Grand Teton mountain range rising above the Jackson Hole valley at golden hour

Destination Guide

Jackson Hole

Wyoming

Thirteen thousand feet of granite, four million acres of wilderness, and a town square where dogs outnumber tourists by August.

Best Season
Jun – Sep / Dec – Mar
Dog-Friendly Rating
★★★★½ 4.5 / 5
Best For
Mountain adventurers & wildlife seekers
Vibe
Western, rugged-luxe, outdoor-first

Jackson Hole is the kind of place where a Labrador in the back of a mud-caked Jeep does not get a second look, but a person without hiking boots does. This is a town built around outdoor recreation, surrounded by some of the most dramatic mountain scenery in North America, and dog ownership here is not a lifestyle choice — it is practically a civic requirement. The locals run the trails with their dogs before work. The bartenders know every regular’s dog by name. The town square, with its famous elk antler arches, is as much a dog park as it is a tourist landmark.

The critical caveat: Grand Teton National Park, which begins just minutes north of town, does not allow dogs on trails. At all. This is the single fact that most Jackson Hole dog guides fail to emphasize sufficiently. The park is the reason most people visit, and your dog cannot join you on the iconic hikes. But the Bridger-Teton National Forest, which flanks the valley on three sides, has hundreds of miles of dog-friendly trails. The trick is knowing which trailheads put you on forest land and which ones put you in the park. Get that right, and Jackson Hole becomes one of the great dog destinations in the American West.

Here is everything we know.

Where to Stay

Rugged luxury with room for the dog

Jackson Hole has invested heavily in its hospitality over the past decade, and many of the top properties now welcome dogs. These are the ones that do it with conviction.

Hotel Jackson

Top Pick
★★★★★ Dog-Friendliness Fee: $50/stay Town Square

The best hotel in Jackson sits directly on Town Square, and it welcomes dogs with the kind of understated competence that defines the whole property. Hotel Jackson is a 55-room boutique with Western-modern design — reclaimed wood, leather headboards, soaking tubs, and floor-to-ceiling windows framing the Tetons. Dogs receive a bed, bowls, and treats at check-in. The $50 pet fee covers the entire stay, not per night, which at Jackson Hole prices feels almost generous. The ground-floor rooms open onto a courtyard that makes early-morning walks painless. The FIGS restaurant downstairs is excellent, and Town Square is your front yard — which means you are walking distance to nearly everything in town. If you are bringing a dog to Jackson and want a proper hotel, this is the one.

Snow King Resort

Ski-In Access
★★★★ Dog-Friendliness Fee: $75/stay No weight limit

Snow King is the town hill — the ski mountain that rises directly from downtown Jackson, visible from every street in the village. The resort hotel sits at its base, and the dog-friendly rooms give you immediate access to some of the best in-town hiking in the valley. In summer, the Snow King trail system offers miles of singletrack that starts right from the hotel lobby, and dogs are welcome on every trail. The rooms were renovated recently and the quality has improved markedly. The rooftop pool has Teton views. The pet fee is $75 per stay with no weight restrictions. This is the play if you want to maximize trail access without driving anywhere.

Rustic Inn Creekside Resort & Spa

Best for Dogs
★★★★★ Dog-Friendliness Fee: $25/night Creekside cabins

If your primary criterion is how happy the dog will be, the Rustic Inn wins. This resort sits along Flat Creek on the edge of town, with individual log cabins spread across landscaped grounds that feel more like a private compound than a hotel. Dogs are welcome in designated cabins, and the creek-side setting means your dog has immediate access to water and green space without leaving the property. The cabins have fireplaces, the grounds are walkable and beautiful, and the spa is surprisingly good. The $25 per night pet fee is the lowest of any quality property in Jackson. Two blocks from Town Square, but it feels like you are in the woods. This is where the dog people stay.

Dog-Friendly Vacation Rentals

Best for Groups
★★★★ Dog-Friendliness Policies vary $$–$$$$$

The Jackson Hole vacation rental market has exploded, and a significant number of properties now accept dogs. The best dog-friendly inventory is in the Aspens area along the Teton Village road, where you get proximity to both town and the national forest trailheads, and in Wilson, the quieter community across the pass that locals prefer. Look for properties with fenced yards — they exist and are worth the premium, especially if your dog is reactive to wildlife (and in Jackson, there will be wildlife). Always confirm the pet deposit and any breed restrictions. Book early for July and August; the best places go fast.

Autumn foliage and mountain creek in a Wyoming valley
Where to Eat

Mountain town food with real patios

Jackson’s restaurant scene has evolved well past the steak-and-potatoes stereotype. These are the spots where the patio, the food, and the dog welcome all converge.

The Bird

Top Pick
★★★★★ Thai / Asian Fusion $$

The Bird is the restaurant that locals will tell you about if they trust you. Tucked just off Town Square, it serves some of the best Thai food between San Francisco and Chicago — which is genuinely surprising in a Wyoming ski town. The pad thai is legitimately excellent, the green curry has real heat, and the whole operation runs with the efficiency of a place that feeds hungry skiers and hikers seven days a week. The dog-friendly patio faces Town Square and is the single best people-watching perch in Jackson. Dogs are welcome and water bowls appear without asking. Come for lunch after a morning hike, sit on the patio, and order the drunken noodles. This is where the day peaks.

Persephone Bakery

Morning Ritual
★★★★ Bakery / Café $$

The essential morning stop in Jackson. Persephone is a French-inspired bakery on East Broadway that turns out croissants, tartines, and espresso drinks that would be at home in the 6th arrondissement. The outdoor tables are dog-friendly, and the morning scene — locals in Patagonia fleeces, dogs tied to chair legs, the Tetons catching the first light — is quintessential Jackson. The pastries sell out by mid-morning on weekends, so arrive early. The breakfast sandwich on house-baked bread is the move. This is where you fuel up before hitting Cache Creek or the national forest, and the coffee is genuinely excellent. Not just good-for-a-ski-town good — actually excellent.

Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas

Local Favorite
★★★★ Mexican / Tacos $$

Jackson’s best casual lunch and the taco spot that locals argue about with genuine passion. Hatch sits on the boardwalk near Town Square with a covered patio where dogs are welcome and the energy is pure mountain-town casual. The brisket tacos are outstanding, the fish tacos are better than they have any right to be at 6,200 feet, and the margaritas are strong enough to make you forget you planned an afternoon hike. The green chile queso is borderline addictive. Come between 11:30 and 1 for the full lunch rush experience, or after 2 when the patio empties and the dog can stretch out. The staff treats dogs as regulars.

Bin22

Wine Bar
★★★★ Wine / Small Plates $$$

A wine bar and bottle shop that doubles as one of Jackson’s most interesting restaurants. The outdoor seating is dog-friendly, the wine list is deep and thoughtfully curated, and the small plates — charcuterie, flatbreads, seasonal salads — are designed for sharing over a long evening. This is the spot for the night when you want to clean up slightly, sit outside with a glass of something from the Rhône Valley, and let the dog doze under the table while the summer light fades over the Tetons. The staff knows wine and will steer you right. Not cheap, but this is Jackson — nothing is.

HandFire Pizza

Casual Night Out
★★★★★ Pizza / Craft Beer $$

Wood-fired pizza in a casual setting with a large outdoor patio where dogs are genuinely welcome. HandFire uses a mobile wood-fired oven and the results are excellent — blistered crust, quality ingredients, and a rotating selection of seasonal pies alongside the classics. The beer selection is solid, the outdoor space is spacious enough for large dogs, and the vibe is the most relaxed of any restaurant in town. This is where families and dog owners end up on summer evenings, and the energy is right: no one is dressed up, everyone has been outside all day, and the pizza is exactly what you want after eight miles on the trail. Order at the window, grab a picnic table, and let the evening happen.

Cafe Genevieve

Local Find
★★★★★Restaurant, Patio, Beach access(307) 732-1910

Offers Food Bowls, Dog walking, Pet sitting, Grooming.

Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas

Local Find
★★★★Restaurant, Patio, Beach access(307) 203-2780

Offers Dog walking, Pet sitting, Grooming, Relief area.

Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas

Local Find
★★★★Restaurant, Patio, Beach access(307) 203-2780

Offers Dog walking, Pet sitting, Grooming, Relief area.

Snake River Brewing Co.

Local Find
★★★★Restaurant, Patio, Beach access(307) 739-2337

Offers Dog walking, Pet sitting, Grooming, Relief area.

Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas

Local Find
★★★★Restaurant, Patio, Beach access(307) 203-2780

Offers Dog walking, Pet sitting, Grooming, Relief area.

D.O.G.

Local Find
★★★★Restaurant, Patio, Beach access(307) 733-4422

Offers Dog walking, Pet sitting, Grooming, Relief area.

Two deer standing in a misty field with mountain backdrop at dawn
Trails & Outdoors

National forest trails, rivers, and moose country

The critical rule: Grand Teton National Park prohibits dogs on trails. The Bridger-Teton National Forest does not. Know the boundary, and Jackson becomes extraordinary.

Cache Creek Trail

Top Pick
★★★★★ Dog Access On-leash Starts from town

Cache Creek is the trail system that makes Jackson Hole genuinely special for dog owners. It starts at the east edge of town — you can walk from Town Square to the trailhead in fifteen minutes — and climbs into the Gros Ventre range through a canyon lined with cottonwoods and aspens. The main trail follows the creek for several miles with gentle elevation gain before branching into more challenging routes. Dogs must be on-leash, and you should take that seriously: this is active moose habitat, and cow-calf pairs are common along the creek from May through October. Bear spray is not optional. The morning light in the canyon is extraordinary, the creek provides water for the dog at regular intervals, and the proximity to town means you can be on the trail by 7 am and back at Persephone for breakfast by 10. This is the single best dog hike in Jackson.

Bridger-Teton National Forest

Wilderness
★★★★★ Dog Access On-leash recommended 3.4 million acres

The Bridger-Teton is the third-largest national forest in the Lower 48, and it is the reason dog owners can have a world-class outdoor experience in Jackson despite the national park restrictions. Dogs are allowed on virtually every trail in the forest, though on-leash is strongly recommended due to wildlife. The best access points from Jackson include the Goodwin Lake trailhead, the Phillips Canyon trail near Wilson, and the Mosquito Creek trail off Teton Pass. The forest ranges from sagebrush flats at 6,000 feet to alpine lakes above 10,000. Carry bear spray, bring extra water, and check trail conditions at the ranger station on the highway — snow can linger on north-facing trails well into July.

Snake River Access Points

River Day
★★★★ Dog Access Off-leash at water Seasonal

The Snake River runs through the valley and provides several access points where dogs can swim and play in the shallows. The best spots are along the South Park boat launch area and the river access points south of town on Highway 89. The current can be strong, particularly during spring runoff (May through early July), so use caution and keep to the calmer side channels and eddies. By August, the flow drops and many of the gravel bars become perfect dog beaches — shallow water, gentle current, and enough space to let a retriever do retriever things. Bring a towel; the water is snowmelt-cold even in summer. The views of the Tetons from the river are among the best in the valley.

Teton Village & Jackson Hole Mountain Resort

Ski Town Hikes
★★★½ Dog Access On-leash Summer only

Teton Village is twelve miles from Jackson town, and in summer the ski resort opens its trail network for hiking. Dogs are allowed on-leash on the trails around the village base area, though they are not permitted on the aerial tram or most of the upper mountain trails. The valley trail from the village to the Granite Canyon trailhead is a beautiful, relatively flat walk through wildflower meadows with the Tetons as your backdrop. The village itself has several dog-friendly restaurant patios. Note that some trails here cross into national park territory without clear signage — stick to marked Bridger-Teton trails if you have the dog. The free START bus from Jackson to Teton Village is dog-friendly, which solves the parking problem entirely.

Emily Stevens Park

Activity
★★★★ Dog AccessOff-leash allowed

A great outdoor option for you and your dog.

Jackson Hole's Old Time Photos

Activity
★★★★ Dog AccessOn-leash

A great outdoor option for you and your dog.

Jackson Hole's Old Time Photos

Activity
★★★★ Dog AccessOn-leash

A great outdoor option for you and your dog.

Sink or Swim Trail

Activity
★★★★ Dog AccessOn-leash

A great outdoor option for you and your dog.

Jackson Hole's Old Time Photos

Activity
★★★★ Dog AccessOn-leash

A great outdoor option for you and your dog.

Hagen Highway Trail

Activity
★★★★ Dog AccessOn-leash

A great outdoor option for you and your dog.

Weekend With Ashton

A 3-day itinerary for you and your dog

A realistic long weekend in Jackson Hole — built around what is actually open, actually dog-friendly, and actually worth your time.

Friday: Arrive & Settle In

Day 1
Afternoon Evening

Check into Cowboy Village Resort and let Ashton decompress — new smells, new room, give them 30 minutes to sniff everything. Then take an easy walk to Emily Stevens Park to stretch legs after the drive. Nothing ambitious — just let Ashton set the pace. For dinner, head to Cafe Genevieve. Request outdoor seating when you book and mention you are bringing a dog. Bring a portable water bowl and a chew toy to keep Ashton occupied while you order.

Saturday: The Big Day

Day 2
Morning Afternoon Evening

Start early. Grab coffee and head to Cache Creek Trail before the crowds — go before 9 am if it is a beach. This is Ashton's highlight of the trip, so let them lead. Brunch at Miazga's after. In the afternoon, explore Jackson Hole's Old Time Photos at a relaxed pace. Ashton will be tired from the morning — keep it mellow. Back to the hotel for a rest. Dinner at Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas — sunset seating if they have it. Ashton gets the best seat: under the table with a view.

Sunday: Final Morning

Day 3
Morning Midday

Sleep in. Ashton earned it. Take a morning walk to Bridger-Teton National Forest — somewhere familiar feels right on the last day. Breakfast at Cowboy Coffee Co.. Request late checkout (most dog-friendly hotels are flexible about this). If you have time before heading out, Sink or Swim Trail is worth a quick visit. Take a final photo of Ashton in front of the hotel. You will want it.

Weekend With Ashton

A 3-day itinerary for you and your dog

A realistic long weekend in Jackson Hole — built around what is actually open, actually dog-friendly, and actually worth your time.

Friday: Arrive & Settle In

Day 1
Afternoon Evening

Check into Cowboy Village Resort and let Ashton decompress — new smells, new room, give them 30 minutes to sniff everything. Then take an easy walk to Emily Stevens Park to stretch legs after the drive. Nothing ambitious — just let Ashton set the pace. For dinner, head to Cafe Genevieve. Request outdoor seating when you book and mention you are bringing a dog. Bring a portable water bowl and a chew toy to keep Ashton occupied while you order.

Saturday: The Big Day

Day 2
Morning Afternoon Evening

Start early. Grab coffee and head to Cache Creek Trail before the crowds — go before 9 am if it is a beach. This is Ashton's highlight of the trip, so let them lead. Brunch at Miazga's after. In the afternoon, explore Jackson Hole's Old Time Photos at a relaxed pace. Ashton will be tired from the morning — keep it mellow. Back to the hotel for a rest. Dinner at Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas — sunset seating if they have it. Ashton gets the best seat: under the table with a view.

Sunday: Final Morning

Day 3
Morning Midday

Sleep in. Ashton earned it. Take a morning walk to Bridger-Teton National Forest — somewhere familiar feels right on the last day. Breakfast at Cowboy Coffee Co.. Request late checkout (most dog-friendly hotels are flexible about this). If you have time before heading out, Sink or Swim Trail is worth a quick visit. Take a final photo of Ashton in front of the hotel. You will want it.

Weekend With Ashton

A 3-day itinerary for you and your dog

A realistic long weekend in Jackson Hole — built around what is actually open, actually dog-friendly, and actually worth your time.

Friday: Arrive & Settle In

Day 1
Afternoon Evening

Check into Cowboy Village Resort and let Ashton decompress — new smells, new room, give them 30 minutes to sniff everything. Then take an easy walk to Emily Stevens Park to stretch legs after the drive. Nothing ambitious — just let Ashton set the pace. For dinner, head to Cafe Genevieve. Request outdoor seating when you book and mention you are bringing a dog. Bring a portable water bowl and a chew toy to keep Ashton occupied while you order.

Saturday: The Big Day

Day 2
Morning Afternoon Evening

Start early. Grab coffee and head to Cache Creek Trail before the crowds — go before 9 am if it is a beach. This is Ashton's highlight of the trip, so let them lead. Brunch at Miazga's after. In the afternoon, explore Jackson Hole's Old Time Photos at a relaxed pace. Ashton will be tired from the morning — keep it mellow. Back to the hotel for a rest. Dinner at Hatch Taqueria & Tequilas — sunset seating if they have it. Ashton gets the best seat: under the table with a view.

Sunday: Final Morning

Day 3
Morning Midday

Sleep in. Ashton earned it. Take a morning walk to Bridger-Teton National Forest — somewhere familiar feels right on the last day. Breakfast at Cowboy Coffee Co.. Request late checkout (most dog-friendly hotels are flexible about this). If you have time before heading out, Sink or Swim Trail is worth a quick visit. Take a final photo of Ashton in front of the hotel. You will want it.

The One Thing

Carry bear spray on every single trail, even the easy ones near town

This is serious grizzly country — not theoretically, not occasionally, but actively and consistently. Cache Creek Trail, which starts from the edge of downtown Jackson, has regular bear sightings throughout the summer. Cow moose with calves are common along every creek drainage, and a surprised moose is as dangerous as a bear. The locals clip bear spray to their belt like car keys; it is not a backcountry precaution here, it is a daily carry item. Buy a canister at any outdoor shop in town before your first hike, learn how to deploy it, and keep your dog leashed on every trail without exception. An off-leash dog that chases a bear will bring that bear back to you. This is not fear-mongering — it is the single most important thing to understand about hiking with a dog in Jackson Hole.

Practical Info

The stuff you actually need

Emergency vets, dog parks, groomers, and supplies in Jackson Hole — saved so you do not have to Google it at midnight.

Emergency Vets

Spring Creek Animal Hospital

Website

VCA Spring Creek Animal Care Hospital

Website

Veterinarians in Jackson Hole, WY

Website

Dog Parks

Off-leash dog park open at Fairgrounds

Off-leash dog park open at Fairgrounds CloseSearch for:SearchClose Breaking Local News & Community updates for Jackson, ...

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Best Dog-Friendly Spots in Jackson Hole: Parks, Trails & Cafes

NORTH OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - SOUTH OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - WEST OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - STAR VALLEY REAL ESTATE - TE...

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Off-leash dog park opens at Teton County Fairgrounds

ools] * Cops & Courts * Legislature * State News ... * Fall Arts Festival * Business Focus * Seniors 2024 ... * Valley V...

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Groomers

Dog Care, Boarding, Training and Grooming

Book

Dolly Dog Co.

Book

Pet Supplies

Teton Tails

Visit

Pet Supplies & Dog Wash in Jackson WY

Visit
Practical Info

The stuff you actually need

Emergency vets, dog parks, groomers, and supplies in Jackson Hole — saved so you do not have to Google it at midnight.

Emergency Vets

Spring Creek Animal Hospital

Website

VCA Spring Creek Animal Care Hospital

Website

Veterinarians in Jackson Hole, WY

Website

Dog Parks

Off-leash dog park open at Fairgrounds

Off-leash dog park open at Fairgrounds CloseSearch for:SearchClose Breaking Local News & Community updates for Jackson, ...

Details

Best Dog-Friendly Spots in Jackson Hole: Parks, Trails & Cafes

NORTH OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - SOUTH OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - WEST OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - STAR VALLEY REAL ESTATE - TE...

Details

Off-leash dog park opens at Teton County Fairgrounds

ools] * Cops & Courts * Legislature * State News ... * Fall Arts Festival * Business Focus * Seniors 2024 ... * Valley V...

Details

Groomers

Dog Care, Boarding, Training and Grooming

Book

Dolly Dog Co.

Book

Pet Supplies

Teton Tails

Visit

Pet Supplies & Dog Wash in Jackson WY

Visit
Practical Info

The stuff you actually need

Emergency vets, dog parks, groomers, and supplies in Jackson Hole — saved so you do not have to Google it at midnight.

Emergency Vets

Spring Creek Animal Hospital

Website

VCA Spring Creek Animal Care Hospital

Website

Veterinarians in Jackson Hole, WY

Website

Dog Parks

Off-leash dog park open at Fairgrounds

Off-leash dog park open at Fairgrounds CloseSearch for:SearchClose Breaking Local News & Community updates for Jackson, ...

Details

Best Dog-Friendly Spots in Jackson Hole: Parks, Trails & Cafes

NORTH OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - SOUTH OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - WEST OF JACKSON REAL ESTATE - STAR VALLEY REAL ESTATE - TE...

Details

Off-leash dog park opens at Teton County Fairgrounds

ools] * Cops & Courts * Legislature * State News ... * Fall Arts Festival * Business Focus * Seniors 2024 ... * Valley V...

Details

Groomers

Dog Care, Boarding, Training and Grooming

Book

Dolly Dog Co.

Book

Pet Supplies

Teton Tails

Visit

Pet Supplies & Dog Wash in Jackson WY

Visit
The Map

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The Fine Print

Hyperlocal intel from Buckrail, Jackson Hole News & Guide, and NPS records

⚠ Dogs are banned from ALL Grand Teton National Park trails. Dogs cannot hike, swim in any park waters (Jenny Lake, String Lake, Jackson Lake), or use the paved multi-use pathway. Dogs are restricted to within 30 feet of paved roads, parking lots, picnic areas, and campgrounds.
⚠ Yellowstone is even more restrictive. Dogs must stay within 100 feet of roads, parking lots, and campgrounds. Banned from all trails, boardwalks, and backcountry. You cannot carry dogs in arms, strollers, or backpacks to circumvent the rules.

Where Dogs CAN Go

Cache Creek: The Local Go-To Off-Leash Trail
Dogs must be leashed for the first 200 yards from the parking area, then can go off-leash with effective voice command on the trail system. About 20 miles of single and double-track trails with a bubbling creek for dogs to splash in. This is where Jackson locals take their dogs daily.
⚠ Winter Leash Mandate (Dec 1 - May 1): Dogs must be leashed at Cache Creek, Trail Creek, Game Creek, and Teton Pass trailheads. Enforced to protect wintering mule deer, elk, and moose. Moose have kicked and injured dogs in these areas.
Ski Lake Trail — 5-mile out-and-back through aspen groves and wildflowers to a cliff-ringed lake. Dogs must be leashed. Popular dog swimming spot at the lake.

Josie's Ridge — 3.4-mile hike with 1,223-foot elevation gain on Snow King Mountain. Dogs must be leashed.

Old Pass Road — The pre-1969 highway over Teton Pass, now closed to cars. Wide, gradual path with no traffic. Dogs love it.

Snake River Trail — From Emily Stevens Park, up to 4.5 miles out and back. Flat and scenic. Best winter walking option.

Boarding for Ski Days

Homestead Hound — Luxury boarding with high-end mattresses, daily enrichment, treats, dog TV, nightly tuck-in, aromatherapy, and grooming. Perfect for ski days when dogs can't join.

VCA Happy Tails Pet Resort — Standard rooms from ~$63-67/night. Book ahead during peak ski season — finding last-minute boarding in Jackson is difficult.

Spring Creek Animal Hospital — (307) 733-1606. Recommended by repeat visitors as convenient and reliable for day boarding.
Moose Safety
Dogs and moose don't mix. Moose have kicked and injured dogs near trailheads. Keep dogs leashed in areas with moose activity, especially in winter when moose move to lower elevations near trails. Carry bear spray on all hikes.
The Cloudveil Hotel — On the iconic Town Square. 2 dogs per room, $150 pet fee. Dogs get local treats and exclusive merch. Welcome in the lobby during evening cocktails.

Hotel Terra — At Teton Village base area. Slopeside luxury option for dog owners wanting mountain proximity.