Here’s the truth about the Smoky Mountains: some of the best views don’t require a single mile on a trail. You don’t need trekking poles, a hydration pack, or trail-hardened knees to see ridgelines stacked to the horizon. Whether you’re traveling with young kids, older family members, or you simply want stunning scenery without the sweat, the Smokies deliver. This list covers everything from drive-up overlooks inside Great Smoky Mountains National Park to adventure experiences and aerial attractions in Gatlinburg.
Newfound Gap Overlook
Newfound Gap might be the single most accessible “wow” moment in all of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. No trailhead, no permit, no gear. Pull into the parking lot at 5,046 feet on US-441, step out of the car, and you’re standing on the Tennessee-North Carolina state line looking at layer after layer of blue-green ridges.
This is one of the most photographed spots in the park for good reason. The Rockefeller Memorial marks the location where President Franklin Roosevelt dedicated the park in 1940, and the stone wall along the overlook gives you an unobstructed view in multiple directions. On clear mornings, you can see the characteristic smoky haze settling between the ridgelines. It looks exactly like the postcards, except it’s better because you’re standing in it.
A few logistics worth knowing: the drive from Gatlinburg to Newfound Gap takes about 25 minutes, but that’s 25 minutes of winding mountain road with its own set of views along the way. The elevation gain from Gatlinburg (around 1,300 feet) to the overlook is significant, so temperatures at the top can be 10-15 degrees cooler than in town. Bring a layer, even in summer.

Photo by Esteban Carriazo
The crowd situation is real. During peak season, the parking lot at Newfound Gap fills up fast. We’re talking full by 10 a.m. on weekends. If you want to actually enjoy the overlook without jockeying for a spot at the wall, get there before 9 a.m. or aim for a weekday visit. Early morning light is better for photos anyway, and the haze tends to be thinner before the afternoon humidity builds up.
One more thing: Newfound Gap is also the starting point for the Appalachian Trail in the Smokies. You’ll see thru-hikers with loaded packs heading off into the woods, which is a fun bit of people-watching even if you have zero intention of joining them.
Kuwohi Observation Tower
At 6,643 feet, Kuwohi (formerly known as Clingman’s Dome) is the highest point in the Great Smoky Mountains, and the highest point in Tennessee, period. The observation tower at the summit offers 360-degree views that, on the clearest days, stretch into six states. It’s the kind of view that makes you understand why 12 million people a year visit this park.

Photo by Connor Scott McManus
Now, calling this “no hiking” requires a small asterisk. There’s a half-mile paved walkway from the parking area to the observation tower, and it’s steep. We’re talking a 330-foot elevation gain over that half mile, which means it’s essentially a ramp. It’s paved and accessible, but it will get your heart rate up, especially at altitude. Families with strollers manage it regularly, and we’ve seen folks in their 80s at the top — just take it slow and bring water.
The observation tower itself is a distinctive concrete spiral ramp that feels almost space-age. You walk up the curved ramp to the top, and the views open up in every direction. To the south, the peaks roll into North Carolina. To the north, the Tennessee Valley spreads out below. If you’ve been to other Smoky Mountain overlooks and thought the views were good, Kuwohi is the “turn it up to eleven” version.
Seasonal note that catches visitors off guard: Clingmans Dome Road closes from December 1 through March 31 every year. The elevation makes it impassable in winter conditions. Even in early April and late November, conditions can be iffy, so check the park’s road status page before driving up. This also means that if you’re visiting for fall foliage in October, Kuwohi is one of the first places in the park to hit peak color. The spruce-fir forest up there starts turning before anywhere else, which makes it a phenomenal early-October destination.
Foothills Parkway Overlooks
If Newfound Gap and Kuwohi are the headliners, the Foothills Parkway is the local secret that frankly deserves top billing. Multiple pull-off overlooks line this scenic drive, and every single one offers wide-open mountain views with no hiking whatsoever. You park, you walk ten feet, you see mountains. That’s it.

Here’s why we love this one especially for families and mixed-ability groups: there’s no parking stress, no entrance fee (it’s a national park road), and no crowds to speak of. While Newfound Gap has people three-deep at the overlook wall on a Saturday in October, the Foothills Parkway pull-offs might have three or four other cars. It’s a completely different experience. You can take your time. Let the kids run around a bit. Set up a camp chair if you want (we’ve seen people do it, no judgment).
The drive itself is part of the experience. The road winds along a ridgeline with views on both sides, and there’s essentially no commercial development along the route. If you’re coming from Pigeon Forge or Sevierville, the drive to the western section takes about 35-40 minutes, and you can easily loop it into a Cades Cove day or a detour before heading into Gatlinburg.
Anakeesta in Gatlinburg
Anakeesta is what happens when someone decides that downtown Gatlinburg’s biggest limitation — being wedged into a narrow valley — is actually an opportunity. A gondola (they call it the Chondola, which is a chair lift/gondola hybrid) whisks you from the main strip up to a ridgeline village perched above the town. Within minutes, you go from pancake houses and taffy shops to elevated views of the surrounding mountains.

The mountain-top experience includes gardens, restaurants, a firepit village, and some genuinely beautiful vistas of Mt. LeConte and the surrounding Smoky Mountain peaks. The best part? You don’t hike a single step to get the views, the Chondola does all the work. Once you’re up top, the paths are gentle and well-maintained, making this one of the most accessible scenic viewpoints in the Gatlinburg area for families with young kids or anyone with mobility considerations.
We should mention something here because it comes up a lot: CLIMB Works built Anakeesta’s Treetop Skywalk and some of the treehouse playgrounds up there. We’re proud of that work. But Anakeesta operates independently from us; they run their own show, set their own prices, and we don’t offer any combo packages with them. We get asked about this all the time, so we want to be upfront. If you want to visit Anakeesta and do our Mountaintop Zipline Tour, you’d book each separately.
Anakeesta tickets run around $30-$40 for adults depending on the season and what package you choose (they have different tiers). It’s not cheap, but you can easily spend half a day up there, especially with kids. The Treetop Skywalk, which is a series of connected bridges through the forest canopy, is a unique way to experience the mountain’s ecosystem from above without any athletic ability required.
Crowd tip: Weekday mornings are your friend here. Weekend afternoons in summer and October see the longest gondola wait times. If you’re going on a Saturday, arrive right at opening.
The Gatlinburg SkyBridge
SkyLift Park’s claim to fame is the Gatlinburg SkyBridge, North America’s longest pedestrian suspension bridge, spanning 680 feet between two mountain peaks above downtown Gatlinburg. And you get there via a chair lift ride, so there’s no hiking involved or trails to navigate.

The views from the bridge itself are dramatic. You’re walking above the treetops with the Smoky Mountains framing the horizon in every direction and Gatlinburg spread out far below like a tiny model village. About halfway across, there’s a glass-bottom section, which is either the highlight of your day or the reason you grip the railing with white knuckles (or, honestly, both at the same time). Kids generally love it. Some adults need a minute.
The SkyBridge experience works well for almost every age and ability level. The chair lift accommodates most visitors, and the bridge itself is wide and has solid railings. It sways gently, but it’s nothing that should deter someone who’s even mildly comfortable with heights. At the far end of the bridge, there’s a viewing platform and a short loop trail through the woods if you want to stretch your legs. There’s also a café at the top with coffee and snacks, so you can sit with a drink and just soak in the view for a while.
Best times to visit: Weekday mornings, hands down. SkyLift Park gets heavy traffic on summer and fall weekends, especially between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Tickets are around $30 for adults, and you’ll want to budget about an hour for the full experience (chair lift up, bridge walk, viewing platform, chair lift down), though there’s no reason you can’t linger longer.
One thing to note: this is a different experience from Anakeesta, even though both involve going up a mountain in Gatlinburg. SkyLift Park is more focused, so you’re there for the bridge and the views. Anakeesta is more of a full-day destination with multiple activities. Both deliver on the “Smoky Mountain views without hiking” promise, just in different ways.
CLIMB Works Mountaintop Zipline Tour
We’re biased here, and we own it. But if you want Smoky Mountain views that go beyond “stand at a wall and look,” the Mountaintop Zipline Tour delivers something no overlook or gondola can replicate: you’re in the view, moving through it, 400+ feet above where you started, with Great Smoky Mountains National Park literally across the street.
Here’s how it works. Your experience begins with a scenic UTV ride that climbs 400+ vertical feet up the mountain. Your guide drives you up a rugged mountain road while the tree canopy opens up and the ridgelines of the national park start revealing themselves below. By the time you reach the first zipline platform, you’ve gained serious elevation without taking a single step on a trail. Guests tell us all the time that the UTV ride is one of their favorite parts, especially folks who came expecting the ziplines to be the whole show.
From there, it’s six dual side-by-side ziplines (so you can ride next to your partner, your kid, or your best friend), four aerial bridges, and a controlled rappel. The dual zipline setup is something we hear about a lot. You’re not just experiencing the view solo; you’re looking over at someone you love, both of you suspended above the Smokies, and there’s something about that shared moment that hits different than standing at a parking lot overlook.
No hand braking required. Our system handles the braking for you, which means you don’t have to worry about technique, you just enjoy the ride and the scenery. Expert staff handles all equipment hookups and transfers. This matters especially for families with kids (ages 5 and up can ride, and those under 70 lbs may ride tandem with a guide) and for anyone who’s nervous about the “adventure” part. We’ve designed this for the regular people who love the outdoors, not just adrenaline junkies.

Our location at 155 Branam Hollow Rd sits surrounded on three sides by Great Smoky Mountains National Park. When you’re on the ziplines, you’re not looking at the park from a distance, but rather looking into it from above. The perspective is something guests consistently say surprised them. They expected fun. They didn’t expect to feel like they were flying over one of the most storied landscapes in the eastern United States.
Practical details: We’re open year-round (closed Sundays) and operate rain or shine. The only closures are for lightning or sustained winds above 35 mph. Arrive 40 minutes early; late arrivals forfeit their tour with no refund. Closed-toe shoes are required (rentals are available if you forgot). Free lockers are provided for keys and small items.
Reserve at least 5 days ahead during peak season. You can book your Smokies zipline adventure online 24/7 or call us at (865) 325-8116. And if you want to pair ziplining with whitewater rafting, check out our combo packages with Smoky Mountain Outdoors — it makes for a full day of adventure without a single trail mile.
Requirements to know: Kids must be at least 5 years old and 42 inches tall. Maximum weight is 270 pounds (250 if under 5’10”). Children under 70 pounds can ride tandem with a guide or sibling, which is a great option for younger kids who meet the age requirement but are on the smaller side. Ages 5–14 need an accompanying adult on the tour; 15 and up can go independently.


Combo potential:
A few practical notes that’ll save you frustration when the weather turns:
























Read through our Google reviews and one pattern jumps out immediately: people aren’t just talking about the views. They’re talking about guides named Slick, Beau, CC, Sylvi — real people who made their trip.





