Every paved pass, named summit, ridge road, and Sub Buck low point we could verify. Filter by state. Sort by elevation. Drop into a destination card to plan a run.

Sort by state, elevation, vehicle reach, season. Every entry hand-rendered.

Tap any destination. Edge-to-edge Rayshader topo backdrop, vehicle tier, season, USGS source.
Coverage skews where the off-road weekends actually happen — California and Colorado lead at 286 and 221 destinations, the Mountain West and desert Southwest carry the middle, and the long tail covers the rest of the country with at least 20 destinations per state.
286 CA · 221 CO. Mountain West heartland and Sierra coverage that anchors the atlas.
125 NV · 105 AZ · 102 UT. Red rock, alpine basins, and high passes.
70–82 each. Cascades, Sawtooth, Tetons, Sangres, all covered.
44–48 each. Appalachian backbone east-coast presence.
30–42 each. Alpine, coastal, Hawaii volcano routes, Arctic Circle access.
20 each minimum. Every state covered, no exceptions.
Sub Buck is BuckUp's track for below-sea-level destinations — 25 low points like Badwater Basin (-282 ft), Bombay Beach, Salton City, the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans, and the Imperial Valley salt flats. Same Buck math as a peak, rendered in cool blue (#4FB1F5) instead of dust amber to mark the opposite direction.
Every Explore destination ships with a Rayshader-rendered 3D topo card as its detail-view hero. The 25 marquee locations are bundled in the app for offline browsing; the remaining 2,375 stream from BuckUp's CDN at topo.buckup.app. The cards are hand-built — no stock satellite tiles, no procedural placeholders.
Download BuckUp to filter, browse, and earn against the full 2,400.
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