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Utqiagvik, AK Road Trips

Plan drives from Utqiagvik, AK with practical route pages for distance, drive time, fuel cost, road character, and places to stop along the way.

Downtown Utqiagvik, AK, AK

Photo: Tima Miroshnichenko

Trip Routes

1

Longest Drive

1843.8 mi

Ketchikan, AK

Quickest Drive

74h 20m

Ketchikan, AK

Plan Around Utqiagvik, AK

Popular Incoming Routes

Useful if Utqiagvik, AK is the arrival point and you want the strongest routes into the city first.

Traveler Guide to Utqiagvik, AK

Utqiaġvik (formerly and still commonly known to non-natives as Barrow) is a city that is 300 miles (480 km) north of the Arctic Circle on the Arctic Ocean in Arctic Alaska. The city holds the distinction of being the northernmost settlement in the United States, and the northernmost settlement on the North American mainland. The residents are primarily of Inupiat (Native Alaskan) descent. Its population in 2019 was a bit more than 4,500 people.

The city is commonly known as Barrow, its official name until a 2016 referendum changed it to the traditional Iñupiat name of Utqiaġvik. It is the administrative and economic center and the largest city in the North Slope Borough, and it functions as a center for Iñupiat culture and for oil extraction. Traditional hunting, fishing, and whaling are an important part of the community. The city is divided into three sections. The southern section is known as the "Barrow side". The larger, traditionally residential central section is known as "Browerville". The smaller, more isolated northern part is known as "NARL", after the Naval Arctic Research Lab that used to be located there. The climate is constantly frigid, with temperatures averaging slightly above freezing only in July and August. Precipitation is low year-round and, in a sense, Utqiagvik is in the middle of an "ice desert", despite being located right next to the Arctic Ocean. The midnight sun can be seen from mid-May to late-July. There is polar night from late November to late January, with twilight only for a few hours from late morning until mid-afternoon.

1 Isatkoak Lagoon. (updated Jan 2025) 2 Iñupiat Heritage Center, 5421 North Star St, ☏ +1 907 852-0422. M-F 8:30AM-5PM. A museum with many fascinating Iñupiat displays and artifacts. Adult (18-59): $10, youth (7-17) and college students: $5, seniors (60+) and children (under 6): free. (updated Dec 2023) NARL / DEW line relics Palm trees at shooting station 3 Point Barrow (Nuvuk), Brower St. The northernmost point in the United States. Satcom Array 4 Whale Bone Arch. Joe's Museum, ☏ +1 907 855 1007. By appointment. Native art and taxidermy interspersed (very appealingly) with artifacts from the proprietor's bachelor-pad life in the 1980s, and anything else you could think of. (updated Apr 2022)

Bird watch. You can use the bird list from the King Eider Inn. 1 Tundra Tours Inc., 1200 Agvik St, ☏ +1 907 852-3900. Tours are offered during the summer season. There is one tour per day,. It starts at 10:00AM and ends around 2:30PM (updated Oct 2020) Also, see the listing of Airport Inn - Lodging & Tours in the "Sleep" section.

There are some decent restaurants in the Utqiaġvik/Browerville area. Expect to pay $20-30 per meal at most restaurants. 1 East Coast Pizzeria, 507 Kongosak St (on the corner of Ogrook and Kongosak), ☏ +1 907 852-2100. Pizza, philly cheesesteaks, salads, and spaghetti. (updated Oct 2020) 2 Osaka Restaurant, 980 Stevenson St, ☏ +1 907 852-4100. Cozy, homey atmosphere, very decent teriyaki and other Japanese favorites. (updated Oct 2020) 3 Sam and Lee's Chinese Restaurant, Kogiak St (near Cunningham). Friendly service, lunch buffet M-F of dishes from various Asian cuisines, and a few "American" options, for under $20 (as of 2017.) (updated Jan 2017)

1 B and C Java, 3060 Eben Hopson St, ☏ +1 907 852-8191. Coffee shop (updated Jan 2025)

1 King Eider Inn, 1752 Ahkovak St, ☏ +1 907 852-4700. (updated Oct 2020) 2 Top of the World Hotel, 3060 Eben Hopson St, ☏ +1 907 852-3900, [email protected]. Check-in: 3PM, check-out: 11AM. Free parking. Double $274+. (updated Dec 2023) 3 Latitude 71 Bed and Breakfast, 5725 B St (corner of B St. and Transit), ☏ +1 907-301-6017, +1 907-319-8448, [email protected]. Check-in: noon, check-out: 11AM. A comfortable and elegant alternative to the average hotel rooms in town. $175 single room and up. (updated Jul 2018)

There are no roads or rails into town. Considering the climate and extreme remoteness of the place, none of this is likely to change any time soon. The only way to travel to Utqiagvik is by plane, although there is an annual summer barge service to send and receive large heavy items such as vehicles, building supplies, and heavy equipment. 1 Wiley Post-Will Rogers Memorial Airport (BRW IATA), 1741 Akavak St (directly south of the city, walking distance from some of the hotels and a few of the restaurants). Alaska Airlines offers several daily flights from Anchorage, Deadhorse, and Fairbanks.

Utqiaġvik is very small, and is a flat desert that almost never receives large amounts of snow. So it's easy to get around by foot even in the winter. During the colder months, you can walk directly across the frozen freshwater lagoons. Just bundle up and beware of the wind chill! In "early winter", be careful and ask locals if the lagoons are really totally frozen over yet before you walk on them. There are several cab companies in town. They are always driving about, and they can be flagged down easily or called by phone for almost immediate pickup. Rates vary between $5 and $9 around Utqiaġvik proper and Browerville. Within town, they are supposed to charge a $6 fixed rate per one-way trip. To go to Point Barrow or to the lake south of town to see the night sky, it is about $50 per hour. Alaska Cab, ☏ +1 970 852-3000. Barrow Cab, ☏ +1 907 852-2222. City Cab, ☏ +1 907 852-5050. Polar Cab, ☏ +1 907 852-8080. 2 UIC Car Rental, 1764 Ahkovak St (near the Utqiaġvik Airport), ☏ +1 907 852-2700. M-F 8:30AM-noon, 1-5PM. Provides car rentals but availability can be limited during peak times. Gasoline can also be very expensive (at least for American tastes), as the price is set only once per year. (updated May 2021) The city bus runs M-F 7AM–7PM and can be a good option for daily commutes. Visitors, however, will probably be happier taking cabs due to the convenience, as well as the fact that cab fare for a group of 2 or more people will end up costing less money because the bus charges per person.

3 Samuel Simmonds Memorial Hospital, 7000 Uula St, ☏ +1 907 852-4611. (updated Jan 2026)

Travel tips adapted from Utqiagvik on Wikivoyage, licensed CC BY-SA 4.0. Content summarized; visit the source for the full article. See our methodology for how we use it.

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