Top 10 Hiking and Trekking Destinations in the World
Top 10 Hiking and Trekking Destinations in the World
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For the ultimate combination of mountain grandeur, established infrastructure, and a true bucket-list payoff, the Everest Base Camp Trek, Nepal is the Best Overall trek — a roughly 130 km (12–14 day) round trip to the foot of the world's highest mountain, with teahouse lodging and guide/porter support, typically costing $1,200–$1,800 all-in.
The Best Value pick is the Annapurna region, Nepal, where stunning Himalayan treks like Poon Hill or the Annapurna Circuit cost as little as $25–$40 per day in teahouses. This list is for hikers from day-walkers to seasoned trekkers planning a trip around the trail itself.
Every destination below is a real, established route with real distances, real seasons, and real costs, ranked on scenery, trail experience, accessibility, payoff, and value.
1. Everest Base Camp Trek, Nepal 🏆 BEST OVERALL
The trek to Everest Base Camp (5,364m) is the most iconic high-altitude hike on earth. Over 12–14 days and ~130 km round trip, you pass Sherpa villages, the Tengboche Monastery, and Himalayan giants, culminating at the foot of Everest and the Khumbu Icefall. Teahouses provide food and beds the whole way.
A guided trip runs $1,200–$1,800, with permits and the dramatic Lukla flight included. Best seasons are March–May and September–November. Side trips to Kala Patthar (5,545m) deliver the classic sunrise view of Everest's summit, and the trail's Sherpa culture, prayer flags, and mani stones add a spiritual dimension absent from most mountain treks.
Tackling acclimatization days at Namche Bazaar and Dingboche is key to a safe, successful climb. Best for fit trekkers who want the ultimate Himalayan achievement with established support; altitude acclimatization is essential, but no technical climbing is required.
2. Annapurna Region, Nepal 💎 BEST VALUE
Nepal's Annapurna region offers world-class Himalayan trekking at the lowest cost anywhere. Options range from the short Poon Hill trek (4–5 days) to the classic Annapurna Circuit (12–18 days) crossing the 5,416m Thorong La pass, with sweeping views of Annapurna and Dhaulagiri.
Teahouse trekking costs just $25–$40 per day including food and lodging. The shorter routes are gentle enough for first-time trekkers, while the full circuit ranks among the world's great long walks, passing through dramatic changes in market and culture — from subtropical foothills to the arid, Tibetan-influenced high country.
Annapurna Base Camp (the "ABC trek") offers a stunning amphitheater of peaks in 7–10 days. Best for trekkers who want jaw-dropping Himalayan scenery, cultural villages, and flexible route lengths on a tight budget. The same spring and autumn windows apply.
It's one of the most rewarding value adventures in travel.
3. Inca Trail to Machu Picchu, Peru
The classic Inca Trail is a 43 km (4-day) trek through the Andes along original Inca stone paths, over high passes, past ruins, and through cloud forest, arriving at the Sun Gate above Machu Picchu at dawn. Permits are strictly limited (about 500 people per day, including guides and porters) and sell out months ahead.
A guided trek runs $700–$1,200 including permits and the Machu Picchu entry. If Inca Trail permits sell out, the alternative Salkantay and Lares treks offer equally stunning scenery and also reach Machu Picchu. Acclimatize first in Cusco (3,400m) and the Sacred Valley to handle the high passes, the highest of which (Dead Woman's Pass) tops 4,200m.
Best for travelers who want a culturally rich, ruin-laden trek with a world-famous payoff. The dry season (May–September) is best; the trail closes each February for maintenance.
4. Tour du Mont Blanc, France/Italy/Switzerland
The Tour du Mont Blanc is Europe's premier long-distance trek — a 170 km (7–11 day) loop around the Mont Blanc massif through three countries, with alpine meadows, glaciers, and charming mountain villages. Comfortable refuges and inns mean you can hike hut-to-hut without camping.
It's accessible and well-marked, with lodging and meals readily available (budget $100–$200/day). Best for hikers who want classic Alpine scenery with civilized comforts and no extreme altitude. The season runs mid-June to mid-September. Book refuges early, as the route is popular.
5. Torres del Paine "W" Trek, Chile
In Chilean Patagonia, the "W" trek (about 75 km, 4–5 days) showcases the dramatic granite spires of the Torres del Paine, plus glaciers, turquoise lakes, and the Grey Glacier. The longer "O" circuit adds the remote back side over 8–9 days.
Refugios and campsites line the route; the trek runs $200–$1,000+ depending on lodging style. Best for hikers who want raw, wind-swept Patagonian wilderness and some of the most spectacular mountain scenery on earth. The season is the southern summer (November–March); pack for fierce, fast-changing weather.
6. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro (5,895m) — Africa's highest peak — is a non-technical trek that takes you from rainforest through moorland to a glaciated summit in 5–9 days, depending on route (Machame and Lemosho are popular). It's the highest point you can reach by walking on the continent.
Guided climbs (mandatory) run $1,500–$4,000+ including park fees, guides, and porters. The choice of route matters enormously: the 7–8 day Lemosho and Northern Circuit routes give your body more time to adjust, pushing summit success rates well above the rushed shorter options.
The final pre-dawn push to Uhuru Peak is grueling but unforgettable, and many climbers pair it with a Tanzanian safari afterward. Best for trekkers who want to stand on the "Roof of Africa." Longer routes improve acclimatization and summit success. Best windows are January–March and June–October.
7. Laugavegur Trail, Iceland
Iceland's Laugavegur is a 55 km (3–4 day) trek through otherworldly volcanic landscapes — rhyolite mountains in rainbow colors, geothermal hot springs at Landmannalaugar, black-sand deserts, glaciers, and steaming vents. Mountain huts dot the route.
The season is short, roughly late June to mid-September, with huts costing around ISK 9,000–13,000/night. Best for trekkers who want surreal, geologically dramatic scenery unlike anywhere else, with the chance to extend to Þórsmörk. Weather is volatile — be ready for rain, wind, and river crossings.
8. Dolomites (Alta Via 1), Italy
The Italian Dolomites' Alta Via 1 is a 120 km (7–10 day) high route through some of the most beautiful mountains in the world — sheer limestone towers, alpine lakes, and WWI history — staying in comfortable mountain rifugi with hearty Italian food and wine.
Rifugio half-board runs roughly €60–€90/night. Best for hikers who want spectacular vertical scenery, hut-to-hut comfort, and excellent food without extreme altitude or technical climbing. The season is late June to late September. The trail is well-marked and immensely popular, so book rifugi ahead.
9. Milford Track, New Zealand
Often called "the finest walk in the world," New Zealand's Milford Track is a 53.5 km (4-day) Great Walk through Fiordland — rainforest, the Mackinnon Pass, and Sutherland Falls, ending at the majestic Milford Sound. Numbers are strictly limited, with huts booked far in advance.
The Great Walk season (late October–April) requires reserving hut passes (around NZ$100+/night) when bookings open. Best for hikers who want pristine, rain-soaked wilderness and waterfalls in a tightly managed, uncrowded setting. Book the moment reservations open, as spots vanish within minutes.
10. Appalachian Trail (a section), USA
The Appalachian Trail runs about 2,190 miles from Georgia to Maine, but you don't have to thru-hike (which takes 5–7 months). Iconic day and multi-day sections — like the White Mountains in New Hampshire, the Smokies, or Mount Katahdin — deliver superb forest and ridgeline hiking close to home for North Americans.
Costs are low; shelters and tent sites are free or cheap. Best for travelers who want flexible, accessible long-trail hiking through Eastern U.S. Wilderness, sampling a famous route in days rather than months. Late spring through early autumn is best, depending on the section.
How to Choose
- Match difficulty to fitness and altitude experience. Everest Base Camp, Annapurna Circuit, and Kilimanjaro involve high altitude; the Tour du Mont Blanc, Dolomites, and Milford Track stay lower and are gentler on the lungs.
- Decide camping vs. Huts/teahouses. Nepal teahouses, Alpine rifugi/refuges, and NZ huts let you skip a tent; Patagonia and Iceland mix huts and camping.
- Weigh budget. Nepal's Annapurna is the cheapest world-class trekking ($25–$40/day); Kilimanjaro and the Inca Trail cost more due to mandatory guides and permits.
- Book permits early. The Inca Trail, Milford Track, and popular Alpine refuges sell out months ahead — often the moment booking windows open — so reserve before committing to flights.
- Hit the right season. Nepal and Peru shine in spring/autumn; the Alps, Iceland, and NZ have short summer windows; Patagonia is a southern-summer trek.
- Acclimatize and train. Build in rest days at altitude (Everest, Kilimanjaro) and condition your legs beforehand for multi-day distances and elevation gain.
- Invest in the right gear. Broken-in boots, layered clothing, and trekking poles make a huge difference; for high-altitude treks, carry proper cold-weather kit and know the symptoms of altitude sickness.
FAQ
What is the best trek in the world for a bucket-list trip?
The Everest Base Camp Trek in Nepal is the classic choice — a 12–14 day, ~130 km journey to the foot of the world's highest peak, with teahouse support and no technical climbing, typically $1,200–$1,800. The Inca Trail and Tour du Mont Blanc are top alternatives.
Which trekking destination offers the best value?
Nepal's Annapurna region is unbeatable: world-class Himalayan trekking with teahouse food and lodging for just $25–$40 per day. Flexible route lengths (from the 4–5 day Poon Hill to the multi-week Annapurna Circuit) make it accessible to many budgets.
Do I need a guide for these treks?
Some require one: Kilimanjaro and the Inca Trail mandate licensed guides, and Nepal now requires guides for many trekking regions. Others — the Tour du Mont Blanc, Dolomites, Laugavegur, and Milford Track — are well-marked and can be done independently with good preparation.
When is the best time to go trekking?
It depends on the region. Nepal and Peru are best in spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November); the Alps, Dolomites, and Iceland have short summer windows (roughly late June–September); Patagonia and New Zealand are southern-summer treks (November–March).
Bottom Line
For the ultimate bucket-list trek, walk to Everest Base Camp in Nepal — the world's most iconic high-altitude trail, supported by teahouses, for $1,200–$1,800. For the best value, trek Nepal's Annapurna region, where breathtaking Himalayan routes cost just $25–$40 a day. Both deliver the trip of a lifetime on foot.
Sources
- Nepal Tourism Board and Himalayan trekking permit authorities
- National Geographic — world's best hikes and treks
- Lonely Planet — trekking and hiking guides
- UNESCO World Heritage (Machu Picchu, Torres del Paine area, Te Wahipounamu/Fiordland)
- Tanzania National Parks (Kilimanjaro fees and routes)
- Department of Conservation New Zealand (Great Walks bookings)
- Condé Nast Traveler — best treks in the world