Brought your bike along on your travels?

You’re in luck. The bicycle trails around Rainy Lake boast beautiful scenery and tranquility and are a great option when exploring the area.

Things To Do

Map of Voyageurs National Park and surrounding area in Minnesota, including Rainy Lake, showing snowmobile trails, safety warnings, lodging locations, trailheads, and amenities. Key and legend at the bottom; colored lines indicate routes and trail conditions. | Rainy Lake, MN

Arrowhead State Trail

Trail map of Blue Ox and Alwood/Squaw Lake areas in north-central Minnesota, featuring ATV routes, parking, campsites, picnic spots, service roads, and a map key with navigation tips—ideal for exploring the Rainy Lake region. | Rainy Lake, MN

Blue Ox Trail

A young child wearing a red helmet and blue shirt rides a bicycle on a paved path through a green, wooded area near Rainy Lake, Minnesota, on a sunny day. | Rainy Lake, MN

Rainy Lake Recreation Trail

A young child sits on the sandy ground beneath hanging playground stepping stones, surrounded by play structures and leafless trees on a sunny Minnesota day. | Rainy Lake, MN

Shorewood Park

A light-colored building with a peaked roof is surrounded by green trees near Minnesota's Rainy Lake. Sunlight filters through the leaves, casting shadows on the paved walkway leading to the entrance. | Rainy Lake, MN

Rainy Lake Visitor Center

While fishing, boating and other water activities are often the main attraction on Rainy Lake, don’t miss the opportunity to explore the area by bike. A 12-mile paved trail runs adjacent to Highway 11 from International Falls to the Voyageurs National Park Visitors Center and offers diversions such as ice cream stops, wildlife viewing and even a dip in the lake! ​

Miles 0-3
The trail is located just east of the Convention and Visitors Bureau office (301 2nd Avenue), roughly where highway 53 meets highway 11/71 in downtown International Falls. You can park there to begin your eastward journey. This area of the trail features river views on your left, which overlook the community of Fort Frances, Ontario. Note the paper mill at the falls, as well as the wood chips and logs that are piled along the highway before being sent to the mill. Make a stop at the Voyageurs National Park Headquarters (360 Highway 11), where you can enjoy the river views.

Miles 3-5
Approximately 3 miles east ​of International Falls is the community of Ranier, marked by a 25-foot statue affectionately known as “Big Vic.” Plan to take time for a detour here. Ranier is a charming village with restaurants, a bar and brewery, as well as an ice cream shop. Chances are good you will see a train, as the Canadian National Railway border crossing in Ranier sees the most railroad cars of any crossing between the U.S. and Canada. This is also where the Rainy Lake flows into the Rainy River, which you can see from the Spruce Street dock. From here, you can either head back to the highway, or bike along County Road 20, which wends through a residential area and past City Beach, where you can cool off with a swim or enjoy a picnic.

Miles 5-7
Here the bike trail merges with highway 11 for a few miles, while the landscape begins to change. You’ll see some of the only farmland – watch for cranes, geese and deer – as well as an unobstructed view of Rainy Lake at the Jackfish Bay Wayside ParkThe trail then turns left at County Road 103 to become enveloped in the wooded landscape.

Miles 7-10
This part of the trail crosses Tilson Bay, where you can see wild rice growing in the wetlands on the right and Rainy Lake to the left. Stop here to rest on the dock or get in some cross training with a trek on the hiking trail.

Miles 10-12
Here the trail is on the shoulder of Highway 11, which challenges bikers with a long, gradual uphill climb before again turning to the left and into the woods. Gradual hills make for a fun, not-too-hard ride, while grouse are known to peak out from the underbrush. At the end of the trail, cross Highway 11 to the Rainy Lake Recreation Trail, a wide, paved path that welcomes runners, walkers and bicyclists. Leading to the entrance of Rainy Lake Visitor Center the 1.75-miles include benches for taking a breather while taking in the views of Rainy Lake.

Blog Posts about Biking

Aerial view of Minnesota’s Rainy Lake with numerous tree-covered islands and calm blue water. A boat creates a wake, while a tall observation tower rises among the trees on one of the islands. | Rainy Lake, MN

Facts About Rainy