Seasonal visiting guide · Summer 2026
Summer in Seattle
Mild days, late sunsets, Mount Rainier on the horizon. Summer is the easiest season to fall in love with Seattle, and the most flexible time to visit your Husky.
Whether you’re a returning UW family visiting your current Husky, a new family scouting campus before move-in, or attending Family Orientation this summer, this guide is your seasonal companion. Long days, soft weather, and just enough Husky to keep things interesting.
Five summer days, five ways Special summer moments Where to stay Key dates Make it a campus visit
☀ The season at a glance
Long days, mild weather, mountains in every direction
Seattle summers are 60s and low 70s most days, with stretches of 80s and the occasional heat wave. The sun rises before 6 a.m. and sets close to 9 p.m. through July. Pack a light layer for evenings, sunglasses for the morning glare off Lake Washington, and shoes you can walk in. The city’s at its most welcoming.
Five summer days, five ways
Pick your pace. Each card is a half-day or full-day plan for visiting families.
Day 1 · Classic Seattle
Pike Place & the waterfront
Morning at Pike Place Market, lunch with a view at the Seattle waterfront, afternoon ferry to Bainbridge Island for ice cream and a slower wander. Wear comfortable shoes — Pike Place is hilly.
Day 2 · Mountain pilgrimage
Mount Rainier day trip
Two hours from campus to Paradise. July and August are wildflower peak. Pack water, layers, and a packed lunch — there’s not much for food in the park. Leave by 7 a.m. to beat parking, and yes, the views are worth the alarm clock.
Day 3 · Right next to campus
Lake Washington & the Burke
Rent a kayak or canoe at the Waterfront Activities Center, paddle through the Arboretum, then wander the Burke Museum (right on campus). Cap it with dinner in the U District. Whole day without leaving the neighborhood.
Day 4 · Locks & salmon
Ballard Locks & Discovery Park
The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks have a salmon ladder window where you can watch fish climb to spawn (peak July through September). Pair with a hike through Discovery Park’s loop trail and lighthouse beach.
Day 5 · Eat your way through
Capitol Hill & the U District
Capitol Hill is Seattle’s food and coffee heart. The Ave (University Way) in the U District is your student’s everyday food strip. Spend a day eating across both neighborhoods. Ask your student where they actually go.
Special summer moments
⛵ The big one
Seafair weekend: August 6 to 9, 2026
Seattle’s biggest summer festival. The hydroplane races on Lake Washington, the U.S. Navy Blue Angels overhead, and a multi-day parade and party along Lake Washington Boulevard. The flyovers practice all week, so you’ll hear the Blue Angels rehearsing across the city. If you’re visiting that weekend, book early — hotels fill up.
🎶 Outdoor concerts
Summer concert series
Marymoor Park (Redmond), Chateau Ste. Michelle (Woodinville), and the Woodland Park Zoo all run outdoor summer concert series from June through September. Bring a low chair, a picnic, and a sweater for the late-evening cool-down.
🏈 Coming this fall
Family football tickets, Nov. 6–7
PFP has a dedicated family ticket allocation for the Family Weekend home game. Tickets release through the Parent Insider newsletter, so subscribers hear first. Stay tuned.
🐺 The PFP angle
Make it a campus visit
Summer is the easiest time to walk through campus without feeling rushed. The Burke Museum is open year-round. Red Square sits empty enough to actually photograph. Husky Stadium is open for self-guided tours on most weekdays. The HUB cafés are quieter. Whether you’re scoping a future move-in, dropping in during your student’s summer term, or just here to celebrate, campus has room for you in summer.
Where to stay
Our partner hotels offer courtesy rates for current and prospective UW families. All within walking distance or a short drive of campus.
University Inn
0.5 mi · Free breakfast
Closest of the partner hotels. Walking distance to campus and the Ave.
Graduate Seattle
0.3 mi · Husky-themed
Right next to campus. Lobby and rooms styled around the UW. Family-favorite for game weekends.
Watertown Hotel
0.4 mi · Bike rentals
Modern, with complimentary bike rentals if you want to ride the Burke-Gilman Trail.
Residence Inn U-District
0.6 mi · Extended stay
Suites with kitchens. Best pick for families staying multiple days or for College Edge arrival weeks.
Key summer 2026 dates
May 20
A&O reservations open
June 1
Parent & Family Guide
July 9–Aug. 20
Family Orientation
Aug. 6–9
Seafair weekend
Aug. 24
College Edge begins
Sept. 22–25
Move-In Week
Sept. 23–Oct. 2
Dawg Daze
Sept. 30
First day of classes
🐺 Visiting in July or August?
Pair your trip with Family Orientation
Family Orientation runs as a full-day Zoom on seven Wednesdays this summer (July 9, 16, 23, 30; August 6, 13, 20). Many families log on from a hotel near campus, then spend the next two days walking through campus, shopping at the U District, and meeting up with their student. Your student picks the date for you when they make their A&O reservation.