Five Waterfalls & Vista House
The classic 4-hour tour covering Vista House, Latourell, Wahkeena, Multnomah Falls, Rooster Rock — and optionally The Grotto.
The Columbia River Gorge is an 80-mile river canyon on the Oregon–Washington border, home to 90+ waterfalls, the 1918 Vista House observatory, and Oregon's tallest waterfall (Multnomah Falls at 620 ft). It's the single most photographed corner of the Pacific Northwest — and the easiest day trip from Portland.
Most visitors see the Gorge in 4–8 hours from downtown Portland, which makes it ideal for a half-day or full-day tour. The Historic Columbia River Highway (1913–1922), one of the first scenic highways in America, weaves between viewpoints and waterfalls; modern Interstate 84 runs along the river at the bottom of the canyon. We use both, depending on season and weather.
This page collects everything you need to plan your visit — what to see, when to come, how to get there, and which JIUZE tours cover this area.
The classic 4-hour tour covering Vista House, Latourell, Wahkeena, Multnomah Falls, Rooster Rock — and optionally The Grotto.
More Gorge tours coming — including a sunrise photographer's edition and a fall foliage day trip. Tell us what you're hoping to see.
Oregon's tallest waterfall at 620 feet (542 ft upper drop, 69 ft lower), Multnomah is the headline stop — and the second-most-visited natural attraction in the Pacific Northwest. The historic Benson Bridge (1914) crosses between the two cascades; the 1925 Multnomah Falls Lodge sits at the base. From late May through early September a timed-entry permit is required to access the lodge area; our tours handle this for you.
A 1918 octagonal stone observatory perched 733 feet above the Columbia River, originally built as a comfort station for early auto travelers. The dome offers a 30-mile view of the Gorge in both directions and remains the single best overview stop on the entire Historic Highway.
Three more classic waterfalls all within a 15-minute drive of each other. Latourell drops 249 feet in a single ribbon, framed by bright yellow columnar basalt. Wahkeena (242 ft) means "most beautiful" in Yakama and tumbles through moss-covered tiers. Bridal Veil (120 ft) is the most easily accessed via a short paved trail.
A wide, quiet riverside park 7 miles east of Crown Point — named for a basalt monolith on its eastern edge. Less photographed than the waterfalls, it's the place to stretch and watch freight ships move slowly upriver on the return leg.
A 62-acre Catholic outdoor sanctuary carved into a 110-ft basalt cliff, located just inside Portland's eastern city limit. Often added as a quiet finale to half-day Gorge tours. The lower plaza is free; the upper gardens have a small admission fee.
The Gorge is a year-round destination, but each season has a distinct character:
Whether you want the classic half-day or a custom photographer's edition, we'll send back an honest plan today.