- Experience Montana’s natural beauty in solitude during the less-trafficked shoulder seasons, fall and spring.
- Fall brings vibrant foliage and active wildlife, making it a prime time for nature enthusiasts.
- Spring offers a chance to see roaring waterfalls and enjoy peaceful hikes away from the summer crowds.
Montana is most commonly known as Big Sky Country. It’s an apt nickname referring to the vast horizon lines that characterize much of the landscape. Travel westward, and those lines will increasingly be met with mountains as they trace the distant edges of your field of view. Speckled throughout is a kaleidoscope of wonder: national parks, natural phenomena, and unspoiled forests filled with wildlife. All of it makes the official motto of this place—the “Treasure State”—far more suitable as a moniker. And if you venture here during shoulder season, the greatest treasure is getting it all to yourself.
“Fall is my favorite season in Montana,” says Paul Makarechian, Bozeman native and owner of Lone Mountain Ranch, a luxury property set on 148 acres of secluded farmland in the rugged southwestern part of the state. “Crowds are less, the trees turn colors, the wildlife is active, the rivers are teeming with fish, and the air quality is perfect.”
Courtesy of Lone Mountain Ranch
Lone Mountain’s 26 standalone cabins are also easier to secure this time of year. Come Christmas, its proximity to Big Sky ski resort makes reservations more scarce (and much costlier), as does the property’s access to ample Nordic adventure and horse-drawn sleigh rides.
Of course, some of that burden was lessened with the opening of the Montage. The 139-room hotel stands out as the largest lodge of its kind in a town that has approximately 3,000 year-round residents. Guests can enjoy ski-in, ski-out access and amenities including spa services and five separate food and beverage concepts.
Arrive in the summer, and the masses are mostly drawn to Yellowstone. The western entrance to one of the most-visited national parks in the U.S. is just an hour away from Big Sky. But in early fall and late spring, the splendor of this backcountry is hardly lessened. Thousands of hydrothermal features, including geysers, fumaroles, and hot springs, remain active and accessible—some even by snowcoach. By early November, the park’s 5,000-strong population of bison has begun a mass migration to lower elevations. The wildlife viewing is in full swing, and the only thing missing is the traffic.
Although most of the famed lodges and inns of Yellowstone close for the season at the end of October, the historic Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel and Cabins remains open throughout fall and winter.
But many will opt to roll into this part of the country riding their own lodging in RV form. This is especially true in the early spring, when most seasonal inns have yet to open. It’s a great way to get an early jump on sightseeing, and nowadays you don’t even have to own a recreational vehicle to operate one. Startups such as RVshare are bringing the Airbnb model to mobile homes, and they’re especially useful in western Montana, with its bounty of RV parks at your disposal.
Courtesy of RVShare
“Montana and the Intermountain West are by far the most popular areas to discover by RV,” says Jon Gray, CEO of RVshare. “There are endless opportunities for exploration among state and national parks and scenic highway routes. This time of year, the parks are less crowded and there is more RV inventory available than in the peak summer months.”
Ideal for families and group travel, you can reserve well-appointed examples that sleep up to six people. And there are plenty of sleek and stylish models to choose from in hip boomtowns like Bozeman and Missoula—perfect locales to start and end your road trip adventures. In Bozeman, Main Street connects to the Mountains trail system, affording direct access from downtown to more than 80 miles of surrounding hikes. Missoula, meanwhile, is Montana’s undisputed gastronomic hub, with dozens of eateries, craft breweries, and distilleries lining the banks of the Clark Fork River.
In either town, businesses are ready to receive you in spring and fall, often at discounted rates for everything from dining to overnight stays. “Shoulder season is especially great for those who can work remotely and take advantage of low prices and dissipated crowds,” adds Gray.
Outdoor adventurers are rewarded with vivid foliage in the fall. The climate is relatively dry during this time of year, but it’s wise for visitors to pack some extra layers. Conversely, the spring thaw bestows backwoods trekkers with an abundance of waterfalls. Glacier National Park contains hundreds of them, many of which you can hike to even when Going-to-the-Sun Road is closed to vehicular traffic. Late May and mid-October are great times to rent an e-bike and pedal along the famed scenic route. You’ll enjoy the views sans the stress of having to share a high-altitude active motorway. Plus, you’ll work up a nice sweat to fend off afternoon temperatures, which often dip below 40 degrees.
“It can get crisp quickly on either side of the summer,” says Makarechian. “But you really can’t go wrong visiting during shoulder season. This is nature’s playground. Even if it’s a bit chilly, you can always admire it from a hot spring, with a glass of wine in hand.” A state worth treasuring, indeed.


