Who Is Logan Ribar from Alone Season 4? What Happened
2026-04-25
Spoiler note: this covers how Logan Ribar's run on season 4 ended.
Alone season 4 broke from the franchise's usual solo format and paired contestants into teams, sibling pairs, spousal pairs, and parent-child pairs, dropped into Quatsino Territory on Vancouver Island. Logan Ribar, 19 at the time, was paired with his father Alex. His contestant page and our season 4 hub have the full team roster and rules for that season's format.
What happened on the island
Logan and his father were separated at the start, each dropped at their own site with the goal of eventually linking up. That link-up never happened. Alex tapped out before the pair could reunite, which under the team season's rules ended Logan's run too, placing him sixth overall. Our data lists his cause of exit simply as being pulled once his father tapped out, not a decision he made independently.
Logan grew up in the Maine woods and came in with real shelter-building and tracking skills, the kind of background that showed up across the season in how the various Ribar-family and other father-son teams approached the terrain. But the season's format meant individual skill only mattered as much as your partner's ability to stay in the game, and that structural quirk is part of what makes season 4 an unusual entry in the show's history. If you want to see how differently that format played out for the winning pair, brothers Jim Baird and Ted Baird actually did link up and split the $500,000 prize as co-winners, which our winners page covers alongside every other season's result.
Where he is now
Logan has kept a low public profile since the show aired. Public accounts and social media activity attributed to him describe him as someone who still spends time traveling and being outdoors, in keeping with the woodsman upbringing described in his original casting bio, but there is no confirmed, verifiable detail about a specific job, business, or project tied to his name as of mid-2026. Given how thin that trail is, the honest answer is that Logan Ribar has mostly stepped back from public attention after his single season on the show.
His father Alex has left a slightly more visible trail, reportedly building an outdoor brand called Liberty Rogue and partnering with a canoe expedition outfit in the years after the show, per casting-update coverage that has followed the season 4 cast. None of that is confirmed through primary sources tied to this site's data, so treat it as reported rather than verified, but it is worth noting for anyone specifically tracking what became of the father-son team rather than Logan alone.
The bigger picture
Season 4's team format is one of the more debated experiments in the show's run precisely because of situations like the Ribars': a contestant's fate got tied to someone else's decision rather than purely their own endurance or skill. It is worth reading the rules page if you want the full breakdown of how tap-outs, medical evacuations, and team dependencies were scored that season, since it explains why "placement 6" for Logan reflects his father's exit rather than anything that went wrong in Logan's own camp.
For a wider view of how the franchise's format has changed season to season, from strict solo runs to the team experiment to the fixed-threshold prize structure used later on, our FAQ rounds up the recurring questions newer viewers tend to have about why Alone's rules aren't identical every year.
More in the Field Journal or start with the season guides.