The West End Is Open: Hoh Rain Forest and Rialto Beach Are Ready for You This Weekend

If you’ve been waiting for the right weekend to make the drive to the West End of the Olympic Peninsula, this is it. Two of the most iconic destinations on this stretch — the Hoh Rain Forest and Rialto Beach — are both fully open right now, and one of them won’t stay that way past July. Here’s what you need to know before you go.

Hoh Rain Forest: The Visitor Center Is Open Today

The Hoh Rain Forest sits about 31 miles southeast of Forks along Upper Hoh Road, and as of this weekend, the entire area is operating normally — trails, parking areas, restrooms, and the Visitor Center. That last detail matters: the Hoh Rain Forest Visitor Center runs on a Friday through Sunday schedule from 9am to 4pm, which means today is one of only three days a week you can actually walk inside, talk to a ranger, and get current trail conditions straight from the source.

The two signature trails are the reason most people make this drive. The Hall of Mosses Trail is a 0.8-mile loop through old-growth Sitka spruce hung with club moss so thick it looks like something from a fantasy novel. The trees here are enormous — some over 300 years old — and the light filters through in a way that makes even an overcast day feel dramatic. The Hoh River Trail sets off from the same trailhead and runs deep into the park; you can walk as little or as much as you want, following the braided river through stands of spruce and maple.

Hoh Campground is currently first-come, first-served, which means you can drive in this weekend without a reservation and claim a site. That window closes June 12, when reservations become required through September 6. If you’ve been meaning to camp in the rainforest, the next six weeks are your easiest shot at a spontaneous overnight. Come prepared for weather regardless of the forecast — the Hoh receives over 140 inches of rain annually, and conditions can shift from sunny to soaked in under an hour. Waterproof layers are non-negotiable. Road and conditions hotline: 360-565-3131.

Rialto Beach: Open Now, Closed July 8 — Plan Accordingly

Rialto Beach is accessed via Mora Road off Highway 101, about 14 miles of winding two-lane road through the Quillayute River bottomlands. Right now, Mora Road and Rialto Beach are fully open. Starting July 8 and running through October 5, both lanes of Mora Road will be closed beyond Mora Campground for permanent road repairs — meaning Rialto Beach will be completely inaccessible by vehicle for nearly three months.

This construction has been coming for a while. Back in 2019, severe winter flooding eroded the riverbank at mile marker 1.25, and the emergency riprap installed at the time was always a temporary fix. The permanent repair is necessary and overdue, but the closure window is real, and if you want to visit Rialto Beach this summer, your window is now through July 7.

Rialto Beach is one of those places that rewards the effort. The beach is wide and wild, littered with enormous drift logs bleached silver by the salt air. Sea stacks rise from the surf in both directions. About 1.5 miles north along the shoreline, the Hole-in-the-Wall sea arch cuts through a headland — a walk that’s entirely doable at low tide, though you’ll want to check a tide chart before heading out. The Pacific coast moves fast, and sneaker waves are a real hazard anywhere along this stretch.

Mora Campground, located before the closure zone, is open first-come, first-served through May 14. Starting May 15, reservations are required (available at recreation.gov), running through September 20. If you want to base camp here before the road closes, this coming week is your last spontaneous-arrival window.

Plan Your Visit

Both destinations are day-trip distance from Forks, which sits at the crossroads of the West End. For the Hoh Rain Forest, allow at least two to three hours minimum — longer if you want to walk the Hoh River Trail beyond the first mile. For Rialto Beach, budget time for the 1.5-mile beach walk to Hole-in-the-Wall and back if tides allow; check tide tables in advance at tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov (La Push / Quillayute River, station 9442396).

Current road and conditions for all Olympic National Park areas: call the recorded information line at 360-565-3131. America the Beautiful passes and Olympic National Park annual passes are accepted at both entrance points. The Hoh Rain Forest entrance station is on Upper Hoh Road; the Rialto Beach / Mora area uses the same pass. Day-use fee without a pass is $35 per vehicle.

The West End is at its best in late spring — crowds haven’t arrived yet, the forest is saturated green, and the beach is still yours for the walking. Don’t sleep on it.

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