Yukon 511 Cameras — Live Road Cameras & Map
All Yukon 511 cameras — interactive statewide map
About this map
Yukon 511 runs a small camera network for a very large place. With roughly 20 cameras spread across a territory bigger than California, the feeds are spaced far apart along the handful of highways that connect Yukon's communities. That makes each camera worth checking before a long northern drive, because the next live view down the road may be a hundred kilometres or more away, with no town, fuel, or cell service in between. Our live Yukon camera map at /yukon-cameras pulls the official 511 Yukon feeds into one fast, searchable view so you can see the road surface, the light, and the snow before you commit to a remote stretch.
These cameras sit on Yukon's main road corridors: the Alaska Highway (Yukon Highway 1) running northwest from the British Columbia border near Watson Lake through Teslin and Whitehorse to Haines Junction, Destruction Bay, and Beaver Creek at the Alaska line; the Klondike Highway (Highway 2) north from Whitehorse through Carmacks, Pelly Crossing, and Stewart Crossing to Dawson City; the South Klondike Highway over the White Pass toward Skagway, Alaska; and the Dempster Highway (Highway 5), the only Canadian public road to cross the Arctic Circle. Coverage is sparse by design, so think of the cameras as spot checks at key points rather than a continuous picture of any route.
Yukon 511 does not run its own road-weather sensors, so each camera on our map is paired with the nearest Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) weather-station reading, shown as air temperature and wind beside the image. Treat that as a regional reading, not an on-road sensor: in a territory this sparse the nearest ECCC station can sit far from the camera and at a different elevation, so it tells you the general air mass the road is sitting in rather than the exact pavement condition. Combined with the live image, it still helps you judge whether you are heading into deep cold, rising wind, or a warming trend before you drive.
Yukon regions covered
Tap an area chip on the map to jump straight to any of these regions.
Territory-wide
The full Yukon 511 network at a glance: roughly 20 cameras scattered across the Alaska, Klondike, South Klondike, and Dempster highways. Use this view to scan the whole territory at once before a long haul, since cameras are spaced far apart and the gaps between them can run a hundred kilometres or more with no services.
Whitehorse
Cameras around the territorial capital, where the Alaska Highway and Klondike Highway meet. Whitehorse holds more than three-quarters of Yukon's population and is the hub every major route passes through, so these feeds are the busiest, most-serviced stretch of road you'll find anywhere in the territory.
South Klondike & White Pass
The South Klondike Highway running south from Whitehorse through Carcross and climbing over the White Pass (about 1,000 m at the summit) to the Alaska border and Skagway. This is high, exposed Coast Mountains driving prone to snow, fog, and avalanche-control closures even when Whitehorse is clear, so check the pass cameras before committing.
Alaska Highway
The Alaska Highway (Yukon Highway 1), the territory's main artery, running roughly 930 km from the BC border near Watson Lake through Teslin and Whitehorse to Haines Junction, Destruction Bay along Kluane Lake, and Beaver Creek at the Alaska line. Long distances between fuel and services, frost heaves, wildlife, and the high country near Kluane all make these cameras worth a look.
Klondike & Dawson
The North Klondike Highway (Highway 2) heading north from Whitehorse through Carmacks, Pelly Crossing, and Stewart Crossing to Dawson City and the gold-rush country, plus the Dempster Highway junction toward the Arctic Circle. Expect remote, lightly trafficked road, extreme winter cold, and long gaps between communities along this corridor.
Tips for using Yukon road cameras
- Check the camera AND the nearest ECCC reading together. The image shows you snow, ice, and light; the Environment and Climate Change Canada air-temperature and wind figure tells you the air mass the road sits in. In this sparse network that station can be far away and at a different elevation, so use it as a regional clue, not an exact pavement reading.
- Plan fuel around the gaps, not the cameras. Distances between services on the Alaska, Klondike, and especially the Dempster highways routinely run well over 100 km, and some stations are seasonal. Top up at every community and assume the next pump could be a long way off.
- Respect extreme cold. Yukon winters regularly hit minus 40 and below. At those temperatures a breakdown becomes a survival situation, so carry winter gear, extra clothing, food, and a way to call out, and tell someone your route and timing before you leave town.
- Watch the high passes separately from the valleys. The White Pass on the South Klondike Highway can be snowing, blowing, or closed for avalanche control while Whitehorse sits clear and dry. Scan the pass-area cameras specifically before you head toward Skagway.
- Treat the Dempster Highway as a serious expedition. It's a long gravel road to the Arctic Circle and beyond, with very limited services, no cell coverage for long stretches, and conditions that can strand vehicles. Check the Dempster cameras, carry spare tires and supplies, and confirm road status with 511 Yukon before starting.
- Watch for wildlife on the road, day and night. Bison, moose, and caribou move along Yukon highways and are a real collision risk, particularly at dawn, dusk, and in the long winter darkness. Slow down in low light and stay alert on the Alaska Highway stretches where bison are common.
All Yukon 511 cameras by corridor
A complete directory of all 20 Yukon 511 traffic cameras, grouped by highway and corridor.
Alaska Highway cameras (4)
- Alaska Highway/Fish Lake Road
- Alaska Highway/Fox Farm Road
- Beaver Creek - Alaska Highway - km 1901
- Swift River - Alaska Hwy km 1124
Alaska Hwy cameras (3)
- Alaska Hwy - km 1062
- Alaska Hwy - km 1650
- Alaska Hwy - km 968
Dempster Highway cameras (2)
- Dempster Hwy - km 244
- Dempster Hwy - km 97
S.Klondike Hwy cameras (2)
- S.Klondike Hwy - km 106.5
- S.Klondike Hwy - km 44.2
Dempster Hwy cameras (1)
- Dempster Hwy - km 372
Haines Rd cameras (1)
- Haines Rd - km 89.8
Haines Road cameras (1)
- Nadahani River
N. Klondike Hwy cameras (1)
- N. Klondike Hwy - km 252
N.Klondike/Silver Trail cameras (1)
- N.Klondike/Silver Trail
Nahanni Range Road cameras (1)
- Nahanni Range Road - km 105
Robert Campbell cameras (1)
- Bearfeed Creek - Robert Campbell Hwy - km 506
Silver Trail cameras (1)
- Silver Trail - km 49.5
Tutshi Lake cameras (1)
- Tutshi Lake
Live road cameras in other states
The same fast camera map for the other states we cover.
Yukon road camera guides
In-depth guides to the highways, passes and destinations we cover here.