Whittier, Alaska is one of the strangest and most compelling day trips you can take from Anchorage — a tiny port town on Prince William Sound, 60 miles from the city, accessible only through a single 2.5-mile tunnel shared by cars and the Alaska Railroad. The payoff for passing through that tunnel is immediate: a sheltered harbor flanked by glaciated peaks, one of the most accessible entry points to Prince William Sound’s tidewater glacier scenery, and a genuinely unusual town that makes for a memorable story. Here’s how to plan a Whittier Alaska day trip in 2026.
The drive from Anchorage to Whittier takes about 1 hour 15 minutes — south on the Seward Highway along Turnagain Arm, then through Portage Valley to the tunnel portal. The Seward Highway stretch along Turnagain Arm is outstanding on its own, with Dall sheep on the cliffs and the tidal bore to watch for; budget extra time if you want to stop.
The Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel is the longest combined rail-and-auto tunnel in North America. It operates on a one-way alternating schedule — traffic flows in one direction for a set period, then reverses. The toll is currently $13 per vehicle each way. The critical thing to know before you go: check the tunnel schedule before you leave Anchorage. Missing a window means a 30–40 minute wait at the portal, which affects everything downstream in your day. The Alaska DOT posts the current schedule online; look it up and plan your departure time around it.
There’s no alternative route to Whittier. If the tunnel’s closed for maintenance, the trip doesn’t happen.
The main reason most people come to Whittier is Prince William Sound — specifically the tidewater glaciers, sea otters, harbor seals, orcas, and seabirds that populate it. Whittier sits at the east end of the Sound, which means glacier cruise operators here can reach ice faces, rookeries, and wildlife areas that would require a full day from Seward to access.
Lazy Otter Charters is one of the Whittier-based operators running glacier and wildlife tours from the small boat harbor — half-day and full-day options, with routes into College Fjord, Surprise Glacier, and the western Sound. The half-day cruise fits comfortably in a day trip from Anchorage; the full-day pushes your tunnel timing tighter on the return.
On any Prince William Sound cruise, expect to see:
Whittier’s harbor and the protected coves immediately outside it are excellent for sea kayaking. Several operators offer guided half-day paddles into the fjords, appropriate for beginners if the weather’s calm. Paddling lets you approach the glacier faces and wildlife at a speed and proximity that motorized boats can’t match — it’s a genuinely different experience, quieter and more immersive. Book ahead; guided kayak tours sell out on summer weekends.
Whittier’s year-round population is small — about 200 people — and most of them live in a single 14-story concrete building called Begich Towers, which also contains the post office, a bed and breakfast, a laundromat, and a medical clinic. The building was originally constructed by the Army in the 1950s when Whittier was a military port; the Cold War history is visible everywhere you look. The town has a few restaurants and a small grocery, and the harbor area is worth a walk before or after your cruise. It’s not a place with a conventional downtown, but it has a strange charm that’s uniquely Alaskan.
Portage Valley, which you’ll pass through on the way to the tunnel, is worth a stop on the return. The Portage Glacier Cruises (MV Ptarmigan) operates boat tours across Portage Lake to the face of Portage Glacier — a completely different glacial experience from the open-water Prince William Sound cruises. The Byron Glacier Trail in the same valley is a flat 0.8-mile walk to the toe of a glacier, with an ice cave accessible in summer. Adding Portage Valley turns the Whittier day trip into a full day of glacial scenery with multiple perspectives on Alaska ice.
May through September is the window for Whittier day trips. June and July offer the longest daylight hours (up to 19 hours in late June) and the most active boat tour schedules. August is the peak of Prince William Sound wildlife season. September brings quieter conditions and the first fall colors on the surrounding peaks, but the boat tour schedule starts thinning.
Whittier gets significantly more rain than Anchorage — it’s one of the rainiest spots in Alaska. Bring a waterproof layer regardless of the Anchorage forecast. Many days start overcast in Whittier and clear by mid-morning; don’t let a grey morning in the city talk you out of going.
About 60 miles by road — roughly 1 hour 15 minutes, including the tunnel transit. The tunnel itself adds about 5–10 minutes to the drive depending on wait time at the portal.
$13 per vehicle each way in 2026. The tunnel runs on a one-way alternating schedule; check the current times at dot.alaska.gov before you go.
It’s an interesting stop even without a tour — the harbor walk, the Begich Towers history, and the mountain scenery are all free — but the boat cruise is the reason most people make the trip. Without it, the tunnel toll and drive time are hard to justify as a dedicated day trip. Consider combining with Portage Valley if you’re skipping the water.
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