Greenland National Park

Greenland National Park is the world’s largest national park, covering vast Arctic landscapes featuring glaciers, fjords, and rich arctic wildlife. It offers a unique wilderness experience in one of Earth's most remote and pristine environments.

92,707,000
Acres Protected
N/A - No established trails
Miles of Trails
Very limited, estimated under 100 annually
Annual Visitors
1974
Year Established

About Greenland National Park

 

Greenland National Park, established in 1974, is the largest national park on the planet, spanning approximately 375,000 square kilometers (92.7 million acres) of Arctic wilderness in northeastern Greenland. The park extends northwards from the eastern coast of Greenland almost to the northern ice cap, featuring rugged mountain ranges, immense glaciers, deep fjords, and expansive tundra. Its geography is dominated by some of the planet’s most extreme environments, including permanent ice sheets and vast ice-free zones that sustain specialized Arctic flora and fauna. The park is home to a variety of wildlife adapted to the harsh conditions, such as musk oxen, Arctic wolves, Arctic foxes, polar bears, and numerous migratory bird species. Human presence within the park is extremely limited due to its remoteness, and it has no permanent inhabitants or visitor facilities. Recreational access is primarily by scientific expeditions and limited guided tours focused on wildlife observation, glacier trekking, and Arctic mountaineering. Notable landmarks include the massive Flade Isblink ice cap, the rugged nunataks (mountain peaks protruding through the ice), and remote fjords with rich marine ecosystems. Visitors are drawn by the chance to experience an environment largely untouched by development, offering remarkable opportunities for photography, ecological research, and extreme wilderness adventure. Because of its extreme Arctic location, Greenland National Park remains one of the least visited national parks worldwide, prized for solitude, raw natural beauty, and polar ecosystem study.

Highlights

Highlight

Flade Isblink, the largest independent ice cap in Greenland

Highlight

Arctic musk ox and polar bear populations

Highlight

Diverse fjord systems carved by glaciers

Highlight

Remote arctic tundra offering uninterrupted wilderness

Notable Natural Features

Flade Isblink Ice Cap

A large independent ice cap covering thousands of square kilometers, one of Greenland’s most significant glacial features.

Zackenberg Research Station

A key scientific outpost near the park used for ecological and climate research in the high Arctic.

Northeast Greenland National Park Fjords

Remote fjords carved by glaciers, home to diverse marine and bird life with dramatic Arctic landscapes.