Experience the best of Juneau with our Private Tour Package. This tour is perfect for families, small groups, or couples who want to explore the natural beauty and fascinating history of Alaska's capital city.
Price:
SUV - Up to 6 people.
$399.00 per group
Van - 7 to 12 people
$550.00 per group
Duration: 3 hours
Highlights: Governor's Mansion, Shrine of St. Therese, Salmon Hatchery, and more.
Inclusions: Private transportation, knowledgeable local guide.
Our tour package is designed to give you a personalized and intimate experience of Juneau's most iconic landmarks and hidden gems.
With our lowest price guarantee, you can be sure you're getting the best value for your money. Plus, our knowledgeable and friendly guides are passionate about sharing their love of Juneau with visitors and will customize the tour to your interests and preferences.
Book Tour NowWant to know better about bears? You'll never be far from one as Alaska is a unique bear country as all three species of North American bears thrive here, black bears, brown bears (including grizzly), or polar bears.
The most commonly found seal species in the waters around Juneau is the harbor seal? These seals are well adapted to living in the icy waters of the region and can often be seen basking on rocks near the shore or swimming in the ocean. Interestingly, harbor seals are able to hold their breath for up to 30 minutes and can dive to depths of up to 1,500 feet in search of food.
Eagles flourish in Alaska because the human population is comparatively sparse and food is abundant. With ample natural habitat along the coast, lakes, rivers and offshore islands, this makes Alaska to have the largest population of bald eagles in the United States.
Sheep Creek is a popular spot for salmon fishing in Juneau, but did you know that it's also a great place to see bald eagles? The area around the creek is home to a significant population of eagles, who come to feast on the salmon during the annual spawning season. In fact, it's not uncommon to see dozens of eagles perched in the trees along the creek, waiting for their next meal. If you're lucky, you might even get to see them swoop down to grab a fish right out of the water!
A half-mile wide, with ice up to 1,800 feet deep, it's little wonder this is Juneau's most popular destination. Whether you're in town for a day or week, there are many ways to experience the glacier. Mendenhall Glacier is one of the many large glaciers that flow from the 1500 square mile expanse of rock, snow and ice known as the Juneau Icefield. As glacial ice continues to build, gravity pulls the ice down slope. The glacier slowly scours the bedrock and grinds down its 13-mile journey to Mendenhall Lake. Your Guide to Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau. Mendenhall Glacier is by far the most iconic and popular attraction in Juneau, and for good reason. Mendenhall Glacier is only about 12 miles from downtown Juneau, which makes it one of the most accessible in the entire state.
If you want to recharge mind, body, and soul, you may get that revered getaway and experience that spritual sanctity at the Shrine of Therese, popularly known as “The Little Flower of Jesus”. A place to take friends, relatives and acquaintances and embrace the outstanding beauty which overlooks the Lynn Canal, with the Chilkat Mountains in the background.
With a totem pole outside, this 26-room building has eight fireplaces to keep the wet, cold winter at bay. This estate was built in 1913 for $40,000, and now houses the Alaskan Governor. The building resembles a twentieth-century version of a New England colonial house.
The famous Alaskan Copper River salmon, has a unique five-star taste and quality due to its limited availability. Alaska is diverse to seven species of Pacific salmon: Chinook salmon, sockeye salmon, chum salmon, pink salmon, and coho salmon, as well as rainbow trout and cutthroat trout. That's why Alaska is known as the salmon mecca of the world where some of the best salmon fishing in the US can be found in here.
Whale watching is one of Alaska’s top outdoor adventure activities. These majestic social cetaceans, mystical ang graceful, frequent the outer coast of Southeast Alaska on the way to summer feeding grounds in the Bering Sea spend at least part of the year in Alaskan waters
View baby salmon year round and meet over 150 local marine species in the various aquariums and touch tanks where just over 130 million chum, king and coho salmon are annually raised. Unravel in front of your eyes the outside operations of an active hatchery and learn about what it takes to raise salmon. The adult salmon would swim up a 450 foot fish ladder and gather into holding ponds until the fish are ready to reproduce.
Northwest Coast art evolved over several thousand years in the rich and complex Indigenous societies of the Pacific Northwest of North America. From the earliest contact with Westerners, wood carvings, weavings and other cultural pieces depicting Northwest Coast art were aggressively collected by museums and visitors and acclaimed as one of the most distinctive and unique art traditions in the world.
This full-sized bronze humpback whale appears to breach out of an infinity pool. It is easily accessed on foot from downtown, less than a mile's walk along the waterfront.