Bigfork is a charming community known as the art center of the Flathead
Valley. It has more than 50 eclectic shops, 25 restaurants, and 13 art
galleries. It is also home to the Bigfork Summer Playhouse - one of the
Northwest's finest repertory theaters, the Bigfork Art and Cultural Center,
concerts in Everit Sliter Memorial Park on summer Sunday evenings, the Bigfork
Festival of the Arts in August. Each holiday season, the village is decked out
in colored lights, fresh-cut greenery and trees and hundreds of bright red bows,
by community “elves” to create a picturesque setting.
The "Village by the Bay" is sheltered in a sparkling blue bay where the swift
waters of the Swan River flow into Flathead Lake bringing kayakers from around
the world to compete in the annual Whitewater Festival each spring. It offers
spectacular views of the Swan Mountains that drop dramatically into the lake’s
shores. The scenic Swan River Nature Trail provides easy hiking and biking just
a few blacks away from downtown Bigfork, and the town’s close proximity to the
Jewel Basin Hiking Area and the Bob Marshall Wilderness make it a perfect
starting point for outdoor recreation enthusiasts. It is also considered to have
some of the Best
Fishing in the Northwest!
Bigfork’s Eagle Bend Golf Course is a 27-hole championship course located on the
north shore of Flathead Lake with challenging golf and gorgeous views of the
lake, the Swan Mountains, and Glacier National Park. Eagle Bend is Montana’s
only golf course to be rated #1 by Golf Digest for six consecutive years and in
the top 50 in the United States.
This quaint Western village was chosen as "One of the 50 Great Towns of the
West," designated as "One of the 100 Best Small Art Towns of the Nation," and
was listed in National Geographic’s Guide to Small Towns Escapes, which is no
surprise with its gourmet restaurants, fun shops, local character, beautiful
natural surroundings, and a host of outdoor activities.
Bigfork was founded in 1901, about the time the hydroelectric plant at the mouth
of the Swan River was built to supply electricity for Kalispell. The town was
platted by Everit Sliter, who was instrumental in the development of the
community, serving as postmaster, running the town's first hotel and general
store and planting one of the first orchards. Bigfork Bay was a harbor for lake
steamers that once navigated the Flathead.
Bigfork’s population is now about 1,400 and has become home for returning
Montanans who had gone elsewhere to build careers, as well as those seeking
recreational second homes or permanent refuge from crowded and harried urban
areas.
Bigfork Community Links
Alan Habel of Re/Max Bigfork knows how important a home is. Alan
will help you find your Montana dream home and then stay with you until your
dream materializes. Learn more about Bigfork Real Estate