Takhini Hot Springs
Takhini Hot Springs, 27 kilometres northwest of Whitehorse in the Takhini River valley, is Yukon’s only commercially operated hot springs — a 36-42°C mineral-rich thermal pool open year-round, set in the boreal forest with northern lights viewing in winter and midnight-sun soaking in summer.
Overview
Takhini Hot Springs, in the Takhini River valley 27 kilometres northwest of Whitehorse off the Klondike Highway, is the only commercial hot springs in Yukon Territory and one of the most distinctive northern hot springs experiences in Canada — a geothermally heated outdoor pool of 36-42°C mineral-rich spring water, set in the boreal white spruce and trembling aspen forest of the southern Yukon interior.
What sets Takhini apart from hot springs in the southern provinces is its year-round operation in a sub-Arctic climate: soaking in the outdoor hot pool while the air temperature is -30°C and the northern lights (aurora borealis) are dancing overhead is one of the definitive Yukon winter experiences. In summer, the pool operates into the night under the midnight sun. Takhini also hosts the annual Hair Freezing Contest (a uniquely Yukon winter tradition of sculpting hair into frozen shapes in the -30°C air while soaking in the hot spring), one of the more celebrated community events in Whitehorse.
Recreation
Takhini Hot Springs offers year-round soaking in the geothermal outdoor pool (the primary experience — a comfortable 36-42°C pool of mineral-rich spring water fed by the geothermal spring, with a cooler wading pool; the pool is outdoor and unenclosed, providing full exposure to the Yukon sky — in winter the aurora overhead and in summer the midnight sun), northern lights viewing from the pool (the aurora borealis is visible from the Takhini valley on clear nights from late August through April; the combination of soaking in the hot spring while the aurora moves overhead is an extraordinary sensory experience unique to the sub-Arctic), stargazing from the pool on dark winter nights (Takhini’s distance from Whitehorse’s limited light pollution provides a reasonably dark sky), hiking and horse riding on the Takhini Hot Springs trails and the adjacent equestrian facility, wildlife watching on the Klondike Highway approach (moose, foxes, and occasionally wolves in the Takhini River valley), and the Hair Freezing Contest (held on the coldest weekend of the winter — typically January or February; participants soak in the hot spring and create frozen hair sculptures in the -30 to -40°C air). The hot-spring soaking under the aurora is the signature experience.
Best Time to Visit
Takhini is exceptional in every season for different reasons. Winter (November through March) is the northern lights season — the aurora borealis is visible on clear nights (Whitehorse is one of the best-connected aurora-tourism destinations in the world, and Takhini’s valley position and distance from city lights make it an excellent viewing site; the combination of soaking in 42°C spring water in -30°C air under a green curtain of aurora is a genuinely magical experience). The Hair Freezing Contest is the peak community winter event. Summer (June through August) offers the midnight sun experience — soaking in the outdoor pool under the 11 PM sun of the Yukon solstice is equally distinctive. Fall (August through October) brings the peak aurora season (dark enough for aurora viewing but not the deep cold of winter) and the spectacular fall colour of the Takhini valley. Spring (April-May) is the shoulder season; the pool is open but the aurora is fading with the lengthening light.
History
The Takhini Hot Springs have been known to the Yukon First Nations (the Kwanlin Dün and Ta’an Kwäch’än peoples, whose traditional territory encompasses the Takhini River valley) for generations; the warm springs in the cold climate of the southern Yukon interior were a notable resource. The springs were first commercially developed in the 1950s, initially as a modest swimming hole facility. The current private operators (the Takhini Hot Springs Road property) have developed the facility into a year-round destination with improved pool facilities, camping, a horse-riding operation, and the now-internationally known Hair Freezing Contest (inaugurated in 2011, the contest has attracted participants and media attention from around the world and has become a uniquely Yukon contribution to global winter-travel culture). The springs are privately owned and operated; the facility has been renovated and expanded several times in the 2010s.
Geology
Takhini Hot Springs is a low-temperature geothermal spring — the spring water is heated by geothermal gradient (the normal increase in temperature with depth in the Earth’s crust) as it circulates through fracture systems in the Paleozoic and Mesozoic bedrock of the southern Yukon. The spring temperature (36-42°C at the surface) indicates a relatively shallow circulation depth compared to high-temperature geothermal systems (such as Iceland or Yellowstone), but is sufficient to maintain a comfortable outdoor pool temperature year-round, even in Yukon winters that reach -40°C. The spring water is rich in dissolved minerals (primarily calcium and magnesium bicarbonate) picked up during its circulation through the bedrock fractures. The precise source depth and circulation path of the Takhini spring water have not been extensively published; the spring is one of several low-temperature geothermal anomalies in the southern Yukon associated with fault-controlled groundwater circulation.
Wildlife
The Takhini River valley around the hot springs supports the boreal forest wildlife community of the southern Yukon interior — moose (commonly seen in the Takhini River valley on the Klondike Highway approach, feeding in the willow and alder shrubs of the river floodplain), wolves (present in the valley; occasionally heard at night from the facility), red foxes (commonly seen near the facility), snowshoe hare (abundant in the boreal forest; the hare-lynx population cycle is visible in the Takhini valley), Canada lynx (present; rarely seen), beaver (in the Takhini River), bald eagles (in the river corridor), and the common boreal songbirds (white-throated sparrow, dark-eyed junco, yellow-rumped warbler, Swainson’s thrush). In winter, common redpolls and white-winged crossbills visit the spruce forest.
Ecology
Takhini Hot Springs’ most distinctive ecological feature is the microclimate created by the warm spring water — the thermal influence of the springs (which maintain above-freezing temperatures in the immediate vicinity year-round) supports plant species and insect communities that would not survive in the surrounding boreal forest winters. The warm spring outflow creates a zone of open water in the creek even in the depths of a Yukon winter (—40°C) that provides critical habitat for water-dependent invertebrates and occasionally attracts dippers and other water birds in winter. The broader Takhini River valley ecology is classic southern Yukon boreal forest — white spruce, trembling aspen and balsam poplar, with the snowshoe hare and Canada lynx population cycle as the dominant ecological dynamic. The Takhini equestrian operation (horse trails in the adjacent boreal forest) integrates the recreational use with the forest ecology.
Cultural Significance
Takhini Hot Springs holds a unique cultural position in Yukon life — it is the Yukon capital’s primary recreational hot spring, a gathering place for Whitehorse residents and international visitors alike, and the host of the Hair Freezing Contest (an internationally recognized winter event that has become a symbol of Yukon’s celebratory relationship with its extreme winter climate). The aurora borealis viewing from the hot spring has made Takhini a flagship destination in the Yukon aurora tourism industry (Japan, China, and Europe are major source markets for Yukon aurora tourism). The facility is a privately operated example of Yukon entrepreneurship in wilderness tourism — a hot springs operation in a sub-Arctic climate, operated year-round through winters that reach -40°C, is a genuine achievement.
Access and Directions
Takhini Hot Springs is 27 km northwest of downtown Whitehorse. Drive north on the Alaska Highway from Whitehorse, then west on the Klondike Highway (Hwy 2) toward Dawson City; turn north on Takhini Hot Springs Road at approximately Km 10 of the Klondike Highway. The facility is accessible by passenger car on paved road. Public bus service from Whitehorse to Takhini is not available (a taxi or rental car is required). The facility offers pool admission, camping (serviced and unserviced RV and tent sites), and horse-riding packages. Check takhinihotsprings.com for current hours, admission prices, and seasonal operating details. Whitehorse (27 km east; 25 minutes by car) has full resort services. The facility is open year-round; winter hours may differ from summer hours.
Conservation
Takhini Hot Springs is a privately operated facility; the geothermal spring and the pool water are managed by the operators. The spring water is non-recyclable (it flows through and is discharged); no chemicals are added to the hot spring pool (the mineral content of the spring water provides natural water quality; this is a genuine advantage of geothermal hot springs over chlorinated pools). The surrounding boreal forest is the responsibility of the Yukon government (the facility sits on leased Crown land); the forest is not managed for timber but is protected as a buffer around the recreational facility. Respect the wildlife corridor in the Takhini River valley; keep a safe distance from moose (moose are the most dangerous large mammal in the Yukon in terms of human-wildlife encounters — a cow moose with a calf or a bull in rut can be extremely aggressive). Pack out all waste from the facility grounds.
Safety
The primary safety consideration for winter visitors is the cold-air exposure when exiting the hot pool — the temperature differential between the pool (42°C) and the air (-30°C or colder) is 70°C or more; wet skin loses heat extremely rapidly in this differential. Exit the pool into a warm change room; do not linger in the open air in a wet swimsuit at -30°C. The facility provides heated change rooms. Driving to the facility in winter requires a properly winter-equipped vehicle (winter tires; the Klondike Highway can be icy and the Takhini Hot Springs Road is not always plowed immediately after snowfall). The Takhini River valley can have wolves at night — do not wander far from the facility after dark in winter. Children require close supervision at the pool edge (the pool is an open outdoor structure with no fencing on all sides).
Regulations
Admission fee required (check takhinihotsprings.com for current rates; seasonal pricing applies). Swimsuit required in the pool (no nudity). Children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult. Camping at the facility requires a camping fee. No outside food or alcohol in the pool area (facilities include a snack bar). No glass containers in the pool area. Hair Freezing Contest: entry fee applies in winter contest season; check the facility website for contest dates and entry details. Pets are welcome on the camping grounds but not permitted in the pool area. Check the facility website for current hours (seasonal changes apply, particularly for winter vs. summer operating hours).
Nearby Attractions
Whitehorse (27 km east — the Yukon capital, with the MacBride Museum, the SS Klondike National Historic Site, the Yukon Wildlife Preserve, and complete resort services), the Yukon Wildlife Preserve (on the Takhini Hot Springs Road, between the Klondike Highway and the hot springs — a 700-acre semi-wild preserve housing woodland caribou, moose, elk, muskox, Dall sheep, bison, Grizzly bears, black bears, wolverine and other Yukon species in large natural enclosures; the finest one-stop Yukon wildlife viewing for visitors who cannot access the backcountry), Kusawa Lake (south on the Kusawa Lake Road from the Klondike Highway — a 35-km glacially fed wilderness lake with excellent fishing and paddling), and the Klondike Highway corridor northward toward Dawson City define the Takhini region.
Tips
Time a winter visit to Takhini for a clear night when the aurora forecast is active (the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute aurora forecast, available online, gives 3-day aurora activity forecasts; a KP index of 3 or higher from Whitehorse typically provides a good aurora display). Arrive at 9 PM after dark (full dark arrives by 7 PM in December and January in Whitehorse), soak in the 42°C pool under the open Yukon sky, and wait for the aurora — when the green curtain appears overhead while you are submerged to the shoulders in warm spring water and surrounded by frost-covered spruce trees, it is an experience that justifies the trip to the Yukon on its own. Visit the Yukon Wildlife Preserve on the same day (it is on the same road, 15 minutes from downtown Whitehorse) for the morning wildlife viewing — Grizzly bears, Dall sheep, caribou and muskox in natural enclosures — before the hot springs in the evening.
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