Mount Whitney Day Hike — Eastern Sierra
Trail Overview
Mount Whitney is the highest peak in the contiguous United States at 14,505 feet. The standard day hike route — the Main Trail from Whitney Portal at 8,374 feet — is 22 miles round trip with 6,100 feet of elevation gain. The last 2 miles navigate massive granite switchbacks and a narrow ridge above 13,000 feet.
This is the trail this entire site is building toward. Andrew has a day hike permit for September 23, 2026. Everything on HikeATrail — the training hikes, the gear reviews, the Whitney Journal — is converging on this single trail review, which will be upgraded to full Tier 2 with firsthand reporting after the summit attempt.
⚡ Trail Reality Check
Whitney is not technically difficult — no ropes or technical climbing on the Main Trail. What it is: relentlessly long at altitude, in a mountain environment that changes rapidly, with an exposure profile that amplifies every small mistake.
Altitude sickness does not respect fitness level. People in excellent physical condition have been turned around at Trail Camp (12,000 feet) by acute mountain sickness. Acclimatization before summit day significantly affects your success probability — it is not optional.
Start time matters more on Whitney than almost any other trail. Most day hikers start at midnight to 2am from Whitney Portal to be at the summit by 9–10am and off the exposed ridge before afternoon thunderstorms. Afternoon thunderstorms in September are real.
Dogs are not permitted above Whitney Portal. Period. June stays in Lone Pine on summit day.
✅ This hike is for you if…
You have trained specifically — 16+ miles with 4,500+ feet of gain as your longest recent hike. You have a permit and a start date. You’ve done altitude work above 11,000 feet in the months before. You have a firm turnaround time you will honor regardless of summit proximity.
🚫 Skip this hike if…
Your longest hike is under 12 miles. You haven’t done anything above 10,000 feet in the past year. You’re planning to hike without trekking poles. You don’t have a weather/turnaround plan. You’re expecting a casual experience because you’re fit — Whitney is not forgiving of under-preparation regardless of fitness level.
🐕 June’s Dog Report
Dogs are not permitted above Whitney Portal on the Main Trail. This is strictly enforced. June stays in Lone Pine — the Alabama Hills area has excellent BLM land where she can get a proper run while I’m on the mountain. This is not a June trail.
🅿️ Trailhead & Logistics
| Address: | Whitney Portal Road, Lone Pine, CA 93545 |
| Elevation at TH: | 8,374 ft |
| Parking: | Day use lots fill by 3am on peak weekends. Reserve camping at Whitney Portal Campground for guaranteed close parking. |
| Bathroom: | Flush toilets at Whitney Portal (seasonal). |
| Cell Service: | Good at Whitney Portal; none above. Download offline maps before leaving coverage. |
| Permit: | Day hike permit required May 1–Nov 1. Lottery through Recreation.gov, applications open February. Walk-up at Lone Pine Ranger Station at 11am the day before. |
| WAG Bags: | Required and distributed at the trailhead. Use them. |
☕ Coffee Before / 🌮 Food After
Whitney Portal Store: Opens before dawn on summit day mornings. Pancakes, burgers, hot coffee. The most earned breakfast in California hiking. Whitney Portal Store →
Post-summit: Alabama Hills Café, Lone Pine — the only reasonable post-Whitney meal. Known for massive portions. Earned after 22 miles at altitude.
Brewery: Lone Pine Brewing Company — Alabama Hills views, craft beer. The correct post-summit beverage decision.
🎒 Gear Checklist for Summit Day
- Trekking poles — non-negotiable
- Headlamp with extra batteries — midnight start
- 4–5 liters water capacity + filter
- 200–300 cal/hr food for 12+ hours + electrolyte tabs
- Insulated jacket, wind shell, warm hat, gloves
- Rain jacket — afternoon thunderstorm protocol
- Emergency bivvy — mandatory
- WAG bag — required by law
- Sun protection: hoody, hat, sunscreen, sunglasses
- Altitude medication if prescribed
🗺️ Navigation
Main Trail from Whitney Portal is well-signed and heavily traveled. Trail to Trail Crest (13,600 ft) is obvious. The final 2 miles on the northwest ridge are above treeline on maintained trail — clear in good conditions, hazardous in whiteout. Download offline maps.
Download AllTrails offline maps →
📖 Follow the Whitney Journal
Andrew has a permit for September 23, 2026. The Whitney Journal documents everything — training, preparation, setbacks, and the summit attempt — in real time.
Tier 1 guide based on published sources. Full firsthand Trail Reality Check publishes after Andrew’s September 23, 2026 summit attempt.
Trail Photos
📋 This is a Tier 1 trail — sourced from published guides, not yet personally hiked. Photos will be added when Andrew verifies this trail firsthand.
