ReasonToGo

All activities / Trekking / Hiking

Trekking / Hiking in June

16 destinations in season, cheapest first.

Durmitor

ME
$ BudgetMedium crowds

Durmitor is a UNESCO World Heritage massif of eighteen glacial lakes, the gorske oci or mountain eyes, and its centerpiece walk climbs Bobotov Kuk, Montenegro's iconic 2,523-meter summit, on a six-to-seven-hour round trip from the Sedlo pass with some hands-on scrambling at the top and half the Dinarides in view. Crno Jezero, the Black Lake in the pines above Zabljak, anchors the gentler days and the trailhead network. Local Zabljak agencies guide the summit and the lake circuits with transport and park fees bundled, and September, after the Adriatic crowds fade, is the quiet reward. The Tara canyon rafting a valley away already has its own row; this is the massif above it.

Why here →

Galicica National Park

MK
$ BudgetLow crowds

Galicica is the mountain wedged between two of Europe's oldest lakes, and the summit of Magaro at 2,254 meters is the payoff: Lake Ohrid on one side, Lake Prespa on the other, both in a single turn of the head. The standard day from the Ohrid side climbs about 600 meters over 8.5 kilometers through karst meadows that hold endemic plants found nowhere else, in a national park that stays quiet even in August while the Ohrid waterfront below fills up. Local guides run it as a half-day with transfers from town, which makes it the easiest big-view summit in the southern Balkans.

Why here →

Lushoto

TZ
$ BudgetLow crowds

The Usambaras are East Africa's best village-to-village hiking: the three-to-four-day Lushoto-to-Mtae traverse crosses the Eastern Arc Mountains, called the Galapagos of Africa for their endemism, through Sambaa farming villages, the montane rainforest of Magamba, and the Irente and Mambo viewpoints where the escarpment drops a thousand meters to the Maasai plains. It is guesthouse-based, culture-forward walking with no altitude and no summit, which makes it the rare African trek that is not a slog toward a sign. The community side is real: Friends of Usambara, the Lushoto NGO that organizes treks, funds tree planting and village forestry from the walking fees.

Why here →

Peja

XK
$ BudgetLow crowds

The Peaks of the Balkans is a 192-kilometer loop through the Accursed Mountains that turned a former conflict border into a permit-managed trekking circuit crossing Kosovo, Albania, and Montenegro, and Peja is its Kosovo gateway. The route won World Travel Market's world-responsible-tourism recognition for exactly what it is: shepherd paths and high passes stitched into a cross-border trail where guesthouses replaced garrisons. Both Peja operators run it guided and self-guided, handle the cross-border permits that still govern the high crossings, and add Via Dinarica Kosovo stages for shorter weeks. The Accursed Mountains are the Balkans' wildest range, and this is their most hopeful story.

Why here →

Pelister National Park

MK
$ BudgetLow crowds

Pelister was Yugoslavia's first national park, protected in 1948 for the Molika, a rare five-needle pine that survives here from the Tertiary period, and its signature day is the climb to the two glacial lakes under the 2,601-meter summit that locals call Pelister's Eyes. Trails start practically in the village of Dihovo, ten minutes above Bitola, where family guesthouses arrange guides, home-brewed beer, and garden dinners at the trailhead, a village-to-summit format the Alps lost decades ago. UIMLA-certified local guides run everything from lake day-hikes to winter ski touring on the same slopes.

Why here →

Prokletije

ME
$ BudgetLow crowds

Prokletije is the highest and most rugged massif of the entire Dinarides, and Montenegro's Grebaje valley sits directly beneath its most dramatic wall, the karst spires of the Karanfili. The classic Volusnica-Talijanka-Popadija loop, seven hours and a thousand meters of gain, walks the rim of that amphitheatre facing the full Albanian Alps skyline, and Zla Kolata, Montenegro's highest point at 2,534 meters, waits for the experienced. Durmitor gets the crowds; this range, a three-euro park fee and a valley of eco-katuns, gets the drama.

Why here →

Seven Rila Lakes

BG
$ BudgetHigh crowds

The Seven Rila Lakes are the Balkans' most iconic day of walking: a glacial cirque staircase of lakes named for their shapes, the Eye, the Kidney, the Tear, strung between 2,100 and 2,500 meters, circuited from the chairlift in five to six hours with the whole of western Bulgaria below. The same massif holds UNESCO-listed Rila Monastery, the spiritual heart of the country, which turns the hike into a two-day mountain-and-monastery pairing no other Balkan range can offer. Certified guiding outfits run it daily in season, and midweek visits dodge the infamous August chairlift queue.

Why here →

Tara National Park

RS
$ BudgetMedium crowds

Tara is Serbia's showcase national park: a forested plateau where eighty percent of the ground is spruce, fir, and beech, harboring the endemic Pancic spruce and the country's densest brown bear population, with almost three hundred kilometers of marked trails. The image everyone comes for is Banjska Stena, the cliff-edge viewpoint a thousand meters above the Drina's emerald bend and Perucac lake, and the classic day walks link it with Crnjeskovo and the Zaovine lakes at around fifteen kilometers and seven hundred meters of gain. Licensed guiding outfits run the park's full program, and the Drina Regatta town of Bajina Basta below doubles as the base.

Why here →

Theth

AL
$ BudgetMedium crowds

The Valbona-to-Theth pass at 1,795 meters links the two signature valleys of the Accursed Mountains and anchors the 192-kilometer tri-border Peaks of the Balkans circuit, approached by the Koman Lake ferry, one of Europe's great inland boat rides. The culture gives the walking its depth: Theth's lock-in tower stands witness to the Kanun highland code, and the guesthouses that feed trekkers are the same families that lived it. Zbulo built many of the region's trails and handles the cross-border permits; Outdoor Albania has run the classic pass for twenty-five years.

Why here →

Juliana Trail

SI
$$ Mid-rangeLow crowds

The Juliana Trail is a 270-kilometer, sixteen-stage circular route designed to walk around Triglav National Park rather than over it: valley paths, alpine villages, and both faces of the Julian Alps, from Bled and Bohinj through Kranjska Gora to the emerald Soca Valley. It was built deliberately as a model of dispersal-led slow tourism, fully waymarked with stage-end accommodation averaging seventeen kilometers apart, and Slovenia's rail and bus network means you can walk it in sections without ever needing a car. The summit story belongs to the mountaineers; this is the trek for seeing how people actually live in these valleys, one gostilna dinner at a time.

Why here →

Northern Velebit

HR
$$ Mid-rangeLow crowds

The Premuzic Trail is a fifty-kilometer dry-stone masterpiece, built 1930 to 1933 under forestry engineer Ante Premuzic, that contours the karst crest of Velebit almost gradient-free through the rock towers of Rozanski kukovi, with the Adriatic and its islands in view for much of the route. It is Croatia's only true hut-based trek, anchored by the Zavizan and Alan huts on the classic two-to-three-day crossing, and it doubles as a stage of the Via Dinarica White Trail. The engineering is the marvel: a path through some of Europe's most broken limestone that never asks for your hands, only your days.

Why here →

Prenj

BA
$$ Mid-rangeLow crowds

Prenj is the Dinaric Alps at their most serious: a dozen towers of bare limestone over two thousand meters that mountaineers call Herzegovina's Himalaya, carrying endemic flora like the Prenj iris and almost no infrastructure at all. The summit day on Zelena glava, 2,155 meters, delivers one of the finest ridge panoramas in the Balkans, guided as a two-day traverse from Mostar for around 160 euros. The honesty that governs everything here: waterless karst and residual mines off the marked routes make this mandatory-guide territory, stated plainly, which is exactly why the certified local guides are the row.

Why here →

Sutjeska National Park

BA
$$ Mid-rangeLow crowds

Sutjeska holds two superlatives in one small park: Maglic, Bosnia's highest peak at 2,386 meters on the Montenegrin border, with cabled sections guarding its summit push, and Perucica, one of the last primeval forests in Europe, where entry is only permitted with a guide and the beech canopy has never heard a saw. The Via Dinarica's white trail threads through, and the Zelengora lakes, the mountain eyes, fill the gentler days. Green Visions, Sarajevo's twenty-year eco-tourism pioneer, runs the multi-day treks; a local Foca outfit covers guided Maglic day pushes. The Bjelasnica leg adds Lukomir, the country's highest permanently inhabited village, where the trek ends over pie and sheep cheese.

Why here →

Vikos Gorge

GR
$$ Mid-rangeLow crowds

Vikos holds the Guinness World Records listing as the deepest gorge in proportion to its width, about 900 meters deep at a point where the rims stand only 1,100 meters apart, with walls ranging from 120 to 1,350 meters through the Vikos-Aoos National Park. The classic guided crossing runs roughly 13 kilometers from Monodendri to Vikos village in six to seven hours, finishing where the Voidomatis springs burst from the base of the cliffs into what is reputedly Europe's clearest river. Guided days pair the canyon with the Zagori stone villages and their Ottoman bridges, and the trails stay uncrowded by Alpine standards even in August.

Why here →

West Highland Way

GB
$$ Mid-rangeMedium crowds

The West Highland Way is Scotland's first and most walked long-distance route: 96 miles from Milngavie on Glasgow's edge along the full length of Loch Lomond, across the emptiness of Rannoch Moor, and down Glen Nevis to Fort William beneath Britain's highest mountain. What makes it internationally distinct is the infrastructure culture: a mature ecosystem of baggage transfer, village B and Bs, and self-guided packages that lets you walk hut-free with a daypack and a dram at the end of each stage, a model the big operators ship thousands of walkers through every year. Seven to nine days, no technical ground, and weather that is itself a Scottish cultural experience.

Why here →

Phong Nha

VN
$$$ PremiumLow crowds

Phong Nha-Ke Bang is the world's greatest cave region, and the way in is on foot: multi-day jungle treks through UNESCO-listed karst where the campsites are inside the caves themselves, tents pitched on underground beaches beneath dolines that pour jungle light into caverns big enough to hold city blocks. Oxalis Adventure, the sole licensed operator for Son Doong, the largest cave passage on earth, also runs the more attainable Hang En and Tu Lan treks with a safety team trained by British cave experts; Jungle Boss runs licensed routes to Do Quyen waterfall and the Hang Pygmy system. This is expedition trekking where the destination happens to be underground, and nothing else in Southeast Asia resembles it.

Why here →

Not sure which of these is yours?

Send us your budget, skill, and dates. We'll pick the one for trekking / hiking and tell you why -- with verified providers and honest timing. An Activity Plan, in 48 hours, for $29.

Get an Activity Plan →

Or save these Reasons for later

Join free and get a personalized weekly Reason Drop for what you're into.