The following is a list of some of the most beautiful waterfalls in the Smoky Mountains. Prepare to have the time of your life while visiting the Smokies.

1. Rainbow Falls

The Smoky Mountains are known for this waterfall walk. Rainbow Falls is accessible via the Rainbow Falls Trail, a moderately challenging 5.4-mile round-trip hike. During the morning hours, this 80-foot-high waterfall may produce a rainbow from the mist it produces. A secluded and beautiful waterfall, Rainbow Falls is the tallest single-drop waterfall in the Smoky Mountains.

2. Baskins Creek Falls

On the Roaring Fork Motor Trail, the Baskins Creek Trail is an easy 3-mile roundtrip trek to Baskin Creek Falls. The waterfall measures 40 feet tall and has two levels. However, the path should not be taken lightly despite its simplicity as it can get pretty tough as you go along it. You can get away from it all at Baskins Creek and it’s easily accessible from Gatlinburg.

3. Fern Branch Falls

Along the Porters Creek Trail in the remote part of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Fern Branch Falls cascade from a small stream. The waterfall is 40 feet high. Porters Creek Trail has wildflowers in spring, but it also has history and beauty year-round. You’ll see up to 40 kinds of wildflowers blooming in the spring on this intermediate hike.

4. Grotto Falls

The Trillium Gap Trailhead serves as the starting point for the journey to Grotto Falls. Grotto Falls is unique in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park because it’s the only waterfall that you can walk behind. During the summer, this 25-foot waterfall provides hikers with a cool, shady, and damp respite. Besides hikers, salamanders love it here too.

5. Ramsey Cascades

Ramsey Cascades, located along the Ramsey Cascades Trail, is the tallest waterfall in the Smoky Mountains. Despite its reputation for being difficult, the eight-mile round trip journey to the top of the peak is well worth the effort. You’ll walk through streams and waterfalls, as well as under some of the biggest and oldest trees in the park.

6. Abrams Falls

The size of Abrams Falls may be small, but the amount of water cascading over the falls more than compensates for its low height. Especially impressive is its deep, broad pool. The creek and waterfall got their names from a Cherokee chief whose tribe originally sat a couple of miles downstream. As a result of strong currents and an undertow, swimming in the pool at the base of the falls is extremely dangerous.

7. Hen Wallow Falls

A lovely hike through the hemlock and rhododendron forest leads to the wonderful Hen Wallow Falls. Despite being just two feet wide at the top, Hen Wallow Creek’s width increases to 20 feet at the bottom. A 90-foot waterfall cascades from the top. If you look very carefully at the water at the base of the falls, you will often find salamanders living there.

8. Indian Creek Falls and Tom Branch Falls

There are two beautiful waterfalls in the Smoky Mountains along Deep Creek which can be reached by an easy 1.6-mile roundtrip hike. The Deep Creek Trail is about 0.7 miles long until it meets the Indian Creek Trail. Tom Branch Falls, an impressive 60-foot waterfall on the far side of Deep Creek, can be seen as you travel along your route. After turning right at the intersection with Indian Creek Trail, continue for about 200 feet until you reach Indian Creek Falls. This 25-foot waterfall is spectacular.

9. Laurel Falls

Laurel Branch and the 80-foot-high Laurel Falls are named for mountain laurel, an evergreen plant that blooms along the route and near the falls in May. At the base of the lower falls, a footbridge crosses a creek that separates the waterfall into two sections. Laurel Falls is an extremely popular attraction in the park, and parking at the trailhead is limited so it can get difficult to find space. This area gets super busy on weekends and weekdays in the summer, so keep that in mind when planning your trip.

10. Lynn Camp Prong Cascades

There is a series of cascades along the Lynn Camp Prong as it tumbles down the mountain near the Middle Prong Trail. Because the trail follows an old logging railroad, it is easy to walk on a wide, generally flat route. The trail is full of wildflowers all throughout the spring through the summer. This is a gorgeous waterfall in the Smoky Mountains that is pretty easy to reach.