Distance is one measure of a hike. Elevation gain is the one that decides how your legs feel the next morning. We pulled every trail in Louisiana with a measurable elevation-gain tag — out of the 998 entries OutsideAtlas tracks here — and ranked them by total vertical. The result is a roster of climbs that punch above their mileage.
Louisiana is flat and water-defined — cypress swamps, bayou systems, longleaf pine flatwoods, and the Kisatchie Hills as the lone area of significant relief. Driskill Mountain (535 ft) is the state high; vertical-gain rankings flag Kisatchie Hills sections. Cottonmouths, alligators, and heat stroke are real but mostly manageable; the harder hazard is route-finding in flooded bottomlands.
Our rankings here are data-driven — pulled from the 998 mapped entries OutsideAtlas tracks in Louisiana — but the data has limits worth being honest about. Elevation-gain figures depend on the surveyor and the digital-elevation model used. Some trails are missing this tag entirely and are excluded from the list. Treat numbers as approximate but directionally reliable.
Not enough data — yet
We don't have enough well-tagged trails to produce a credible ranking for this category in Louisiana right now. Rather than fill the page with sparse entries, we've left it short. As OpenStreetMap contributors and Recreation.gov keep tagging routes, this list will populate.
In the meantime, you can browse all 998 Louisiana trails and use the filter chips to narrow by difficulty or distance.
Planning your Louisiana trip
A few pieces of context are worth keeping in mind specifically for Louisiana. October through April is the practical window; summer humidity and biting insects make midday hiking miserable. Cottonmouths, alligators, and heat stroke are real but mostly manageable; the harder hazard is route-finding in flooded bottomlands.
Always cross-reference the official land-manager page before driving out — closures, fire restrictions, and seasonal road access can change quickly. Our trail pages link directly back to the OpenStreetMap source so you can see the tags we're working from.
If you're new to hiking generally, our beginner's guide covers footwear, layering, and the day-pack basics. For safety planning on bigger objectives, the ten essentials guide is worth twenty minutes of reading.
More Louisiana hiking guides
If you found this useful, the rest of our Louisiana coverage continues below.
- Top 10 longest trails in Louisiana — Multi-day routes and through-hikes ranked by distance.
- Best beginner hikes in Louisiana — Easy, well-marked trails for first-time hikers.
- Most challenging hikes in Louisiana — Expert-rated routes for experienced hikers only.
- Best national parks in Louisiana — Federal parks and recreation areas ranked.
- Best waterfall hikes in Louisiana — Trails leading to named falls, ranked by accessibility.
- Best dog-friendly hikes in Louisiana — Where leashed dogs are explicitly welcome.
- Best family hikes in Louisiana — Short, easy trails sized for kids and grandparents.
Rankings like this are starting points, not verdicts. Trail conditions change, new routes get tagged, and what was the toughest trail in Louisiana last year might not be next year. We refresh these articles when the underlying data shifts meaningfully.
Got a correction, a route we missed, or a question? Drop us a note via the contact page. We read every email and we'd rather hear it from you than miss it.