Skip to Content

June Is The Perfect Time To Discover These 12 Massachusetts Falls

June Is The Perfect Time To Discover These 12 Massachusetts Falls

Sharing is caring!

Massachusetts waterfalls hit a sweet spot in June, when spring runoff still lingers and the trails feel lush without the deep heat of midsummer. Some of these falls are famous for good reason, while others feel like quiet little secrets tucked into woods, gorges, and roadside bends.

If you are craving mist, moss, and a reason to take the scenic route, this list gives you both classics and wonderfully unexpected stops. Consider it your excuse to chase water across the state before summer gets too busy.

Bash Bish Falls

Bash Bish Falls
© Bash Bish Falls

June is when Bash Bish Falls feels almost theatrical, with leafed-out walls, cool mist, and the loud rush of water bouncing through its narrow gorge. In Mount Washington, this famous Berkshire cascade is the state’s highest single-drop fall, splitting around a giant boulder before plunging roughly sixty feet into a clear pool.

The Massachusetts trail is shorter but steeper, while the New York approach is longer and easier for a more relaxed outing.

I would treat this one like a destination walk rather than a quick stop because the whole setting feels carved for drama on a bright green Berkshire morning. Swimming is prohibited here and that rule matters since the currents and slick rocks can turn dangerous fast.

If you are planning an early June visit, check trail access updates first since the Mount Washington entrance had weather-related closures and the easier Taconic State Park side was the better bet for part of the season.

Wahconah Falls

Wahconah Falls
© Wahconah Falls State Park

Wahconah Falls in Dalton is the kind of Berkshire stop that makes a warm June afternoon feel instantly cooler. Water spills about forty feet over layered ledges, then fans out across dark rock in a way that looks both powerful and strangely elegant.

The surrounding state park stays nicely wooded, so the approach feels shaded, soft, and perfect when you want a short nature reset without a demanding hike.

I like this fall for its balance: big enough to feel memorable, easy enough to fit into a day of wandering around the Berkshires. You can linger on the sound, watch sunlight flicker through the trees, and enjoy that rare mix of convenience and atmosphere.

After rain, the flow looks extra lively, but even in calmer conditions the textured rock keeps the scene interesting from nearly every angle. If you are chasing variety in June, this is a great contrast to the state’s taller, more rugged waterfalls.

Doane’s Falls

Doane's Falls
© Doane’s Falls

Doane’s Falls in Royalston is really a chain of moments, not just one drop, and June gives each section a fresh, lively voice. Along the Tully River, the cascades tumble a combined 175 feet past giant rocks, forest shade, and those satisfying boardwalks that make the route feel welcoming.

If you like a waterfall walk that keeps changing its shape every few minutes, this place delivers without making you work too hard for the payoff.

What I enjoy most here is the rhythm, another plunge, a calmer stretch, then another surprise around the bend. Everything feels connected by water, wood, and mossy stone after a rainy week in June, especially then.

The trails are fairly accessible by regional standards, so this is one of the better picks if you want scenery that feels dramatic without feeling remote. Bring patience instead of speed, because the best version of Doane’s Falls is the one you notice slowly.

Slatestone Brook Falls

Slatestone Brook Falls
© Sanderson Brook Waterfall

Slatestone Brook Falls in Sunderland is not the loudest or grandest stop on this list, which is exactly why it sticks with you. This roughly forty-foot roadside cascade slips down a rocky mountainside in a thin, silver pattern that feels more like a secret than a spectacle.

In June, with everything green and glowing, it becomes the kind of place where you pull over for five minutes and somehow stay much longer.

I love mixing in one offbeat stop like this between bigger hikes, because it changes the pace and makes the day feel more personal. You are not here for epic thunder so much as texture, quiet, and that satisfying sense of finding beauty where others might drive past.

It is also easy to pair with food, bookstores, or a scenic back-road drive through the valley on a soft evening. If you enjoy unusual, low-commitment detours, this Pioneer Valley trickle absolutely earns its place.

Campbell Falls

Campbell Falls
© Campbell Falls State Park

Campbell Falls in New Marlborough feels like a borderland adventure, with the Whiting River charging through woods before dropping in a broad, roaring cataract. The full fall is often described around one hundred feet, and the setting has that damp, echoing energy that makes you instinctively lower your voice.

June is ideal because the trail is pleasant, the forest is bright, and the water usually still carries plenty of spring confidence.

I think this is one of those places that rewards people who like scenery with a slightly wild edge rather than polished viewpoints. After rain, the spray can feel wonderfully refreshing on a hot day without ever entering the water.

Because it straddles the Massachusetts and Connecticut line, the experience feels a little less ordinary, like you are stepping into a tucked-away corner most summer travelers miss. Go for the rumble, stay for the cool air, and let the whole ravine reset your mood.

Tannery Falls

Tannery Falls
© Tannery Falls

Tannery Falls in Savoy Mountain State Forest is the hidden-gem pick I would save for the friend who thinks they have already seen every Berkshire waterfall. The hike carries you through deep forest before revealing an eighty-foot drop that breaks into smaller cascades, making the whole scene feel layered and alive.

In June, the trail smells green, the rocks stay cool, and the water seems to arrive out of nowhere.

What makes this one special is the sense of discovery, because the approach builds suspense instead of handing you the view immediately. You get movement, sound, and flashes of white water through trees before the falls finally open up and feel bigger than you expected.

Pack shoes with grip, move slowly, and enjoy the hush between the louder cascades when the trail turns darker inside. If you love places that feel half hike and half reveal, this forest stop absolutely belongs on your June list.

Trap Falls

Trap Falls
© Trap Falls

Trap Falls in Willard Brook State Forest proves that a waterfall does not need a long hike to feel satisfying. Near Ashby, this easy stop is reached by a short stroll and a wooden bridge, so you get the sound and sparkle of moving water with almost no effort.

June is perfect for bringing kids, cautious hikers, or anyone who wants something scenic between bigger adventures.

I like recommending this one because accessibility can be its own kind of magic, especially when the landscape still feels fresh and quiet. You can pause on the bridge, listen to the brook gather speed, and enjoy a view that feels earned without being exhausting.

It is also a smart rainy-day backup, since the short walk keeps mud, time, and complaints to a minimum for nearly any travel group. For a low-stress waterfall day, Trap Falls is the kind of simple pleasure that makes summer plans easier to keep.

Royalston Falls

Royalston Falls
© Royalston Falls

Royalston Falls feels like the secluded counterpoint to more famous names, and the Tully Trail approach helps set the mood. In Royalston, the water drops about forty-five feet into a boulder-packed gorge, where the dark stone and tight walls make everything sound amplified.

June is an especially good month here because the forest is full, the air is mild, and the trail still carries that fresh-season energy.

I would choose this one when you want the payoff to feel slightly hidden, as if the waterfall belongs to the people willing to keep walking. After a week of rain, the water and moss can look almost unreal in the dim light near the bottom overlook there.

The gorge gives the whole place a dramatic, tucked-in character, and the surrounding woods make the reveal feel even cooler and deeper. Bring a snack, take your time, and let the quiet sections of trail become part of the experience.

Tannery Falls

Tannery Falls
© Tannery Falls

Tannery Falls in Easthampton is the sort of under-the-radar waterfall stop that fits beautifully into a June day of exploring western Massachusetts. Instead of grand state-park scale, you get a more local feeling, brook, stone, shade, and the pleasure of finding moving water tucked into an ordinary landscape.

That intimacy is the appeal, especially if you enjoy places that feel discovered rather than announced.

I like weaving a place like this into a trip with coffee, bookstores, or a lazy drive, because it turns waterfall chasing into something more playful. You may come for a quick look, then stay because the sound is calming and the smaller scale lets you notice details bigger falls can overwhelm.

Bring curiosity, not expectations, and this modest Easthampton spot might surprise you more than a famous trail ever could on a humid green afternoon. In June, that quiet charm feels just right, like a gentle pause between louder destinations.

Goldmine Brook Falls

Goldmine Brook Falls
© Goldmine Brook

Goldmine Brook Falls in Chester already has a name that sounds like a secret, and the real place lives up to it. Tucked into the hilltown landscape, this waterfall offers the kind of mossy, stony setting that feels especially inviting in June, when recent rain often keeps the brook lively.

It is less about bragging rights and more about atmosphere, which can be even better when you are trying to slow down.

I would pair this stop with a scenic drive and maybe a bakery run, because it seems to belong to the softer side of summer travel. The reward is not just the waterfall itself but the whole mood around it, quiet roads, deep greens, and that hidden-corner feeling western Massachusetts does so well.

You leave feeling refreshed rather than rushed, which is sometimes the best outcome anyway. If you like your adventures a little quirky and a little hushed, Goldmine Brook fits perfectly.

Chapel Brook Falls

Chapel Brook Falls
© Chapel Falls

Chapel Brook Falls in Ashfield is a June favorite if you like your water features with a little variety built in. Rather than one dramatic plunge alone, this spot gives you cascades, ledges, and a playful flow that invites lingering, especially when the surrounding woods are bright and full.

The setting feels friendly and photogenic without losing that lightly wild western Massachusetts personality.

I think this is one of the easiest places to recommend to mixed groups, because nearly everyone can find something to enjoy. Some people will want photos, others will just want to sit nearby and listen, and both approaches feel correct here.

If you have been chasing bigger names all weekend, this stop can feel wonderfully grounding and surprisingly memorable at the same time for such an easy outing too. On a warm day, the combination of rock, water, and shade makes Chapel Brook feel like a small seasonal ritual worth repeating.

Spirit Falls

Spirit Falls
© Spirit Falls

Spirit Falls in Royalston sounds mystical, and in June it honestly earns the name. Reached in a quieter corner of north central Massachusetts, this fall feels wrapped in ferns, shadow, and cool air, with water slipping through rock in a way that seems older than the trail itself.

It is the kind of place where conversation naturally drops, because the whole setting asks you to pay closer attention.

I would save this for the part of the day when you want less checking boxes and more soaking in a mood. The memory lingers because the place feels sensed as much as seen on the walk back out.

Royalston has a gift for dramatic water and secluded woods, and Spirit Falls might be the most atmospheric example of that pairing. If you are willing to slow your pace, this stop can feel less like an attraction and more like a brief private ceremony with the landscape.