Hike: Dirty Harry’s Balcony
Hike: Dirty Harry’s Balcony
Dirty Harry’s Balcony Hike Report from 6-3-2026: Exact logistics on how this can be your 5-9 after your 9-5
Other Alyssa Outside Posts
- The Ultimate Guide to Washington Hiking Passes: Which One Do You Actually Need?
- 7 Best Hikes Closest to Seattle during FIFA World Cup
- 45 Creative Travel Journaling Prompts
- How to Keep a Travel Journal
- Best Tips for First Time European Backpackers
Dirty Harry’s Balcony At a glance
| Distance | 4.4 mi round-trip (out-and-back) |
| Elevation gain | 1,600 ft (WTA) |
| Highest point | 2,600 ft |
| Difficulty | Moderate |
| Type | Day hike · after-work friendly (if you start earlier than we did) |
| Best season | May–September |
| Drive from Seattle | ~40–55 min to trailhead (I-90 Exit 38) |
| Pass | Discover Pass (DNR / state recreation lands) |
| Dogs | Yes, on leash |
| Land manager | WA Department of Natural Resources |
| Trailhead | Exit 38 → Fire Training Academy → 1.8 mi → parking lot + bathroom |
| WTA | Dirty Harry’s Balcony |
| Map | Green Trails Bandera No. 206 |
Guidebooks vs my GPS
If you are curious, this is the comparison of my Garmin vs what main trail sites are saying.
| Source | Distance | Elev. gain | Est. time |
|---|---|---|---|
| WTA | 4.4 mi | 1,600 ft | Moderate · ~2–3 hr typical |
| AllTrails (Birdhouse route) | 4.3 mi | 1,377 ft | ~2h 41m avg |
| Mountaineers / Green Trails | 4.4 mi | 1,600 ft | Moderate |
| My Garmin (Jun 3, 2026) | 6.6 mi | 1,407 ft | 1h 47m moving · 3h 09m elapsed |
GPS shows extra mileage vs WTA (road approach, overlooks, or watch on before/after trail). Moving time ≠ elapsed… I took a lot of photo breaks since the light at the top of the mountain was so beautiful. Max elev 2,526 ft on watch vs 2,600 ft WTA.
My trip — June 3, 2026
| Who | Group of friends |
| Vibe | After-work hike |
| Drive to trailhead | ~53 min from Seattle (weekday + traffic) |
| Car | 2012 Hyundai Elantra — sedan, no clearance issues, road in fine shape |
| Trailhead | Organized lot, bathroom, no potholes on the approach |
| Started hiking | 6:30 pm (I’d aim for ~5:30 pm next time) |
| Sunset | ~9:00 pm |
| At the balcony | Golden hour — best light of the whole hike |
| Off trail | ~9:30 pm (headlamp section) |
| Back in Seattle | ~10:30 pm — late night! |
Quick logistics
- Pass: Discover Pass on the dash.
- Directions (WTA): I-90 Exit 38 toward the Fire Training Academy → right at the stop sign → 1.8 miles → left under the freeway → trailhead parking. Do not drive past the Dirty Harry’s parking area — the road beyond is closed.
- Trail finding: Graveled path → short road walk → bridge over the South Fork Snoqualmie → trail on the right immediately after the bridge. Well signed from there.
- Payoff: Rocky balcony overlook — Mount Kent, McClellan Butte, Mount Washington. Several overlooks before the signed balcony turnoff; WTA notes the first cliff overlook isn’t the true balcony.
- After-work tip: Start by 5:30 pm in June if you want daylight both ways without a headlamp. Sunset ~9 pm; we traded an early start for golden hour and it was worth it, which means brig a headlamp!
Dirty Harry’s Balcony
Getting to the Trailhead After Work
After work on Wednesday, June 3, I did Dirty Harry’s Balcony with a group of friends. It is in the Olallie / Exit 38 area off I-90, and you need a Discover Pass to park there.
It took about an hour to get to the trailhead on a weekday (53 minutes + traffic). Normally on weekends that would be 40 minutes. I drove my 2012 Hyundai Elantra with no problems.
The trailhead was neat and organized and had a bathroom. There were no potholes getting to the trailhead.
We didn’t start the hike until 6:30. Normally with after work hikes I want to start closer to 5:30 pm. That being said, we had the most amazing golden hour lighting since we were at the top of the mountain right around sunset. Sunset is around 9 pm. We did have to do some hiking in the dark and we got down around 9:30, and then had an hour drive to Seattle. (late night for a work day, but worth it)
Golden Hour
This hike was absolutely beatiful! It gives you wonderful valley views, and has lots of little lookouts even if you don’t make it all the way to the top. The incline is quite steep and intense on the way up, so moving from sedentary work to rapidly hiking up a mountain felt quite intense.
Golden hour hike meant great photos of my friends and I. (I am not sharing all of them here). Love being outdoors on a workday and really makes me appreciate living in Seattle 🙂










