Skagway Flightseeing tours to Glacier Bay!

We offer the best Skagway flightseeing tours available. Our large windows and smaller plane allow for the most intamate flights for glacier and wildlife viewing. Our flights are a highlight of Skagway tours.

Skagway is located at the top of the inside passage and Lynn Canal (which is really a fjord.) It was the starting point for the inland trek of the Klondike gold rush. Skagway still holds to its gold rush past with the look of its buildings and fashion of summer employees. They also host local tours on the history of Skagway.

If you're in Skagway, Alaska and looking to go flightseeing to Glacier Bay or just around the area we can accommodate you. In our flights you will be seeing amazing mountain peaks, glaciers, and a vast Alaska wilderness. At times we see whales, mountain goats, moose, bears, seals, and nearly always eagles. Our tours can take you out for an hour up to as long as you choose.

From Skagway we commonly charter flights to Haines, Gustavus, Juneau, Sitka, and Yakutat. We can take you to a number of other places as well including remote glacier and beach landings, our flights to Glacier Bay are an unforgettable experience.


Sights seen while on a Skagway flightseeing tour.
Our Plane

Glacier Bay remote glacier landing.

Welcome to the Bush Hawk XP with "windows so big that you see Russia from on a clear day."

The Bush Hawk XP is plane is made in Canada and is the most rugged Bush plane built today. The Bush Hawk-XP is built from the ground up for the kind of flying we do here in Alaska. Features include Large panoramic windows for the best viewing, (windows that are 4-5 times bigger than any Cessna) Wings so strong that they do not require Lift struts that get in the way of passenger viewing, ample doors for entry and exit..and lots more.

Did you know?

Composition: Glaciers are mostly ice, but also snow, water, rock, sand and silt. They form where more snow falls than melts. The weight of many year's accumulation gradually compresses the lower layer into dense ice. The pressure at the bottom warms and melts some of the ice, providing a sliding surface.