Little Canyon
Utah Elopement Locations
Eloping at Silver Lake
Mountain reflections, golden aspen forests, and a serene boardwalk — just 45 minutes from Salt Lake City.
← All Utah Elopement Locations / Silver Lake & Big Cottonwood Canyon
The Location
There is a moment in late September, usually around the third week of the month, when Big Cottonwood Canyon becomes arguably the most beautiful place in Utah. The aspens turn, seemingly overnight, into a shimmering curtain of gold and amber that lines every hillside from the canyon mouth to the Brighton ski resort at its top — and Silver Lake sits in the center of it all, reflecting the spectacle perfectly in its still, mirror-clear surface.
Silver Lake is a small but profoundly beautiful alpine lake at 8,740 feet elevation at the top of Big Cottonwood Canyon. It’s accessible via a paved, flat boardwalk loop — no serious hiking required — which makes it genuinely unique among Utah’s alpine destinations. You can arrive in your wedding attire, walk directly to the water’s edge, and begin your ceremony within minutes of parking. The lake is surrounded by dense conifers, mountain peaks, and in fall, that spectacular aspen color that has made this canyon famous among photographers from across the country.
Silver Lake in fall is one of Utah’s most photographed alpine settings — and one of its best elopement spots
[ Replace with your Silver Lake elopement photo — portrait orientation, 2:3 ratio ]
Via I-215 to UT-190 (Big Cottonwood Canyon Road)
At the Brighton Ski Resort base area
Paved loop trail — no rough terrain required
Book 6+ months ahead for fall dates
Ceremony Spots Around Silver Lake
The Boardwalk Loop
The Silver Lake boardwalk is about 1 mile long and circles the entire lake, with multiple viewing platforms extending over the water on its eastern side. These platforms are perfect ceremony spots — you’re literally standing above the lake’s surface, with the reflection of the mountains and sky below you and the real peaks above. The boardwalk is wide enough to accommodate a small gathering and requires no hiking.
The Brighton Resort Side
The western side of the lake opens onto the Brighton ski base area, where the chairlifts rise up into the mountain and a grassy slope comes down to the water. This area offers a more open, panoramic frame — great for wide-angle shots that capture the full scale of the surrounding peaks. Brighton also operates its chairlifts in summer for sightseeing, which can add a unique element to your elopement adventure.
Dog Lake Trail (Half-Mile Hike)
If you’re willing to do a short hike, Dog Lake sits just 0.5 miles up the trail from Silver Lake’s boardwalk. It’s smaller, quieter, and nestled more deeply in the trees — a beautiful option for couples who want genuine solitude. The trail gains only about 200 feet of elevation and is manageable in most footwear.
The Aspen Groves Along the Canyon Road
Big Cottonwood Canyon itself has dozens of pullouts and forest clearings where dense aspen stands line the road. These spots are completely private in fall — the golden canopy closes overhead and the light filters through in columns. You could stop anywhere along the upper canyon for ceremony portraits and find something genuinely magical.
The golden aspen groves throughout Big Cottonwood Canyon create a spectacular fall elopement backdrop
[ Replace with your aspen grove elopement photo ]
The Fall Aspen Season: What You Need to Know
Utah’s Most Coveted Elopement Window
Fall color in Big Cottonwood Canyon typically peaks between September 20–October 5, though it varies slightly year to year based on temperature and precipitation. When it peaks, the canyon is one of the most visually stunning places in the American West — and the most sought-after elopement destination in Utah. Photographers book this window a year in advance. If fall is your dream, start planning in January.
| Season | Conditions | Best For | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| Late Sept – Early Oct | Peak aspen gold, crisp air 40–65°F, occasional early snow at the top. Weekends are crowded. | The iconic fall aspen elopement — the #1 reason couples choose this location | Peak Season |
| July – Aug | Warm, green, lush. Lake is calm and reflective. Wildflowers around the boardwalk. | Summer lakeside ceremony with green mountain backdrop | Best |
| Oct – Nov | Post-peak fall. Bare aspens, moody skies, possible snow. Dramatic and haunting. | Moody autumn / early winter aesthetic | Great |
| Dec – March | Heavy snow, ski season crowds on weekends. Boardwalk may be icy. | Snow elopements — check boardwalk conditions first | Good |
| April – June | Muddy and variable. Lake still partially frozen in April. Road closes in heavy snowfall. | Late June only — transition to summer | Fair |
Permits & Important Rules
Big Cottonwood Canyon is a designated watershed area for Salt Lake City’s drinking water supply, which creates some specific rules that elopement couples must know:
Watershed Rules — Read Before You Go
- →No dogs allowed anywhere in Big Cottonwood Canyon — this is strictly enforced and applies to the entire canyon, not just the lake area
- →Swimming and wading in Silver Lake is prohibited (watershed protection)
- →No alcohol is permitted in the watershed area
- →Small elopements (2 people + photographer) typically do not require a permit on Forest Service land around the lake
- →Brighton Ski Resort property (the western shore area) is private — coordinate with the resort for any formal ceremony on their grounds
- →Leave No Trace: no flower petals, confetti, or decorations that could enter the water
Getting There & Parking
From Salt Lake City, take I-215 South to Exit 6, then follow UT-190 East (Big Cottonwood Canyon Road) all the way to the top — approximately 15 miles. Silver Lake and the Brighton Ski Resort parking area are at the very end of the road. There is no fee to park at the Silver Lake boardwalk area.
Fall weekends are notoriously busy. The canyon road can back up for miles on peak color weekends. Plan to arrive by 7:30am to guarantee a parking spot and the most beautiful soft morning light on the lake. Weekday fall visits are dramatically quieter and often more magical.
Morning light on Silver Lake creates mirror reflections of the surrounding Wasatch peaks
[ Replace with your lakeside elopement photo — landscape orientation, 4:3 ratio ]
Photography at Silver Lake: Making the Most of the Reflection
The defining photographic feature of Silver Lake is its reflection — and capturing it well requires knowing when and how to position. Here’s what your photographer needs to know:
Calm mornings are everything. The lake’s surface is at its stillest before 10am, before afternoon breezes stir the water. If a mirror reflection of mountains and aspens is what you’re dreaming of, plan your ceremony for morning. By midday, even a light wind can break up the reflection entirely.
The boardwalk platforms extend out over the water on the eastern and northern sides. From these platforms, your photographer can shoot back toward the aspen-covered hillside with you in the foreground and the golden reflection below. It’s a composition that basically photographs itself.
Blue hour after sunset is another extraordinary window. The sky turns deep violet, the lake turns black, and the surrounding peaks hold their last warm light. If you can stay past sunset, the blue hour shots from the boardwalk are some of the most dramatic images you’ll see from any Utah elopement.
Sample Elopement Day Timeline
- →7:00am — Arrive at Silver Lake for calm-water reflections in morning light
- →7:30am — Ceremony on the boardwalk platform above the water
- →8:30am — Portraits through the surrounding aspen groves
- →10:00am — Drive down canyon, stopping at pullouts for additional golden aspen shots
- →12:00pm — Celebratory brunch in Salt Lake City or Park City (30 min further east)
- →Optional evening — Return for blue hour / sunset portraits
Ready to Elope at Silver Lake?
Fall dates book out fast. Let’s start planning your alpine lake elopement before your perfect September weekend is gone.
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