Explore the terrain of Wyoming with this interactive elevation map, powered by AWS Terrain Tiles. Plot a route across Wyoming’s landscape to generate a precise elevation profile – every ridge, valley, and summit charted in real time. Switch to Contour Generator mode to visualise any area as contour lines. The city elevation table below samples each location live from 30-metre resolution terrain data.
The table below shows major Wyoming cities ranked by elevation, loaded live from AWS terrain tiles. Click any city to open its terrain map.
| City | Region | Elevation (ft) ? | Elevation (m) | Population |
|---|
Explore Wyoming City Terrain Maps
Each city page shows satellite imagery, hillshade, and contour layers focused on that city’s terrain.
Wyoming Elevation Overview
Wyoming has the second-highest mean elevation of any US state. Gannett Peak in the Wind River Range reaches 13,809 ft. The state contains Yellowstone – the world’s largest known supervolcano. The Tetons rise dramatically from Jackson Hole. The eastern third is rolling High Plains. The Continental Divide crosses from the northwest to the south.
How to Use the Wyoming Elevation Map
Click on the map to place waypoints along any route. Once you have two or more points, the Generate Profile button activates – click it to sample elevations and draw the chart below. Use the Samples slider to control data resolution. To explore contour lines, switch to the Contour Generator tab, drag to draw a bounding box over your area of interest, set your interval and units, and click Generate Contours. Download results in GeoJSON, KML, GPX, or CSV format for use in other mapping tools.
Wyoming Elevation Highlights
- Highest point: Gannett Peak, 13,809 ft
- Lowest point: Belle Fourche River, 3,099 ft
- Mean elevation: 6,700 ft
Explore elevation maps for states bordering Wyoming: Colorado Elevation Map, Idaho Elevation Map, Montana Elevation Map, Nebraska Elevation Map, South Dakota Elevation Map, Utah Elevation Map.

