Hot Springs & Wellness
Montana Hot Springs and Wellness: A Cannabis-Aware Guide to Chico, Norris, Lost Trail, and the Statewide Circuit
Montana's hot-springs circuit runs from Paradise Valley to the Bitterroot. Cannabis fits the private-cabin evenings, never the public pools.

Photo by سيف الظاهر on Unsplash
The Circuit
Montana has more natural hot springs than any state except Colorado and Alaska. The commercial and semi-commercial hot-springs circuit runs from Chico Hot Springs in Paradise Valley south of Livingston, to Norris and Quinn's in the southwest, to Lost Trail on the Idaho line, to Jackson in the remote Big Hole, to Symes in the town of Hot Springs, and the cluster of smaller springs scattered across the state. Each has a different character — historic lodge, family-friendly, adults-only, ski-adjacent — and a cannabis-aware approach that matches the setting.
The consistent rule: no cannabis consumption in any public or semi-public soak, period. Montana state law prohibits cannabis consumption in public spaces, and every commercial hot springs qualifies. The cannabis-aware hot-springs day is a private-cabin or hotel-room evening before or after the soak, with the soak itself as a fully sober experience.
Chico Hot Springs, Paradise Valley
Chico Hot Springs sits in Paradise Valley, 30 miles south of Livingston on the way to Yellowstone's north entrance. The historic lodge (operating since 1900) anchors a property that includes the main pool complex, the Chico Saloon, the lodge dining room, cabins for rent, and a secondary hot pool. The setting is one of Montana's signature experiences — the Absaroka Mountains rise sharply to the east, and the Yellowstone River runs within a short walk.
Adults 21+ planning a Chico weekend should rent a cabin (not a lodge room — the lodge's historic-building structure means thin walls and shared common areas), arrive with licensed cannabis purchased in Livingston or Bozeman (verify licensed status via the Montana Department of Revenue Cannabis Control Division at mtrevenue.gov/cannabis/), and keep consumption entirely at the cabin. The soak itself is sober. The Chico Saloon on a Saturday night runs a full country-music-band rotation, which adds a post-soak evening option.
Norris and Quinn's, Southwest Anchor
Norris Hot Springs sits 30 miles northwest of Bozeman in the Madison Valley, a smaller and more down-home property than Chico. "The Poolside Music" schedule runs live acts through the summer. Quinn's Hot Springs sits farther west near Paradise, with the St. Regis River running alongside and a more lodge-and-restaurant structure. Both are adults-only-compatible (some sessions are family-friendly; check current schedules) and run private-rental options that match the cannabis-aware approach.
Lost Trail and Jackson, the Remote Hot Springs
Lost Trail Hot Springs sits on U.S. 93 at the Idaho state line, 45 miles south of Darby in the upper Bitterroot. The property has been quieter in recent years but still operates. Jackson Hot Springs Lodge in the Big Hole is Montana's most remote major hot-springs destination — 80 miles south of Butte, with the broad Big Hole Valley stretching in every direction. Both require a longer drive from any licensed-dispensary market, which makes pre-planning the cannabis supply essential. Adults 21+ should purchase in Missoula or Butte before the drive out, and keep any consumption at the private cabin on the property.
Symes and the Flathead Hot Springs
Symes Hot Springs sits in the small town of Hot Springs, Montana (actual town name) on the Flathead Reservation. The property is an Art Deco-era hotel with its own mineral pools, and the town itself is a small commercial cluster that runs on the hot-springs economy. Cannabis on the Flathead Reservation is a jurisdictional question — tribal authority can supersede state law on tribal land, so visitors should assume tribal cannabis rules apply and consult current Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes policy before bringing any product onto reservation land.
The Three-Day Hot-Springs Circuit
A three-day Montana hot-springs circuit that works in practice: day one Chico Hot Springs overnight, day two drive northwest through Missoula to Quinn's or Norris, day three drive south to Jackson Hot Springs or Lost Trail. Approximately 600 miles of driving across the three days, which means careful cannabis scheduling — only at the overnight-stop private cabin, never during the drives, and full 8+ hour buffer before the next morning's drive. Montana's two-lane highway network and long driving days make this the defining compliance constraint.
Compliance, Quickly
- 21+ only at every dispensary and for every purchase
- Verify licensed status via the Montana Department of Revenue Cannabis Control Division at mtrevenue.gov/cannabis/
- Montana state law prohibits cannabis consumption in public spaces, including every commercial hot-springs pool, lodge common area, and sauna
- Tribal land (Flathead Reservation, others) may follow different cannabis rules — verify tribal policy before bringing product onto reservation land
- Federal land (Yellowstone park-side springs, any federal-forest hot spring) is absolutely off-limits under federal law
- Start low, go slow on edibles, especially before any soak (heat and cannabis can amplify each other)
- Never drive after consuming, and Montana's hot-springs circuit demands the rule absolutely given the long drives between properties
Where to Go Next
- Montana Big Sky Outdoors Cannabis Guide
- Montana Mountain Towns Cannabis Guide
- Montana National Park Gateway Cannabis Guide
*This is editorial, not legal advice. Verify current Montana cannabis laws at mtrevenue.gov/cannabis/.*