Where to Stay

Treehouse Cabins in Hocking Hills: A Complete Guide

Updated 2026-03-28 · ~1150 words · 5 min read

Sleeping above the forest floor in Hocking Hills is no longer a childhood fantasy. Treehouse cabins have become one of the most sought-after lodging options in the region, offering an elevated perspective on the same ancient gorges and hemlock forests that draw millions of visitors each year. Demand is intense — fall weekends often sell out six months or more in advance.

Hocking Hills Treehouse Cabins

The original and most established treehouse property in the region sits on 15 secluded acres. Four distinct treehouse units are perched among the hardwood canopy, each featuring wood-fired cedar hot tubs, full kitchens, and private decks with unobstructed forest views. The design philosophy emphasizes natural materials — reclaimed wood, stone, exposed timber framing — blending the structures into the surrounding woodland. Expect to pay $250–$450+ per night depending on the unit and season, with a two-night minimum on weekends.

The 8-Unit Treehouse Resort

A newer addition to the Hocking Hills treehouse scene, this resort expanded the region's elevated lodging capacity significantly. The eight units vary in size and amenity level, ranging from intimate couples retreats to larger family-friendly treehouses. Most feature hot tubs, fireplaces, and full kitchens — the standard Hocking Hills amenity package, but 20 feet off the ground. Pricing starts around $300/night and climbs past $500 for premium units during peak fall foliage weekends.

Among The Trees Lodging

Among The Trees takes a different approach, combining treehouse-style elevated cabins with more traditional luxury cabin amenities. The properties blend indoor-outdoor living with large windows, wraparound decks, and that signature feeling of being suspended in the forest canopy. Hot tubs are standard, and some units feature game rooms or theater setups.

What Makes a Treehouse Stay Different

Beyond the novelty, treehouse cabins offer something traditional ground-level cabins cannot: a canopy-level perspective on the forest. In spring, you're at eye level with migrating warblers. In fall, the color surrounds you on all sides rather than just above. In winter, snow-dusted branches frame your morning coffee at a height that makes the forest feel vast and intimate simultaneously.

The trade-off is access. Most treehouses require climbing stairs — sometimes steep ones — to reach the entrance. This makes them less suitable for guests with mobility concerns. They also tend to be smaller than ground-level cabins, favoring couples and small families over large groups.

Booking tip: October treehouse stays are the hardest reservations in Hocking Hills. The canopy color at elevation is extraordinary, and supply is limited to roughly two dozen units across all properties. Book 6–12 months ahead for peak fall weekends. Midweek stays are significantly easier to secure and typically 40–60% cheaper.

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Best Seasons for a Treehouse Stay

Fall (October) is the crown jewel — you're literally inside the changing canopy, surrounded by crimson sugar maples, golden hickories, and burnt-orange oaks. Winter offers its own magic: snow-covered branches just outside your window, frozen waterfalls a short drive away, and the lowest prices of the year. Spring brings wildflowers (300+ species bloom from late March through June) and peak waterfall flow. Summer is the busiest season — the canopy provides natural shade and temperatures in the gorges run 10–15°F cooler than ridgetops thanks to the hemlock microclimate.

Pricing at a Glance

Treehouse cabins occupy the upper-middle to luxury tier of the Hocking Hills lodging market. Here is what to expect across the year:

Off-peak weekday (January–March, non-holiday): $200–$300/night. Standard weekend (April–September): $300–$450/night. Peak fall weekend (October): $400–$550+/night. Holiday weekends (Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor Day, Thanksgiving): $350–$500/night with 3-night minimums standard.

Additional fees typically include $25/night per extra adult beyond base occupancy, a $300 refundable security deposit, and Hocking County's 6% lodging tax.