
Underground mine tours return Memorial Day weekend
After a closure due to a flooding event in summer 2024, underground mine tours will return in May 2026.
Underground tour information
Travel 2,341 feet down the shaft to the 27th level of the Soudan Underground Mine to experience one of the most unique tours in not just Minnesota, but in the whole nation. You will journey into the mine on authentic, expertly-maintained hoisting equipment, followed by an underground train ride nearly a mile to the Montana stope, the last working area of the mine.
The mine operated for 80 years from 1882-1962 and was gifted to the state of Minnesota to become a new state park in 1965. Tours have been offered safely ever since.
Note: Due to space limitations, tickets are required for everyone, including children.
- Schedule and reservations
Tour schedule
Mine tours run daily from Memorial Day weekend through the end of September, and Fridays and Saturdays through the third weekend in October.
In the off-season, only educational and group tours are available. These tours must be prearranged with the park.
Reservations
These are popular tours, and tickets often sell out! Advanced reservations are highly recommended, but not required.
Reservations may be made in advance, up until 30 minutes before the tour. Please check in at least 15 minutes before your scheduled tour time.
Reserve online or by calling 866-857-2757.
To reserve an adult group or school tour, contact the park at 218-300-7000 or email [email protected].Tour rates
Ages 13 and up: $15
Ages 5-12: $10
Ages 4 and under: free, but a ticket is required
Taxes are not included.
- General tour information
Please check in at least 15 minutes before your scheduled tour time.
The temperature of the mine is a cool, constant 51° F. Wear a warm jacket and sturdy boots or shoes.
There are no restrooms underground.
The three-minute cage ride down into the mine is in a dimly lit, closed, confined space. You will be kept with your family or group and always accompanied by staff.
No purses, bags, backpacks or strollers are allowed underground.
Underground mine tours are fully accessible. A powered wheelchair is available on a first-come/first-served basis.
Yes, you may take photographs underground.
The mine's surface buildings and over seven miles of hiking trails are also available to explore.
Per state park rules, rock and artifact collecting is not allowed. All artifacts must be left in the mine.
- Underground mine tour (90 minutes)
Experience the life of the miner as you travel 2,341 feet — nearly one half mile — underground. You'll travel by cage on authentic, expertly maintained hoisting equipment. Once underground, you'll board a train and ride nearly a mile to the last and deepest area that was mined. Hear true stories of the miners, innovations and safety improvements, and learn firsthand about the working conditions that made this underground iron mine, known as the "Cadillac of Mines."
- Educational and group tours
Educational and group tours of the underground mine are available year-round by reservation only. Off-season tour group rates and increased minimums may apply.
To reserve a group or school tour, contact the park at 218-300-7000 or email [email protected].
Educational tours are for schools K-12. $5/person or a $50 minimum, whichever is greater.
Organized adult group tours are available for scouts, colleges or other organized group. $13/person or $130 minimum, whichever is greater.
15 days' advanced reservation required for all education and school group tours.
- How to get to the mine tour entrance
Soudan Underground Mine is located in St. Louis County in northeastern Minnesota, just off State Highway 169/1 in Soudan. Follow the signs when you get to Soudan.
Summer mine entrance: 1302 McKinley Park Road
Winter mine entrance: 1379 Stuntz Bay Road
Lake Vermilion/Vermilion Ridge Campground: Highway 169 approximately one mile east of Soudan toward Ely. It is a 15-minute drive from here to the mine site.
- About the bats
White-nose syndrome is a disease that kills hibernating bats and has destroyed bat populations in eastern North America. WNS is now present in the mine and in the park. Bats are the only animals susceptible to the disease; WNS does not pose a threat to humans or other wildlife, but people may inadvertently spread the fungus to new areas on their clothing or shoes. The fungus can remain in a cave long after all the bats have died.
Soudan Mine is still home to one of Minnesota's largest bat hibernacula. Prior to WNS, between 10,000 and 15,000 bats over-wintered in the mine each year, emerging in the summer to roost in the woods. The mine's bat population has plummeted since then, and we are unsure of its current numbers. In warmer months, look for bats at dusk at the Alaska shaft as they leave the mine in search of food.
- Self-guided surface audio tour
Explore the above-ground buildings and features with this audio tour, or follow along with the written transcripts.
