Discover America's Historic Covered Bridges
Journey through time and explore a comprehensive directory of the nation's most picturesque and historically significant covered bridges.
Journey through time and explore a comprehensive directory of the nation's most picturesque and historically significant covered bridges.
501 Bridges available
Placeholder AD Space
Explore bridges across best states
Polk County, near Pedee. Built 1927, 73 ft. long. The last covered bridge on an official Oregon state highway; saved from demolition by a 1974 public vote.
Multnomah County, in Portland. Built 1982, 60 ft. long. The only covered bridge in Oregon's most populous county — built for looks, not structural need.
Deschutes County, in Bend. Built 1963, 42 ft. long. Oregon's only covered bridge east of the Cascades; some don't count it as a "true" covered bridge at all.
Coos County, near Remote. Built 1921, 60 ft. long. Uses a rare double-Howe-truss design; the only covered bridge in Coos County.
Josephine County, near Sunny Valley. Built 1920, 105 ft. long. Named for a pioneer tragedy on the Applegate Trail; Oregon's most-viewed covered bridge, visible from I-5.
Get your Bridge listed on American Covered Bridges and reach thousands of potential customers.
Modern replica built 1988-89 in Cabot
One of only 2 surviving covered railroad bridges in Vermont
Rural gem serving Northeast Kingdom
"Emily's Bridge" - Stowe's haunted bridge
Spans waterway at Cambridge Junction
Crosses Lord's Creek
Part of Montgomery's bridge collection
Southern Vermont historic bridge
Built 1870, 120-foot Town lattice truss
Explore the historic Creamery Covered Bridge in Brattleboro, Vermont—the town's last 19th-century covered bridge. Built in 1879, this 80-foot Town lattice truss once served local dairy farmers and now stands as a cherished pedestrian landmark over Whetstone Brook.
Longest covered bridge entirely within Vermont at 276 feet
Spans the West River