Skip to main content

Prudhoe Bay, AK Road Trips

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

Downtown Prudhoe Bay, AK, AK

Photo: John De Leon

Trip Routes

1

Longest Drive

1674.8 mi

Sitka, AK

Quickest Drive

73h 44m

Sitka, AK

Plan Around Prudhoe Bay, AK

Popular Incoming Routes

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

Prudhoe Bay, AK by the Numbers

Recent demographic snapshot from the US Census Bureau's American Community Survey.

Population

1,971

Median Age

40.3

Source: US Census Bureau ACS 5-year (public domain). See our methodology for details.

Traveler Guide to Prudhoe Bay, AK

Deadhorse (pop. 25) is a town 10 miles (16 km) from Prudhoe Bay and the Arctic Ocean in Arctic Alaska at the end of the Dalton Highway.

Like the Dalton Highway, Deadhorse exists to support oil operations in Prudhoe Bay. While the official population is 25, the town boasts a non-permanent population of 2,000-3,000 employees of the various oil operations. Like Coldfoot and the camp at Mile 60, the facilities for visitors are the same as those built to house construction workers for the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. All facilities are simple, prefabricated buildings which were brought to Deadhorse on barge or via the Dalton. Commodities, having to be shipped great distances, are expensive. The settlement dates to the 1967 discovery of the Prudhoe Bay oil field. While the origin of the town's name is unclear, the most common theory is that it refers to the original airfield runway, which was built with gravel hauled by trucking company Dead Horse Hauling. Deadhorse has no direct access to the Arctic Ocean, which is 10 miles (16 km) away. Special advanced access/tours (via oil field personnel permission, requiring photo ID and right of refusal) may visit Prudhoe Bay... but, even then, not all tours reach the bay. The mere idea that someone would travel so far, with so little to see at the end of the road, may earn a few blank stares from the oil folk.

The Dalton Highway ends just a few miles inland of the Arctic Ocean and only private, restricted roads extend to the ocean. Fortunately, tours can be booked through the hotels in the town which not only take you to the ocean and its gravel beach (where you can take a frigid dip, joining the "Polar Bear Club") but also include a tour of the oilfield and operations. The ocean is ice-free from late July to October.

There are a couple of restaurants in town as part of the hotels such as the Caribou Inn.

Alcohol is not available. In a harsh environment like this, exposure to the elements is a grave danger which can easily occur while intoxicated. The North Slope Borough is considered dry. Oil field operations areas also forbid alcohol.

There are a few hotels in town. 1 Arctic Oilfield Hotel, 1 Spine Road, Prudhoe Bay, ☏ +1 844 663-2269. Hotel with a restaurant, fitness center, snack bar, wi-fi, and laundry facilities. (updated Oct 2020) 2 The Aurora Hotel, 123 Lake Colleen Road, ☏ +1 907 670-0600, [email protected]. Hotel with a library, game room, gym, wi-fi, and espresso shop. (updated Oct 2020) 3 Prudhoe Bay Motel, Pouch 340004, ☏ +1 907 659-2449. At the end of the Alaska's Dalton Highway and on the edge of Prudhoe Bay Oil field, provides accommodations for both visitors touring the state of Alaska as well as workers of the North Slope. Very simple accommodations. (updated Jun 2016)

The town is at the northern terminus, Mile 414, of the Dalton Highway which provides a land link year-round to Fairbanks. 1 Deadhorse Airport (SCC IATA), 500 1st St. A modest airport which functions year-round. The airport is served by commercial flights (i.e. Boeing 737-400C aircraft, special: half cargo, half passengers) from Alaska Airlines, normally from Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Utqiaġvik (Barrow). (Ravn Alaska filed for bankruptcy in Apr 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic). You should try to contact your travel agency, or contact the airline. There are also several charter services which can provide flights to this airport, some offering tours which drive up the Dalton, then fly back (or vice versa). (updated Apr 2020)

The town is rather small and during the summer months walking is very feasible although there are no sidewalks and large oil field equipment and trucks demand constant vigilance. During the winter, extreme temperatures make walking, even short distances, very uncomfortable and exposure to such temperatures can be lethal. While the town is not very large, driving is the best option most of the year.

This area has a polar climate. The coldest recorded wind chill here was -102°F (-74°C)! During the winter, exposure to the elements can prove lethal. Like nearly all wild areas in Alaska, grizzly bears are a concern. Don't leave any food lying around including waste food containers, and keep an eye out for bears when walking around. Polar bears are present in the coastal areas predominantly during August and September but can be found at any time during the year. Polar bears are both extremely dangerous and protected, so do not approach or harass the bears and get to a building or vehicle. Whenever exiting a building, immediately scan your surroundings for polar bears.

Travel tips adapted from Deadhorse 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.

Trips to Prudhoe Bay, AK

Drives from Prudhoe Bay, AK in your inbox

Monthly note with new routes, weekend drive ideas, and seasonal picks for AK. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Browse more AK road trips or choose a route from Prudhoe Bay, AK above.