The Yukon–Koyukuk Census Area is Alaska’s largest by land area, encompassing over 145,000 square miles of wilderness in the state’s interior. It stretches from the Yukon River to the Brooks Range and includes remote villages like Galena, Huslia, Tanana, Ruby, and Allakaket. With a population of around 5,000, the area is extraordinarily rural, accessible mainly by air, riverboat, or snowmobile. Historically, it was central to Athabascan culture and later saw small gold mining and fur trading posts. Today, the lifestyle remains traditional and subsistence-based. Most homes are wooden cabins or modular houses built on stilts to adapt to permafrost. The terrain is rugged and isolated, offering virtually no road network between settlements. Housing is sparse, with values typically between $200,000–$350,000, while building costs are among the highest in Alaska—$450–$600 per sq ft due to extreme logistics. The nearest major city is Fairbanks, hundreds of miles away by air. Yukon–Koyukuk represents the ultimate Alaskan frontier—vast, silent, and breathtakingly wild, where community and tradition hold everything together.