The Most Dangerous Hike in America

Let’s be real. Plenty of us dream about that perfect trail with breathtaking views and bragging rights. Most hikes deliver exactly that without serious risk. Then there are trails that experts actually fear.

These aren’t just challenging routes. They’re places where statistics tell a grim story and where search and rescue teams know far too many names. Some demand technical skills that most hikers don’t possess. Others punish even experienced mountaineers with conditions that shift violently without warning.

Angels Landing: The Notorious Spine of Zion

Angels Landing: The Notorious Spine of Zion (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Angels Landing: The Notorious Spine of Zion (Image Credits: Unsplash)

As of 2024, 18 deaths have been confirmed at or near Angels Landing in Utah’s Zion National Park. Here’s the thing about this trail that gets me – it looks stunning in photos, but those Instagram posts don’t capture the final stretch. The trail is narrow, steep, and fully exposed, with the last half-mile running along a slick sandstone ridge just a few feet wide with nothing but open air on both sides, though chains offer support.

Between 2007 and 2024, Zion National Park recorded 59 fatalities, averaging approximately 3.3 deaths per year, with Angel’s Landing responsible for more than 18, according to OutdoorAdept reporting from 2025. The narrow spine becomes treacherous when the weather hits or when crowds force hikers to navigate around one another on that slim rock edge. An associate professor at Bowling Green State University who studies deaths in the national park system called it potentially “the most dangerous trail in America”.

What’s particularly sobering is that the permit scheme has been running since 2022, and the route has seen fewer incidents and no deaths since its inception, with the last recorded death on Angels Landing occurring in March 2021. Park officials now require permits specifically to control crowds and reduce risk.

Half Dome’s Cable Section: When Granite Turns Deadly

Half Dome's Cable Section: When Granite Turns Deadly (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
Half Dome’s Cable Section: When Granite Turns Deadly (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

California’s iconic Half Dome isn’t just famous. It’s ruthlessly unforgiving. As of 2025, there have been 25 confirmed deaths on the cable section and the summit, with many more when counting the entire approach trail. The final 400-foot stretch involves climbing steep granite while holding metal cables, with wooden planks spaced roughly 10 feet apart.

Rain transforms this into something else entirely. Six of the 10 deaths on the cables occurred when the granite was wet, and dozens of nonfatal accidents happened during storms. In July 2024, a tragic case illustrated this danger perfectly. Grace Rohloff, an experienced hiker, had celebrated reaching the Half Dome summit just moments before the accident, slipping during a heavy rainstorm and falling to her death while descending the cables with her father.

The weather on Half Dome can flip shockingly fast. Blue skies at the summit don’t guarantee they’ll stay that way during your descent. The cable system was described as “unnecessarily dangerous,” with the rock being slick granite with few bumps for foot traction and wooden planks about 10 feet apart without side planks or harnesses attached to the cables.

Capitol Peak: Colorado’s Technical Monster

Capitol Peak: Colorado's Technical Monster (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
Capitol Peak: Colorado’s Technical Monster (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

An unprecedented five fatalities occurred within six weeks in 2017 on 14,137-foot Capitol Peak, one of Colorado’s most challenging 14ers, with the mountain’s standard route being a 17-mile round trip concluding with an exposed stretch of 4th-class rock. This peak doesn’t mess around. Fewer than 1,000 people climb the mountain each year, and the Forest Service posted a sign near the trailhead cautioning about “down-sloping, loose, rotten and unstable rock” that “kills without warning”.

Capitol’s Knife Edge section demands genuine mountaineering skill. Capitol Peak is considered one of the most difficult mountains to climb in Colorado, with precarious obstacles such as loose, crumbling rocks and extreme exposure. Honestly, the statistics from 2017 shocked rescue teams. Four fatalities had occurred on Capitol Peak over the preceding 14 years before the spike in 2017.

The mountain punishes route-finding errors brutally. As many as four out of the five climbers who died on Capitol in 2017 were off-route, according to the American Alpine Club. Even a 2022 incident saw a climber fall approximately 900 feet from the route that connects the treacherous Knife’s Edge to the mountain’s summit.

Mount Washington: The Small Peak with Extreme Weather

Mount Washington: The Small Peak with Extreme Weather (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
Mount Washington: The Small Peak with Extreme Weather (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

At only 6,288 feet, Mount Washington shouldn’t be deadly, right? Wrong. Mount Washington has been listed among the ten deadliest mountains in the world, with 178 known fatalities and missing persons within the Presidential Range. The mountain earned its nickname as home of the “worst weather in the world,” with hurricane-force gusts greater than 74 mph observed at the summit more than 100 days a year on average.

Temperature swings defy logic. The summit observatory has recorded temperatures as low as -50°F, and an estimated wind chill of -102°F was recorded in January 2004. People die from hypothermia here in summer, not winter. 161 people have died since 1849, with more people dying from hypothermia in the summer than in winter.

In June 2022, a hiker attempting the Presidential Traverse died of hypothermia after a severe storm brought gusting winds and winter-like conditions, with rescue teams enduring 80-mile-per-hour wind gusts and a wintry mix of rain, sleet, and snow falling in below-freezing temperatures. The mountain’s accessibility makes it particularly dangerous – tourists routinely underestimate conditions and arrive catastrophically unprepared.

The Kalalau Trail: Hawaii’s Cliffside Gauntlet

The Kalalau Trail: Hawaii's Cliffside Gauntlet (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
The Kalalau Trail: Hawaii’s Cliffside Gauntlet (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

The Kalalau Trail follows narrow ledges carved into sea cliffs with several exposed sections, most notably Crawlers Ledge, where footing is precarious, and one misstep means a fatal fall, while tropical storms and rainfall trigger flash floods that turn stream crossings into impassable torrents. This 11-mile trail along Kauai’s Napali Coast looks like paradise in photos. It can become a death trap when conditions deteriorate.

Hikers caught between swollen streams and cliffs have died trying to cross back, with loose rock, mud, and rip currents adding to the danger through falls, drownings, and rockslides claiming many experienced hikers and swimmers. The trail’s tropical location deceives people into thinking it’s a beach hike. It absolutely isn’t.

Recent incidents highlight ongoing dangers. In September 2024, a norovirus outbreak forced a full trail closure after dozens of hikers fell ill with vomiting and fever, with authorities reopening only part of the trail for day use later that month. Between the exposure, stream crossings, and unpredictable weather, this trail demands respect that casual hikers often don’t give it.

Why These Trails Keep Claiming Lives

Why These Trails Keep Claiming Lives (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Why These Trails Keep Claiming Lives (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Social media amplifies danger by making these hikes look easier than they are. Honestly, I think Instagram has blood on its hands here. The internet has opened up a world of free online guidebooks, while social media has helped fuel a new appetite for outdoor excitement broadcast through electrifying GoPro videos and Instagram selfies, leading people to see easier mountains as “piddly” while Capitol Peak becomes a real climb where summit selfies attract admiring comments.

Preparation failures kill more than terrain. On Mount Washington, it’s the lack of preparation, not the mountain, that kills. Rangers repeatedly stress this point. Climbers having too little experience for the objective they’re attempting is a common factor in rescues and incidents, with experts advising to “build up to the big ones” and use qualified guide services if there’s any question about safety.

Weather misjudgment proves fatal repeatedly. In summer, intense sun and dehydration turn risky climbs into serious physical and mental challenges, especially for people in better physical shape who are more prone to underestimate risk, according to hiker heat risk studies. Clear conditions can vanish within minutes on exposed peaks, trapping unprepared hikers.

The common thread across these deadliest hikes isn’t just technical difficulty or elevation. It’s the combination of accessibility, rapidly changing conditions, and human overconfidence. These trials punish small mistakes with fatal consequences. Experienced mountaineers respect that reality. Casual hikers often learn it too late.

Did you underestimate any of these trails before reading the real statistics? What precautions do you think more hikers should take?

<p>The post The Most Dangerous Hike in America first appeared on Travelbinger.</p>

Leave a Comment