Winter is not a season to get through in Anchorage — it is a season people move here for. From November through April, the city runs on skis, fat bikes, snowshoes, sled dogs, and the kind of long, dark evenings that make aurora watching a reasonable after-dinner activity. Kincaid Park grooms more than 40 kilometers of lit nordic trails most winters. The Tony Knowles Coastal Trail turns into one of the best fat-biking routes in the country. Alyeska Resort, 40 minutes south, runs lift-served downhill skiing with views over Turnagain Arm.
This page brings together the best winter activities in Anchorage, from cross-country skiing and ice skating on Westchester Lagoon to guided aurora tours, dog-sledding trips, ice fishing, and the city’s winter festivals. Daylight is short — sunrise to sunset can be under six hours at the solstice — so build your day around the light, layer properly, and check forecasts before heading into the mountains. Conditions below cover the typical core winter window, roughly late November through March.