Hiking & Helene: Storm Damage Info for 2026 Hikers
Nov 6, 2025
Nov 6, 2025
Hurricane Helene, which hit the southern Appalachians in late September 2024, caused widespread destruction. Closures and detours due to the storm are still in effect.
Continue reading for the best ways to plan your A.T. adventure and learn about how to stay safe in areas with storm damage. We will continue to update our Helene Trail Alert with the latest closures and conditions.
Register your hiking plans on ATCamp.org and sign up to receive urgent Trail Alerts.
Fields of downed trees left by the storm create the perfect fuel source for wildfires to spread quickly, which could have devastating effects on the already damaged landscape.
Wildfire risk remains even after temporary rains, especially in the Roan and Grayson Highlands. These areas are home to rare and critically imperiled southern spruce-fir forest. Damaged spruce-fir trees dry out extremely quickly and are very flammable.
Wildfires pose a serious risk to both hikers and local communities that border the forest.
Matts Creek Fire. Photo by USFS.
The ATC strongly recommends that A.T. hikers not have campfires and exercise caution when using camp stoves between Davenport Gap and the New River at Pearisburg, VA, regardless of whether official burn bans are in place.
There is an official burn ban in the Roan Highlands from Hughes Gap to Doll Flats (NOBO miles 374.2 to 392.6).
All of the open sections of the A.T. that were damaged by Helene are now “punched-through,” meaning that the footpath itself is passable. However, more work is needed.
Remember, the severity and scale Helene means storm damaged areas will remain dynamic for years.
Trees will continue to fall. Soil will continue to erode and move. Don’t be afraid to turn around and skip around severe damage. Continue reading this blog for more details on what to expect in storm-damaged areas and how to stay safe.
The Chestoa Bridge that the A.T. followed across the river was washed away during the storm. Since bridge construction is expected to begin in 2026 and truck traffic has greatly reduced in the area, a ferry service will not be offered again in 2026. Hikers can either follow the road walk detour (3.6 miles) or shuttle around. Shuttling around the river vs. walking the detour will not impact a hiker’s eligibility for our 2,000-miler program.
Nolichucky River DetourThere is a ~6 mile detour around Iron Mountain Gap to route hikers away from a storm debris removal project. This project will reduce wildfire risk by removing downed trees. The project is still underway and uses heavy logging and construction equipment. Because of this, the detour will remain in place until storm debris removal is complete.
The detour is the official route of the Trail and is marked with temporary white plastic blazes.
Iron Mountain Gap DetourConstruction work to rebuild the Virginia Creeper National Recreation Trail (Creeper Trail) following damage from Helene began in November 2025. The A.T. is closed from Highway 58 at Straight Branch to Grassy Ridge Road where the Trail is co-aligned with or closely parallels the Creeper Trail outside of Damascus.
A.T. hikers can either take a detour that uses several side trails to route around the closed section (including the Iron Mountain Trail, which was the A.T. until 1972), or shuttle around the closed section. Shuttling around vs. walking the detour will not impact a hiker’s eligibility for our 2,000-miler program.
VA Creeper Trail DetourThe ATC, Trail Club volunteers, USFS, and NPS have all been working extremely hard since the storm to assess damage, clear the Trail, and gather funding and resources to restore the Trail.
Just because other hikers say that an area is passable does not mean that it is safe.
The area around Iron Mountain Gap and the closed section along the VA Creeper Trail are closed for hiker safety and to give crews room to work. Always stay out of closed sections.
Official closures from the U.S. Forest Service are legally binding, meaning that you can be fined and/or arrested for being in closed areas.
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The Importance of Preparation and Flexibility in 2026
Storm Damage: What to expect and how to stay safe
Areas hit by Hurricane Helene are still changing and evolving, even more than a year later, and will continue to do so. Good judgment and the ability to safely adapt to changing conditions are as important for A.T. hikers as the 10 Essentials.

Storm damage in southwest VA.
Remain flexible and be prepared to change your plans if needed.
The A.T. north of the Smokies and into Virginia all saw impacts from Hurricane Helene, with the worst of the damage along the North Carolina-Tennessee border into Damascus. Learn about the conditions you may encounter and how to stay safe.

Recent completed work of rebuilding the Appalachian Trail is shown with a cut up tree that was taken down by Hurricane Helene in late September of 2024. (Ben Earp/Ben Earp Photography)

It would not be a good idea to take a break or camp under this dead, leaning tree!
Know how to identify hazardous trees. These are standing dead, damaged, and or diseased trees that could fall anytime, especially during windy weather. Look for dead, leaning, snagged, or damaged trees (large cracks in the bark, dying or dead branches, fallen trees caught in others).

With fewer tree roots to hold the ground in place, landslides are still a risk in storm-damaged areas. Sections of the footpath (also called the tread or treadway) may have still severe erosion. Other sections will be soft and unstable. There may be large craters in the treadway due to uprooted trees, which are especially hard to see in snow.
Weather Forecast Helene Landslides

Volunteer Crew at Trimpi Shelter in 2025
A.T. Maintaining Clubs, USFS staff, and ATC crews have been hard at work this season repairing damage from Helene, and will continue to work on storm-damaged sections in 2026. You can support their efforts and the Trail’s recovery by giving them room to work and making sure it is safe to pass before continuing on your way.
Consider flip-flopping or saving storm-damaged sections until the fall to give crews more time and space to work this spring and summer.
Last but not least, please say thank you! Many of the crew members you’ll run into on the A.T. are volunteers. Everyone you meet working on the Trail is there because they love it and want to keep it open for everyone. A simple thank you goes a long way toward making these folks feel appreciated for their hard work!
A.T. Clubs welcome volunteers to join them on a workday or you can sign up for a multi-day volunteer trail crew experience. There will also be more Helene repair-related trail crew projects in 2026. Check out all our volunteer opportunities and sign up for our volunteer newsletter by clicking the button below.
Become a VolunteerMany small mountain towns along the Trail rely on hiker business during the spring, summer, and fall months. As communities along the A.T. in the south continue to rebuild, you can help recovery efforts by patronizing local businesses in places that are welcoming visitors again.
Be sure to check with individual communities and businesses ahead of time to see if they are open to visitors. If businesses and towns are open, consider visiting these impacted Trail towns:
You can help by patronizing local businesses. If your budget allows:

Appalachian Trail – Hardcore Work Day (Ben Earp/Ben Earp Photography)
If you’d like to help with recovery efforts in towns or at hostels along the way, please call ahead first to ask about opportunities. Help will be welcomed in many places, but showing up unannounced or self-deploying can take up valuable resources, create confusion, or slow things down.
The ATC and our partners are already posting volunteer opportunities to help rebuild the A.T. and will continue to do so into 2026. Sign up for our volunteer newsletter to receive information about opportunities, including our Trail crews.
Receive Volunteer OpportunitiesYou can also donate to the ATC and support our work to repair, rebuild, and reconnect the Trail.
Remember that we are all stewards of this special place. The A.T. has flourished for more than 100 years and, with your help and careful planning, will remain a premier National Scenic Trail for another 100 years and more!
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