Visit Bartlett, NH: Complete Guide (2026)
Planning a Bartlett trip? Here’s the practical local guide to where to stay, where to eat, what to do, and how Bartlett fits into the wider Mount Washington Valley.
Updated May 2026.
Bartlett, NH is one of those White Mountains towns that makes more sense the second you stop asking it to be North Conway.
It is not built around outlet shopping, long Main Street browsing, or a giant restaurant bench. Bartlett is about access. Attitash is here. Bear Notch Road is here. The Saco River is here. Crawford Notch is close. Jackson is close. North Conway is close enough when you need more options, but Bartlett itself stays quieter and more useful as a base.
If you want a trip built around skiing, hiking, river time, scenic drives, and a lower-noise home base, Bartlett earns a long look.
What Bartlett Is Known For
Bartlett is best known for the Attitash corridor, easy access to the eastern White Mountains, and the fact that it sits in a sweet spot between action and breathing room.
Things To Do in Bartlett
Start with Attitash Sports Shop and the broader Attitash area if your trip is winter- or mountain-activity-driven.
For a lower-key outdoor stop, the Bartlett Experimental Forest gives you a real example of the area’s wooded, trail-forward identity.
Bartlett Railroad Station and the Maine Central RR Roundhouse help explain the town’s rail-and-mountain identity.
In winter, Bear Notch Ski Touring Center is one of the better local moves.
Where To Stay
The Bartlett Village House and Alpine Garden Camping Village & Winery fit the quieter-basecamp version of Bartlett well.
Nearby Day Trips
Use Bartlett as the base, then borrow North Conway, Jackson, Glen, and Crawford Notch when they actually improve the day.
FAQ
Is Bartlett worth visiting?
Yes — especially if you want a quieter eastern White Mountains base with fast access to skiing, hiking, and nearby valley towns.
What is the difference between Bartlett and North Conway?
North Conway has more retail, more restaurants, and more visitor traffic. Bartlett is better as a basecamp and tends to feel less crowded.
The White Mountains Insider editorial team covers local news, trail conditions, restaurant openings, real estate trends, and everything happening in New Hampshire's White Mountains region. Got a tip? Email us at tips@whitemountainsinsider.com



