Open a map of the United States and trace the northern border of Minnesota. At the very top, something strange happens.
A small finger of land juts above the 49th parallel — the only piece of the contiguous United States that sits north of the line. It is not connected to Minnesota by any road. To drive there, you have to go through Canada. Twice.
This is Angle Inlet, home to the Northwest Angle — the northernmost community in the lower 48 states, and one of the most overlooked geographic oddities in America.
A Surveyor’s Mistake That Never Got Fixed
The Northwest Angle exists because of an 18th-century mapping error. When the United States and Britain negotiated their border after the Revolutionary War, they used the Lake of the Woods as a reference point.
The agreement called for the border to run from the lake’s “most northwestern point” due west to the Mississippi River — but no one had accurately mapped either landmark.
When surveyors arrived later, the math didn’t work, and the result was a small notch of American territory sitting above the 49th parallel, completely surrounded by Manitoba and Ontario on three sides and the Lake of the Woods on the fourth.
It is the only place in the contiguous United States that lies north of the 49th parallel — technically part of Lake of the Woods County, Minnesota, but unreachable from the rest of the state without leaving the country first.
Four Border Crossings for One Destination
Driving to the Northwest Angle from Roseau or Warroad, Minnesota, means crossing into Manitoba, Canada, driving about 40 miles through the province — including a stretch of gravel road through dense boreal forest — and then re-entering the United States at Angle Inlet. Going home means doing it again. Four border crossings in total.
A passport is required at every checkpoint. The crossing at Angle Inlet is unmanned, but travelers are still required to check in with US Customs via a video kiosk. When Canada closed its border during COVID-19 in 2020, the Northwest Angle was effectively cut off from the rest of America. “Tourists are by definition essential to us,” said Paul Colson, owner of Jake’s Northwest Angle Resort. “We can’t make a living without them.”
The community improvised, building a 22-mile ice road across the frozen Lake of the Woods to bypass the closed border — a remarkable solution that drew national attention from Bloomberg BusinessWeek.
Life at the Top of America

About 120 people live at the Northwest Angle year-round. In summer, the population swells as anglers arrive to fish the world-class walleye waters of the Lake of the Woods — the same body of water that created the Angle’s isolation in the first place. The lake covers 1,700 square miles, holds more than 14,000 islands, and is considered one of the finest fishing destinations in North America.
Beyond fishing, the Angle holds a collection of small distinctions that delight geography enthusiasts. It is home to the northernmost post office in the lower 48 states, the last one-room public schoolhouse in Minnesota, and the northernmost point marker in the contiguous US at Young’s Bay Resort. A short hike reaches the precise geographic point, where visitors take photos proving they’ve stood farther north than anywhere else in the continental country.
There is also a fresh complication for 2026 visitors to note: Canada’s Remote Area Border Crossing (RABC) program — which simplified border crossings for boaters on the lake — ends September 14, 2026. Anyone planning to travel by water between the Angle and Canadian waters after that date will need to use the 888-CAN-PASS telephone reporting system instead.
The Road Trip Worth the Detour
For road-trippers willing to take on the border logistics, the drive through Manitoba to reach Angle Inlet is part of the experience. The 40-mile run through the province winds through quiet Canadian prairie and forest, offering glimpses of a landscape most American travelers never see. Wildlife sightings — including black bear — are common on the approach road.
Visitors who want to avoid border crossings entirely can book a charter boat across the lake through Lake of the Woods Passenger Service, staying entirely in US waters and arriving at the Angle without ever touching Canadian soil. It takes longer and costs more, but it is the only way in that doesn’t require a passport.
Either way, the Northwest Angle is the kind of place that makes America’s geography feel genuinely strange — and genuinely worth exploring.















