Smoky Mountain Adventure

Horseback Riding in the Smoky Mountains

Saddle up at any of these stables and the same truth shows up fast: they are not interchangeable. One rides creekside trails inside the National Park, one is a 500-acre working ranch with a mountaintop view, one finishes with gem mining and a petting zoo for the kids. Here is how to pick the right one for your group, whether you are bringing a first-time rider, a horse-crazy seven-year-old, or grandparents who would rather take the carriage.

A Stable Full of Choices, and They Are Not the Same

Horseback riding is one of the few Smoky Mountain activities that genuinely works for the whole group. The trails move at a walk, the horses are picked for their calm temperament, and a wrangler rides with you the entire time, so the nervous first-timer and the kid who has begged for this all year both come back grinning. The catch is that the stables around Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville, and Townsend are built for different days out, and booking the wrong one for your crew is an easy mistake.

So we rode them and laid them side by side below: how long the trail runs, how much saddle time you actually get, what each stable does better than the rest, and roughly what you will pay. Prices are approximate and verified as of May 2026, so treat the numbers as a guide and confirm when you book, since rates move with the season.

Trail riders on horseback in the Smoky Mountains

Horseback Riding in the Smokies, at a Glance

This is the fast version of everything below. If you are skimming, or you just want the answer without the reading, start here.

Typical cost
About $40 to $60 per person for a one-hour ride
Ride length
Trail is 45 min to 1 hour, plan 90 min total
Best season
Spring and fall, ride early in the day
Best for first-timers
Davy Crockett or the Cades Cove park stable
Best for kids
Big Rock Dude Ranch, petting zoo and gem mining
Best inside the Park
Cades Cove Riding Stables, Townsend
Best value
Walden Creek Stables, around $25 for an hour
Longest ride
Smokemont, a 4-hour guided ride
No horse needed
Heritage Carriage Rides, an evening carriage ride

What to Know Before You Go

Best Seasons

Spring and fall are the sweet spot, comfortable air and the best trail scenery, though fall foliage rides fill up fast once the leaves turn. The three National Park concession stables, Cades Cove, Sugarlands, and Smokemont, run roughly mid-March through late November and close for the winter. Some private ranches ride year-round, weather permitting. Whatever the season, book a morning slot, when it is cooler for the horses and the trails are quieter.

What to Bring and Expect

Closed-toe shoes are required, and a boot with a small heel sits best in the stirrup. Wear long pants so the saddle does not rub, and bring a light layer, since the shaded trails run cooler than the valley. Leave dangly jewelry and loose scarves behind. Most stables cap riders near 225 to 250 pounds and set a minimum age around 5 or 6, so confirm both for everyone before you drive out. Expect to sign a waiver and listen to a short orientation before you mount up.

Find the Right Fit

Picking the right stable comes down to three honest questions, and a couple of minutes thinking them through saves you from the wrong booking.

Who is coming? Every guided stable carries first-timers and kids comfortably, since the trails are walking-pace rides. If you are bringing young children, Big Rock Dude Ranch and the adventure-park stables pair the ride with a petting zoo and pony options for the smallest visitors. If someone in the group would rather not sit a horse at all, point them at a carriage ride instead, an easy, gentle outing that still gets them out among the horses.

How much of the day do you have? A standard trail ride is about an hour in the saddle, but plan for closer to 90 minutes once you add the waiver, the orientation, and matching horses. If you want more saddle time, Smokemont runs guided rides up to four hours, and the dude ranches can turn a ride into a half-day with their other activities. If you only have a couple of hours free, pick a stable close to your cabin.

Do you want to ride inside the National Park? Three concession stables operate on park land: Cades Cove and Sugarlands on the Tennessee side, and Smokemont near the Oconaluftee entrance. Their trails wind along streams and through the park's forest, which is a different experience from the private-ranch rides up in the foothills. If riding in the actual park matters to you, start there.

Horseback Riding Inside Larger Attractions

These are not dedicated riding stables. They are bigger adventure parks where a trail ride is one activity among many, and they also offer carriage rides. Worth knowing if you want the ride as part of a fuller day rather than the main event.

Jayell Ranch Family Adventure Park in Sevierville
Inside a larger park · Ticketed by activity

Jayell Ranch Family Adventure Park

Jayell Ranch is a 250-acre family adventure park in Sevierville where a one-hour, four-mile guided trail ride sits alongside ziplines, ATV and UTV tours, a petting zoo, and farm games. The horseback ride opens onto expansive views toward Mount LeConte and the hills of North Carolina. Choose this if you want a full park day rather than a single ride.

View Jayell Ranch →
Adventure Park at Five Oaks in Sevierville
Inside a larger park · Ticketed by activity

Adventure Park at Five Oaks

The Five Oaks Riding Stables share their Sevierville property with the Adventure Park at Five Oaks, which adds guided zipline tours and other activities to the same 70-acre site. If you want to combine a trail ride with a zipline run in one stop, this is the easy way to do it. The riding stable is listed on its own above.

View Adventure Park →

Deals Worth Knowing About

Nobody needs to pay full counter price for all of these. Here is the best angle, depending on who you are bringing.

Bringing kids
Five Oaks Riding Stables lets a younger child ride tandem in the saddle with an adult at a steep discount, often about half the adult price. Big Rock Dude Ranch throws in a complimentary petting zoo, so the smallest kids who are not riding still have something to do while the rest of the group is on the trail.
Booking for a group
Big Rock Dude Ranch and Five Oaks both handle reunions, church groups, and corporate outings, and several stables cut a group rate once you reach a set number of riders. Call ahead rather than buying online one ticket at a time, so they can line up enough horses and put your whole group on the same ride.
First-timers on a budget
Walden Creek Stables runs an hour-long ride for around $25, the lowest counter price of the bunch, and the National Park stables at Cades Cove, Sugarlands, and Smokemont are not far behind near $40 to $45. Any of them is a genuine, well-run first ride without the dude-ranch markup.
Adventure-park combos
Jayell Ranch bundles horseback riding with ziplines and ATV tours into discounted combo packages, and signing the online waiver before you arrive often takes a few dollars off per person. Big Rock Dude Ranch also bundles trail rides with gem mining and fishing if you want to stack the day.
Off-peak riders
Weekday mornings and the shoulder seasons of spring and late fall are quieter and easier to book, and some stables run lighter pricing or open slots when the crowds thin out. It costs nothing to ask what the day looks like when you call.

Combo packages, coupon booklets, and online promo codes for these stables rotate constantly, so the smart move is to check for a current code right before you book. Deal information here was verified May 2026.

Where to Go

The seven dedicated stables sit across several towns, and two larger adventure parks with their own trail rides are marked with an asterisk. Markers are colored by area, so the stables closest to your cabin are easy to spot. Tap any spot in the key to find it on the map.

Tips and Getting There

Insider Tips

  • Book the first ride of the day. It is cooler for the horses, the trails are quieter, and you are not waiting behind a slow group ahead of you. Summer and fall afternoons run long waits.
  • Weight and age limits are real and checked at sign-in. Most stables cap riders near 225 to 250 pounds and set a minimum age around 5 or 6. Confirm the numbers for everyone, especially kids and anyone close to the cap, before you make the drive.
  • Call ahead, even at first-come stables. Hours can be seasonal or inconsistent, the National Park stables close for the winter, and Walden Creek in particular has had uneven hours. A two-minute phone call saves a wasted trip.
  • Wear long pants and a boot with a small heel. Shorts rub against the saddle on an hour-long ride, and a heel keeps your foot from slipping through the stirrup.

Getting There and Parking

The stables are spread across Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville, and the Townsend side of the National Park, so the smart move is to pick the one closest to your cabin. All have free on-site parking. The Cades Cove stable sits at the entrance to the Cove loop, a scenic but slow drive in, so allow extra time. Smokemont is on the North Carolina side near the Oconaluftee entrance, the longest haul from the Tennessee towns, closer to an hour or more. Big Rock and Walden Creek are an easy reach from a Pigeon Forge cabin, and Five Oaks and Jayell Ranch are central for anyone staying in Sevierville. Arrive early for the waiver and the orientation.

Picking the Right Stable for Your Group

For First-Time Riders

If you have never been on a horse, do not overthink it. These are walking-pace trail rides, the stables match a calm horse to your experience, and a wrangler rides with the group the whole way. Davy Crockett Riding Stables in Townsend and the Cades Cove and Sugarlands park stables are calm, well-run picks that ease nervous riders in gently. If someone is genuinely not sure they want to sit a horse at all, a carriage ride is the no-pressure way to still enjoy the outing.

For Families With Kids

Most stables set a minimum age around 5 or 6 to ride alone, and several let younger children ride tandem in the saddle with a parent, which is the move for little ones. Big Rock Dude Ranch is the strongest family pick: the ride is uncrowded and easy, and a complimentary petting zoo, gem mining, and a fishing pond keep the smallest kids busy. Five Oaks also offers tandem riding for young children. Always confirm the age and weight limits before you drive out so nobody is disappointed at the counter.

For Riders Who Want Real Saddle Time

If a quick hour is not enough, go where the rides run long. Smokemont, on the North Carolina side of the park, offers a 2.5-hour ride and a four-hour guided trail with river views and cascades. Davy Crockett also runs longer rides up to a half-day. These are the picks for confident riders, or anyone who wants the trail to feel like a real outing rather than a sampler.

For Groups and Events

Big Rock Dude Ranch and Five Oaks both handle large groups well, with room for reunions, church groups, bachelor and bachelorette trips, and corporate outings, and several stables offer a group rate once you reach a set number of riders. Jayell Ranch can fold a trail ride into a wider park day for a mixed group with different interests. Book one of our larger cabins nearby and you can roll the whole crew out together.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I wear for horseback riding in the Smoky Mountains?

Closed-toe shoes are required at every stable, and boots with a small heel are best, since they sit securely in the stirrup. Wear long pants to keep your legs from rubbing the saddle, and bring a light layer, as the shaded mountain trails run cooler than the valley. Skip flip-flops, sandals, and loose scarves.

How much does horseback riding in the Smoky Mountains cost?

Most one-hour guided trail rides run roughly $40 to $60 per person as of May 2026. The National Park concession stables, Cades Cove, Sugarlands, and Smokemont, are at the lower end, near $40 to $45 for an hour, while ranches like Big Rock and Five Oaks run closer to $55 to $60 for a longer ride. Prices shift seasonally, so confirm current rates when you book.

How old do you have to be to ride a horse in the Smokies?

Most Smoky Mountain stables set a minimum age around 5 or 6 to ride a horse alone, and several allow younger children to ride tandem in the saddle with a parent. The National Park stables generally require riders to be at least 5. Always confirm the minimum with the specific stable before you drive out.

Is there a weight limit for horseback riding in the Smoky Mountains?

Yes. Most stables cap riders somewhere between 225 and 250 pounds for the comfort and safety of the horse, and the limit is checked at sign-in. The exact number varies by stable, so call ahead and confirm if anyone in your group is close to the cap.

Do I need a reservation to go horseback riding?

Some stables take reservations and some are first-come, first-served. Big Rock Dude Ranch fills out paperwork on-site with no appointment needed, while the National Park stables and busier ranches fill up on summer and fall weekends. Booking ahead, or arriving early in the day, is the safe move in peak season.

Is horseback riding in the Smoky Mountains safe for beginners?

Yes. Every guided stable matches a calm, well-trained horse to your experience level, gives a short orientation before you mount up, and sends a wrangler with every group. The trails are walking-pace rides, not gallops. First-timers and nervous riders do these comfortably every day.

How long does a horseback trail ride take?

The ride itself is usually 45 minutes to one hour, but plan for closer to 90 minutes to two hours once you add sign-in, the orientation, matching horses, and mounting up. Longer rides of two to four hours are available at Smokemont and a few ranches if you want more saddle time.

What is the difference between a dude ranch and a riding stable?

A riding stable focuses on the trail ride itself. A dude ranch, like Big Rock at Ponderosa or Jayell Ranch, pairs the ride with other activities on the same property, such as gem mining, a petting zoo, fishing, or ziplines, so it suits a longer family day rather than a single ride.

Can young children go horseback riding in the Smokies?

Yes. Children around 5 and up can usually ride their own horse with a guide leading, and some stables let younger kids ride tandem in the saddle with a parent. Big Rock Dude Ranch and the adventure-park stables also have petting zoos and pony options for the smallest visitors who are not ready for the trail.

When is the best time of year to go horseback riding in the Smoky Mountains?

Spring and fall offer the most comfortable weather and the best scenery, with fall foliage rides being especially popular and crowded. The National Park concession stables run roughly mid-March through late November. Some private ranches ride year-round, weather permitting. Mornings are cooler and quieter whatever the season.

Can you ride horses inside Great Smoky Mountains National Park?

Yes. The park has more than 500 miles of trails open to horses, and three concession stables operate inside the park: Cades Cove and Sugarlands on the Tennessee side, and Smokemont near the Oconaluftee entrance. They offer guided rides on park trails from spring through late fall.

What happens if it rains on my horseback riding trip?

Light rain usually does not stop a ride, and the tree cover helps. Stables close for thunderstorms, lightning, or unsafe trail conditions. If weather cancels your ride, most stables will reschedule you or refund you, so call ahead on an iffy day rather than driving out.

Are carriage rides a good option instead of a trail ride?

Yes, and they suit a different kind of outing. Heritage Carriage Rides runs short, romantic horse-drawn rides in the evening in Pigeon Forge, and Cades Cove Riding Stables offers carriage and hay-wagon rides through the historic cove. A carriage ride is the easy answer for guests who would rather not sit a horse, including young children and grandparents.

Do the stables provide helmets?

Helmet policies vary. Some stables provide helmets for children or on request, others do not, since the rides are at a walk. If a helmet matters for your group, ask when you call to book, and you are always welcome to bring your own.

Can you go horseback riding while pregnant?

Many stables do not allow riders who are pregnant, because of the motion and the risk of a fall, and policies vary by stable and by trimester. Call the stable directly before you book. A carriage ride is a gentle alternative that most expecting guests can still enjoy.

Which Smoky Mountain stable is best for a first ride?

Any of the guided stables work for a first ride, since the trails move at a walk. Davy Crockett Riding Stables in Townsend and the Cades Cove and Sugarlands park stables are calm, well-run picks for nervous first-timers, and Big Rock Dude Ranch pairs an easy ride with extra activities if you are bringing kids.

Can we book a horseback ride for a large group or event?

Yes. Most stables can take a larger group with notice, and ranches like Big Rock and Five Oaks handle reunions, church groups, and corporate outings. Call ahead so they can line up enough horses and put your group on the same ride. Several stables offer a group rate once you reach a set number of riders.

Can I bring my dog horseback riding in the Smoky Mountains?

No. Dogs cannot come on a trail ride, they spook the horses and are not allowed at the stables or on most park trails. The simple fix is a pet-friendly cabin, ideally one with a fenced yard, so your dog stays comfortable for the couple of hours you are out. Many of our cabins welcome pets, so nobody in the family gets left behind for the trip.

Come Back to a Cabin Built for the Whole Crew

A morning in the saddle is the good kind of tired, and the right cabin keeps the day rolling once you are back. A lot of ours come stacked with game rooms, arcades, home theaters, and pools, the sort of place where nobody is bored after dinner. Pick a base close to the stables you have your eye on and you trim the drive too.

Ask about Xplorie. Many of our cabins include Xplorie, the local free-activities program: one free attraction every day of your stay, plus member savings on dozens more. The lineup changes, so depending on the cabin a partner activity is either free or discounted, and an Xplorie discount can cover the whole group. Tell us your dates and we will point you to the cabins that carry it.

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