
The end of the road — and you made it. Delta Junction is Historic Milepost 1422, the official end of the Alaska Highway, where the famous road finally runs out at the Triangle and the visitor center hands you a certificate for finishing North America's ultimate road trip. It started as a telegraph station in 1904, became a buffalo town when the government turned a herd of plains bison loose here in the 1920s, and sits in the Tanana River Valley under three mountain ranges, where the wind is strong enough to have its own name. This page tells the story.
And then there are the buffalo. The herd the government released in the 1920s never left — it roams free on the Delta Bison Range to this day, a few hundred animals strong, and it's the reason the town was once called Buffalo Center and why a bison silhouette still feels like the truest emblem of the place. Between the highway's end, the free-roaming herd, the old roadhouses, and the valley farms, Delta Junction has a stack of genuinely Alaskan identities most towns its size could never claim — earned at the end of the longest road on the continent.
Why People Visit Delta Junction Alaska
People come to Delta Junction to finish the Alaska Highway — to stand at Milepost 1422 and earn the certificate — and to find the bison, the roadhouses, and the wide Tanana Valley while they're here. It feels remote, friendly, and distinctly Interior Alaska: the end of the longest road on the continent, with a buffalo herd to prove it.