Stay near McKenzie Bridge
Use Belknap Hot Springs Lodge and Gardens as the trip anchor, then compare hotels or nearby town bases close enough for the soak, dinner, and the drive home.
Four Oregon hot springs spanning the most photographed wild travertine soak (Umpqua), the retreat-cooperative community (Breitenbush), a remote Harney County pond resort (Crystal Crane), and the year-round McKenzie River developed property (Belknap).
Oregon's hot springs portfolio is built around four genuinely different experiences. The state's geothermal activity concentrates in the southern Cascades and the high desert of southeast Oregon, with smaller systems in the central Cascades and along the McKenzie River corridor. We have a guide for each region.
Umpqua Hot Springs in the southern Cascades is one of the most-photographed wild hot springs in the Pacific Northwest, with cascading travertine pools above the North Umpqua River. The trail in is short (0.4 miles each way, steep) and the day-use fee is $5 per vehicle. The road is gated in winter. Breitenbush Hot Springs in the central Cascades is a worker-owned cooperative on 154 acres in the Willamette National Forest, rebuilding from the 2020 Santiam Fire. Belknap Hot Springs on the McKenzie River is year-round developed lodging with two mineral pools and 8 cabins. Crystal Crane Hot Springs near Burns is the remote Eastern Oregon option, with a 323,000-gallon natural-source pond, cedar bathhouses, teepees, and a camp kitchen.
Cascading travertine terrace pools above the North Umpqua River. Short steep hike, $5 vehicle fee, road gated in winter.
Worker-owned cooperative on 154 acres. Clothing-optional, off-grid, vegetarian meals included, rebuilding from 2020 fire.
Open 365 days a year. Two mineral pools, 19 lodge rooms, 8 cabins with kitchens, 12% Lane County lodging tax.
323,000-gallon natural-source pond in Harney County. Cedar bathhouses, teepees, camp kitchen, edge-of-the-country setting.
Eastern Oregon's wide-open soak: a 323,000-gallon natural-source pond surrounded by Harney County high desert, with cedar bathhous
Oregon's most photographed wild hot springs: cascading travertine pools on a forest hillside above the North Umpqua River.
Oregon's signature retreat-community hot springs: worker-owned cooperative, clothing-optional, no WiFi, no day-use casual visits,
Oregon's year-round McKenzie River developed resort: two mineral pools, 19 lodge rooms, 8 cabins, and an acres-large garden settin
Umpqua Hot Springs in the Umpqua National Forest near Toketee Falls. Wild USFS pools.
Breitenbush Hot Springs retreat cooperative in the Willamette National Forest.
Belknap Hot Springs developed resort, plus nearby wild Cougar / Terwilliger Hot Springs.
Crystal Crane Hot Springs near Burns, plus the wild Alvord, Hart Mountain, and Snively springs.
Oregon hot springs split sharply by season. Umpqua's NF-3401 access road is gated November through April, restricting wild-soak season to May through October. Breitenbush is open year-round but the most accessible season is late spring through fall. Belknap operates 365 days a year. Crystal Crane is year-round (closed only Thanksgiving and Christmas). Summer weekends fill at all four; weekdays are the better experience.
Start with the soak, then choose the town base that keeps the drive, dinner, and pool access simple. These links point to practical hotel searches near the main trip anchors.
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Use Belknap Hot Springs Lodge and Gardens as the trip anchor, then compare hotels or nearby town bases close enough for the soak, dinner, and the drive home.
Use Umpqua Hot Springs as the trip anchor, then compare hotels or nearby town bases close enough for the soak, dinner, and the drive home.
Use Crystal Crane Hot Springs as the trip anchor, then compare hotels or nearby town bases close enough for the soak, dinner, and the drive home.
Use Breitenbush Hot Springs Retreat & Conference Center as the trip anchor, then compare hotels or nearby town bases close enough for the soak, dinner, and the drive home.
The springs themselves are physically accessible year-round, but the USFS access road (NF-3401) is gated from November through April, blocking vehicle access. Winter visits require either ski or snowshoe travel from the gated section, which adds substantial mileage. The realistic season for most visitors is May through September.
The September 2020 Santiam Fire swept through the Breitenbush drainage and destroyed most guest infrastructure (Sanctuary, Buddha's playhouse, all guest cabins, bathrooms and showers). The pools, river, and many trees survived. The cooperative chose to rebuild and reopened with limited lodging in early 2021. Rebuilding continues; lodging availability remains reduced from pre-fire levels. Devil's Hole wading area reopened in 2025.
Some are, some are not. Breitenbush Hot Springs is clothing-optional by policy. Umpqua Hot Springs is officially on USFS land where swim attire is required, but in practice the upper pools often have clothing-optional culture. Belknap Hot Springs is swimsuit-required. Crystal Crane Hot Springs requires swimsuits in the main outdoor pond, while private cedar bathhouses are private.
About 230 miles south, roughly 4 hours via I-5 and OR-138. Most Portland visitors do Umpqua as part of a Crater Lake trip (Crater Lake is 30 minutes further east on OR-138) or a longer southern Oregon road trip.
Belknap Hot Springs is the most family-oriented developed option, but note the age restriction: children must be 5 or older to enter the pools. Crystal Crane Hot Springs welcomes families. Breitenbush and Umpqua are adult-oriented and not suitable for most families with young children (Breitenbush is clothing-optional, Umpqua has scald-risk pools and a steep trail).
Yes, several. Cougar Hot Springs (Terwilliger) near McKenzie Bridge, Bagby Hot Springs near Estacada, Hart Mountain Hot Springs in Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge, Snively Hot Springs near Vale, and Alvord Hot Springs in southeast Oregon are all worth comparing. Umpqua Hot Springs charges only a $5 per vehicle USFS day-use fee.