Most visitors to Great Smoky Mountains National Park funnel through the Gatlinburg and Sugarlands entrances, fighting traffic and competing for trailhead parking. Thirty minutes east, the tiny community of Cosby offers the same spectacular mountains with a fraction of the crowds. Once known as the "Moonshine Capital of the World," this unincorporated Cocke County hamlet of roughly 5,000 residents sits at the northeastern boundary of the park, where the ridgelines are just as dramatic and the trails are often yours alone.
Cosby is not a place you stumble into by accident. There is no strip of pancake houses or go-kart tracks here. What you will find is a quiet valley framed by some of the highest peaks in the eastern United States, a handful of genuinely excellent local restaurants, a living moonshine heritage, and trailheads that lead to waterfalls, old-growth forests, and one of the most photographed fire towers in the Appalachians. If you have been searching for the Smokies experience that existed before the tourist boom, Cosby is where you will find it.
The Best Things to Do in Cosby
#1 Hike to Hen Wallow Falls
The Hen Wallow Falls Trail is the signature hike of the Cosby section of the park. The moderate 4.4-mile round trip climbs through a dense hardwood forest thick with rhododendron before arriving at a 90-foot waterfall that fans out across a wide rock face. In spring, the falls run at full volume and the surrounding forest floor erupts with wildflowers. In autumn, the canopy turns to gold and crimson overhead.
The trailhead begins at the Cosby Campground, and you will likely share the path with only a handful of other hikers. Compare that to Laurel Falls or Grotto Falls near Gatlinburg, where you may encounter hundreds of people on a busy Saturday. The trail gains about 900 feet of elevation, making it a solid workout without being punishing.
LOCAL TIP
Start early in the morning for the best light on the falls and the quietest trail conditions. The parking area at Cosby Campground rarely fills up, but morning hikers get the forest mist that makes this trail magical.
#2 Summit Mount Cammerer Fire Tower
The Mount Cammerer Trail is one of the most rewarding hikes in the entire national park. The 11.2-mile round trip from the Cosby trailhead climbs steadily through spruce-fir forest before emerging at a stone fire lookout tower perched on a rocky outcrop at 5,025 feet. The 360-degree panorama from the tower is staggering: wave after wave of blue-green ridgelines stretching to the horizon in every direction.
The route follows the Low Gap Trail to the Appalachian Trail, giving you roughly two miles on the AT itself. This is a full-day hike that demands decent fitness and early departure, but the payoff is one of the most iconic viewpoints in the Smokies. The CCC-era stone tower, built in the 1930s and restored in the 1990s, is a destination unto itself.
LOCAL TIP
Pack extra layers regardless of the season. The summit is exposed and significantly cooler than the valley. Fall mornings often produce a temperature inversion that fills the valleys with fog while the tower sits above it in brilliant sunshine.
#3 Walk Through the Albright Grove Old-Growth Forest
The Albright Grove Loop protects one of the finest stands of old-growth forest remaining in the eastern United States. The 6.8-mile round trip from the Maddron Bald trailhead passes through a cathedral of tulip poplars, hemlocks, and silverbell trees, some of which are over 400 years old and exceed 100 feet in height. The trunks of the largest trees are wider than a car.
This is not a heavily trafficked trail. On most days you will have the grove largely to yourself, walking in near-silence beneath a canopy so dense that the forest floor stays cool even in midsummer. The loop section through the old growth is about 0.7 miles, but the approach hike through Maddron Bald is beautiful in its own right, passing an old settlers' cabin and crossing several mountain streams.
#4 Drive the Foothills Parkway East
The Foothills Parkway's eastern section is a 5.6-mile scenic drive that connects Cosby to Interstate 40, and it offers some of the most dramatic mountain views accessible by car in the entire region. Unlike the bumper-to-bumper traffic on Newfound Gap Road or the Cades Cove Loop, this stretch of parkway is often nearly empty. You can pull over at multiple overlooks without circling for a parking spot.
Construction of the Foothills Parkway began in the 1940s, and due to engineering challenges and funding gaps, only about one-third of the planned route has been completed. The Cosby section is among the finished portions, and it rewards drivers with sweeping views of the English Mountain range and the Pigeon River valley. It is especially spectacular during fall foliage season, when the surrounding ridgelines light up in amber and scarlet.
LOCAL TIP
Drive the parkway at sunset for the best photography conditions. The western-facing overlooks catch golden light that illuminates the mountain layers beautifully. Bring a tripod if you are serious about landscape photography.
#5 Explore Cosby Campground & Picnic Area
Cosby Campground is one of the best-kept secrets in the national park system. While Elkmont and Cades Cove campgrounds fill up months in advance, Cosby rarely reaches capacity. The 157-site campground sits along Cosby Creek at 2,459 feet elevation, surrounded by towering hardwoods and the sound of running water. Sites are well-spaced and shaded, with the kind of privacy that larger campgrounds cannot offer.
Even if you are not camping, the adjacent picnic area is worth a stop. Spread a blanket along the creek, wade into the shallow pools on a warm afternoon, or use it as a staging area before hitting the trails. The Hen Wallow Falls and Mount Cammerer trailheads both begin here, making the campground a natural basecamp for exploring the Cosby section of the park.
#6 Learn the Moonshine History of Cocke County
Cosby's moonshine heritage is not a marketing gimmick dreamed up by a tourism board. This community was genuinely the epicenter of illegal whiskey production in the American South for the better part of a century. During Prohibition, Cocke County moonshiners supplied much of the region, and the tradition continued well into the modern era. The rugged terrain, abundant cold-water springs, and remote hollows made it nearly impossible for federal agents to shut down the stills.
The most famous moonshiner of them all, Marvin "Popcorn" Sutton, lived and worked in this area. Sutton became a folk hero and documentary subject before his death in 2009, and his legacy looms large in local culture. Today, Adventure Distilling Company operates just minutes from the center of Cosby, offering legal tastings and a direct connection to the moonshine tradition. The distillery had close ties with Sutton himself, and the staff can share stories that bring the history to life.
LOCAL TIP
Ask about the Popcorn Sutton connection at Adventure Distilling. The staff are passionate about the history and will share stories you will not find in any guidebook. Cocke County Distillery in nearby Newport is also worth a visit for a different take on the tradition.
#7 Eat at Carver's Applehouse Orchard & Restaurant
Carver's Applehouse is the kind of place that justifies a detour. The family-run orchard and restaurant sits on a hillside above Cosby, growing over 120 varieties of apples across their working farm. The restaurant serves hearty Appalachian comfort food: legendary chicken pot pie, catfish platters, and country ham with all the fixings. But the real draw is the apple-centric menu. The fried apple pies are made fresh daily and have achieved near-mythical status among locals and repeat visitors.
Beyond the restaurant, the farm store sells fresh apples in season, apple butter, cider, jams, and an impressive selection of locally made goods. There is also a candy shop that will delight kids and adults alike. Carver's is not just a meal; it is an experience that captures the agricultural heritage of this valley.
#8 Have Breakfast at Janice's Diner
Janice's Diner is Cosby's living room. This family-owned restaurant on the Cosby Highway serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner six days a week (closed Mondays), and the daily specials board is reason enough to stop in. The breakfast menu features biscuits and gravy, country ham and eggs, and pancakes made from scratch. At lunch and dinner, the comfort food continues with meatloaf, fried chicken, and burgers that locals swear by.
The atmosphere is exactly what you want from a small-town diner: friendly service, reasonable prices, and the kind of food that tastes like someone's grandmother made it. Janice's has earned a loyal following on TripAdvisor and Google Reviews, consistently ranking among the top restaurants in the Cosby area. Arrive early on weekends because the small dining room fills up fast.
#9 Take a Llama Trek
Smoky Mountain Llama Treks offers one of the most unique outdoor experiences in the entire region. Based right in Cosby, the company leads guided hikes through private mountain trails with llamas carrying your gear and picnic supplies. The llamas are gentle, well-trained, and endlessly entertaining. The treks range from half-day excursions to full-day adventures, and the guides share extensive knowledge about local flora, fauna, and mountain history.
This is an ideal activity for families, couples, and anyone who wants a hiking experience that goes beyond the ordinary. The llamas handle the heavy lifting while you enjoy the scenery, and the picnic lunch served on the trail features locally sourced ingredients. It is one of those experiences that sounds quirky but turns out to be genuinely memorable.
#10 Attend the Cosby Ramp Festival
Every spring since 1954, Cosby has hosted the Ramp Festival, a celebration of the pungent wild leek that grows abundantly in the surrounding mountains. Ramps are a cornerstone of Appalachian foodways, and this festival is one of the oldest and most authentic food festivals in the region. The event features ramp dinners (typically ramps scrambled with eggs, served alongside cornbread and pinto beans), live bluegrass music, traditional crafts, and a community atmosphere that feels genuinely unchanged by time.
Governor Frank Clement proclaimed the first festival in 1954, and the tradition has continued with only occasional interruptions. The festival typically takes place in late April or early May at the Cosby Community Center, and it draws both longtime locals and visitors from across the Southeast. If you are visiting in spring, this is an unmissable window into the living culture of the Smoky Mountains.
#11 Go Off-Road on a UTV Tour
Smoky Mountain Adventure Tours, operated in conjunction with Adventure Distilling Company, offers guided UTV excursions through the rugged backcountry surrounding Cosby. Available in summer and fall, the tours take you through terrain that is inaccessible by car, with mountain views, creek crossings, and forest trails that showcase the wild side of Cocke County. You can choose between guided tours with an experienced driver or self-drive options for those who want to control the wheel.
The tours are a fantastic way to experience the landscape beyond the national park boundaries, and they pair perfectly with a tasting session at the distillery afterward. It is the kind of combination that captures the adventurous, slightly rebellious spirit that has always defined Cosby.
#12 Swim at Big Creek
Just a short drive from Cosby, the Big Creek section of the national park offers some of the best natural swimming holes in the Smokies. The Midnight Hole, a deep emerald pool at the base of a small waterfall, is the most popular spot and one of the most photographed swimming holes in Tennessee. The water is cold and crystal clear, fed by mountain springs that keep temperatures refreshing even in the heat of July.
The hike to Midnight Hole is an easy 1.4-mile walk along an old railroad grade, making it accessible for families with children. Beyond the swimming hole, the Big Creek Trail continues to Mouse Creek Falls and eventually to the backcountry campsites deeper in the park. Pack a towel, bring a picnic, and plan to spend a lazy afternoon.
LOCAL TIP
Big Creek is one of the few swimming areas in the park that stays relatively uncrowded even on summer weekends. Arrive before noon for the best experience and the warmest sun on the water.
#13 Catch a "Celebrating Cosby" Summer Event
On summer weekends, the National Park Service hosts "Celebrating Cosby: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow" at the Cosby Campground amphitheater. These free events feature traditional Appalachian music, dance performances, storytelling by longtime local residents, and presentations by park rangers about the natural and cultural history of the area. You might hear a retired moonshiner share family stories, watch a clogging demonstration, or listen to old-time banjo picking under the trees.
The events are informal, family-friendly, and deeply authentic. They offer a window into the mountain culture that has shaped this community for generations, and they are the kind of experience you simply cannot find in the more commercialized parts of the Smokies.
Where to Eat in Cosby
Cosby's dining scene is small but genuine. There are no chain restaurants here, and that is entirely the point. The handful of locally owned spots serve food rooted in Appalachian tradition, made with care and priced fairly. Carver's Applehouse and Janice's Diner anchor the scene, but keep an eye out for seasonal pop-ups and the occasional food truck that appears at local events.
Where to Stay
Cosby does not have the cabin rental density of Gatlinburg or Pigeon Forge, but that is part of its appeal. The accommodations here tend toward private mountain cabins, small bed-and-breakfasts, and the national park campground itself. For visitors who want the convenience of a full-service cabin community with resort amenities, the Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge communities are a 30 to 45-minute drive, giving you the best of both worlds: quiet Cosby days and comfortable cabin evenings.
Browse all cabin communities or use our trip planner to find the right fit for your group.