Hot Springs

printer iconPrintemail iconEmailfavorites iconSave to Favorites

The western part of the Flathead Reservation has a couple of commercial hot springs in and around the very modest and unresortlike town of Hot Springs. Several massage therapists have practices in town, so it’s easy to get very relaxed here.

Locals mix with day trippers up from Missoula at Camas Hot Springs, a series of outdoor pools on the northeast edge of town developed by the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. Two soaking pools, one large and one small, are near a path leading to hot seeps welling up from the ground. Admission is $5 for the whole day, and no-frills RV camping is available.

Another tribe-run site is Rose’s Plunge, at the Camas Recreation Center.

Wild Horse Hot Springs (406/741-3777, 11 a.m.–8 p.m., $5), six miles off Highway 28 from Hot Springs, is a place to relax in a private room with a plunge, a steam room, a shower, and a toilet. The plunge is like a cement baby pool with hot water. It’s not a posh place, but it somehow has the feeling of a refuge, a place where chills and bone weariness melt away and you’re left with your pores open to the rolling hills and golden light of the surrounding reservation. RV camping is available out back, but most people just come for a soak.

If you do want to spend the night within an easy sniff of the waters, Symes Hot Springs Hotel and Mineral Baths (104 Wall St., 406/741-2361, www.symeshotsprings.com, $50–115) has rooms with bathtubs plumbed with the local sulfurous brew; there are also newer outdoor soaking and swimming pools. This downtown Hot Springs hotel is a mix between an old-fashioned therapeutic spa and a New Age retreat, with a pretty good restaurant, helpful staff, and relaxed, friendly clientele.

Economy rooms are equipped with a toilet and sink off the bedroom; to bathe you go downstairs to a long row of huge claw-foot tubs, each enclosed in its own wooden cubicle, and draw yourself a bath. Showers are also available, and more expensive rooms ($68 and up) have their own tubs. If you’re here for the real treatment, there’s a massage therapist on site.

Another Hot Springs original is Alameda’s Hot Springs Retreat (308 N. Springs St., 406/741-2283, $50–75), which has hot tubs, massages, and rooms (all with private toilet but some with shared shower facilities) in an old-fashioned motel. Pets are allowed both here and at Symes.

Buy Moon Travel Guides

Loading books
loading
For more Moon travel information, sign up for our monthly e-newsletter for updates on new travel guide releases, travel tips and trip ideas for those seeking adventure or relaxation, and expert advice from our on-the-go Moon travel authors.

Find Activities>>

Moon Travel Guides make independent travel and outdoor exploration fun and accessible. With expert and adventurous travel writers delivering a mix of honest insight, first-rate strategic travel advice, insider travel tips and an essential dose of humor, Moon Travel Guides ensure that travelers have an uncommon and entirely satisfying experience. Each travel book is filled with unique trip ideas, easy-to-use maps, and detailed information on sights, restaurants, and accommodations. Moon Travel Guides not only point you in the right direction, they inspire new ideas and adventure. Whether you are seeking a relaxing beach trip to Hawaii, or an adventure travel trip to the rainforests of Costa Rica, Moon guidebooks—and Moon.com—are with you every step of the way. Founded in 1973, the Moon Travel Guides series includes Moon Handbooks, Moon Outdoors, Moon Metro, Moon Living Abroad and Moon Spotlight travel books. Moon is based in Berkeley, California and is a proud member of the Perseus Books Group.