Plan Your Visit

Getting Here & Around

Tahoe is easier to reach than it looks — here's how to fly in, drive over the passes, and get around once you arrive.

By Air

Nearest Airports

For the North and East Shore, one airport is in a class of its own for convenience.

~45 min

Reno-Tahoe International (RNO)

By far the closest major airport to the North and East Shore. Rent a car and you're at Incline Village in well under an hour via the Mt. Rose Highway (weather permitting).

~2 hours

Sacramento International (SMF)

A solid alternative from the west, often with more flight options. The drive climbs I-80 over Donner Pass to the North Shore.

~3.5 hours

San Francisco / Oakland (SFO / OAK)

The biggest choice of flights, but the longest drive — best if you're already visiting the Bay Area.

By Car

Driving In

A car is the way to do Tahoe — distances between beaches, trailheads and towns are real, and transit is limited.

From Reno

The Mt. Rose Highway (NV-431) drops you straight onto the East Shore at Incline Village — scenic and quick, but a high pass that's the first to see snow. I-80 via Truckee is the all-weather backup.

From Sacramento & the Bay Area

I-80 climbs over Donner Pass to Truckee, then drops to the North Shore — the main artery from the west, and the most reliably maintained in winter.

The Lake Loop

Once you're here, the 72-mile drive around the lake is a highlight in itself. Allow a full unhurried day and start early to beat the parking crunch at the big overlooks.

Winter

Snow, Chains & Road Conditions

Every route into Tahoe crosses a mountain pass, and winter storms can bring chain controls or temporary closures with little warning. A few essentials:

Storm-day plan B: If a pass closes, it's a perfect excuse to swap the mountain for an indoor day — a museum in Truckee or Carson City, or a long lunch and a spa afternoon.
Once You're Here

Getting Around

You're Almost There

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