Featured amenities
About Warm River Cabin
Number of accommodations: 1
Seasonal information
2026 Season availability
Campground Amenities
Most popular amenities
Water Access
- River Access
Pets and Policies
- Pet friendly
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001, Loop: WARC
Site Details
Reviews (72)
What Guests Are Saying
Warm River Cabin offers a cozy and well-stocked retreat in a serene location, perfect for outdoor activities like cross-country skiing. Recent upgrades, including new curtains and games, enhance the charm of the cabin. However, visitors should be prepared for a busy environment with many people nearby, and it's advisable to bring essentials like water, bug spray, and a sign to indicate it's a rental.
What Guests Are Saying
Warm River Cabin offers a cozy and well-stocked retreat in a serene location, perfect for outdoor activities like cross-country skiing. Recent upgrades, including new curtains and games, enhance the charm of the cabin. However, visitors should be prepared for a busy environment with many people nearby, and it's advisable to bring essentials like water, bug spray, and a sign to indicate it's a rental.
Review Summary
Brett H
VerifiedJanuary 24, 2022 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
It was great
Brett H
VerifiedJanuary 24, 2022 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
It was great
Merry M
VerifiedNovember 10, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
I was traveling through the area on a move, so I was unfamiliar with this wilderness. I chose a cabin for added safety in grizzly country. I came in at night using Google maps, and there were ponds in the middle of the road the whole way from the highway. I was not in an off-road vehicle but also did not know the roads would be impassable to a rented cabin maintained by the forest service. Somehow I made it there with lucky driving, but the cabin was very cold, and as the wood was downstairs in an unlit cellar, I had no idea there was more wood for the stove until the morning. I high centered on the way out after sliding off a bank of mud, alone with my puppy. Miraculously, I found power lines intersecting the road not far from my car. When I called the forest service in a slight panic because I don't know anyone within states of me, they said they couldn't help. "We don't send people." So with a dying phone, I called around more for help, and finally the sheriff's office gave a number for a couple towing companies. It was 300 bucks to just have a pickup pull me from the mud, but I was ecstatic to get out of there. I certainly made mistakes continuing on this journey once I saw the road at night, but I did not know where else to go. The forest service will not help you, even in dire situations. Hunters passed me as I was stranded and urgently warned me of grizzlies, and I could hear a pack of wolves or dogs howling in the distance. When I finally returned to the ranger's office to return the key, I saw multiple forest service pickups sitting in the parking lot. They could have been there so much quicker than a tow, especially given the complexity of backcountry USFS roads. It was difficult trying to communicate my location to the people actually willing to help. I hope one day whatever policies kept the USFS from helping me in any way will change. Receiving no help from them was not just logistically difficult with my dying phone but emotionally jarring as well.
Merry M
VerifiedNovember 10, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
I was traveling through the area on a move, so I was unfamiliar with this wilderness. I chose a cabin for added safety in grizzly country. I came in at night using Google maps, and there were ponds in the middle of the road the whole way from the highway. I was not in an off-road vehicle but also did not know the roads would be impassable to a rented cabin maintained by the forest service. Somehow I made it there with lucky driving, but the cabin was very cold, and as the wood was downstairs in an unlit cellar, I had no idea there was more wood for the stove until the morning. I high centered on the way out after sliding off a bank of mud, alone with my puppy. Miraculously, I found power lines intersecting the road not far from my car. When I called the forest service in a slight panic because I don't know anyone within states of me, they said they couldn't help. "We don't send people." So with a dying phone, I called around more for help, and finally the sheriff's office gave a number for a couple towing companies. It was 300 bucks to just have a pickup pull me from the mud, but I was ecstatic to get out of there. I certainly made mistakes continuing on this journey once I saw the road at night, but I did not know where else to go. The forest service will not help you, even in dire situations. Hunters passed me as I was stranded and urgently warned me of grizzlies, and I could hear a pack of wolves or dogs howling in the distance. When I finally returned to the ranger's office to return the key, I saw multiple forest service pickups sitting in the parking lot. They could have been there so much quicker than a tow, especially given the complexity of backcountry USFS roads. It was difficult trying to communicate my location to the people actually willing to help. I hope one day whatever policies kept the USFS from helping me in any way will change. Receiving no help from them was not just logistically difficult with my dying phone but emotionally jarring as well.
Corinne M
VerifiedNovember 7, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
A bit difficult to get to on the roads (unkept dirt roads) and rustic lodging, for sure but the stove kept us toasty (we were there in late October). It was only us, the cabin and nature. We felt completely alone taking in the sounds and scenery of the cabin and surrounding river. A plus is the cabin is really close to the Upper & Lower Mesa falls which were a nice detour.
Corinne M
VerifiedNovember 7, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
A bit difficult to get to on the roads (unkept dirt roads) and rustic lodging, for sure but the stove kept us toasty (we were there in late October). It was only us, the cabin and nature. We felt completely alone taking in the sounds and scenery of the cabin and surrounding river. A plus is the cabin is really close to the Upper & Lower Mesa falls which were a nice detour.
Rebecca S
VerifiedOctober 8, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
Cabin was great, plenty of room for everyone. Fire kept things cozy in the morning and evening, wood stove works well. We didn't use the kitchen wood stove, but it looks functional. We walked the trail, berries everywhere and watched deer feeding on the aquatic plants in the river. We didn't have much luck fishing. There were OHV, but they were usually quiet. Our trip was in early August. Would definitely do it again.
Rebecca S
VerifiedOctober 8, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
Cabin was great, plenty of room for everyone. Fire kept things cozy in the morning and evening, wood stove works well. We didn't use the kitchen wood stove, but it looks functional. We walked the trail, berries everywhere and watched deer feeding on the aquatic plants in the river. We didn't have much luck fishing. There were OHV, but they were usually quiet. Our trip was in early August. Would definitely do it again.
Dallin P
VerifiedSeptember 30, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
I really enjoyed this cabin very much. It is in such a beautiful place and the cabin itself is very nice. I loved the stoves; they kept the cabin warm on a cold night. I found it clean and well stocked. Thanks for this treasure.
Dallin P
VerifiedSeptember 30, 2021 • Stayed at: 001, Loop: WARC
I really enjoyed this cabin very much. It is in such a beautiful place and the cabin itself is very nice. I loved the stoves; they kept the cabin warm on a cold night. I found it clean and well stocked. Thanks for this treasure.
Location Warm River Cabin
Address:
Ashton/Island Park Ranger District
Ashton, ID, 83420
United States
From Ashton ID, travel east-northeast on Highway 47 (also known as the Mesa Fall Scenic Byway) for approximately 15 miles to the intersection of Highway 47 and Forest Road 150. Turn right onto Forest Road 150 and travel approximately 2.5 miles to the intersection of Forest Road 150 and Forest Road 154. Turn right onto Forest Road 154 and travel approximately 1.0 mile to the intersection of Forest Road 154 and Forest Road 367. Keep left on Forest Road 154 for approximately 1.5 miles to the cabin. The cabin is located across the bridge adjacent to Warm River Springs and Warm River.
The cabin is accessible via Highway 47 (Mesa Fall Scenic Byway), which is approximately 15 miles from Ashton, ID.
Latitude & Longitude: 44.2058 / -111.251
Elevation: 1764 feet
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Last updated: June 4, 2026