Routeburn Track

Photo: Pseudopanax at English Wikipedia / CC BY 4.0

Striding across the alpine spine of Fiordland and Mount Aspiring National Parks, the Routeburn Track is one of New Zealand's Great Walks, a 32-kilometer (20-mile) journey through ancient beech forests, tussock-clad basins, and breathtaking mountain passes. This isn't just a walk; it's a traverse of landscapes that shift from emerald valleys to stark, rocky peaks, with views that stretch to the Tasman Sea. Whether you tackle it over three days or run it in a day, the Routeburn delivers an immersion into raw, pristine wilderness that defines New Zealand's South Island.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

Most walkers take 3 days and 2 nights, staying at DOC huts or campsites (book well in advance – they fill up months ahead). The standard direction is from the Routeburn Shelter (near Glenorchy) to The Divide (near Te Anau), or vice versa. Fit trampers can complete it in 2 days, but you'll miss the chance to linger at the highlights. Trail runners often do it in a single day (8–11 hours), but this requires excellent fitness and early starts. For a more relaxed pace, add a night at Lake Mackenzie Hut to soak in the scenery.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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