The flavivirus NS3 protein is a helicase that has pivotal functions during the viral genome replication process, where it unwinds double-stranded RNA and translocates along the nucleic acid polymer in a nucleoside triphosphate hydrolysis-dependent mechanism. Crystallographic and computational studies of the flavivirus NS3 helicase have identified the RNA-binding loop as an interesting structural element that may function as a component of the RNA-enhanced NTPase activity observed for this family of helicases. Microsecond-long unbiased molecular dynamics and extensive replica exchange umbrella sampling simulations of the Zika NS3 helicase have been performed to investigate the RNA dependence of this loop's structural conformations. Specifically, the effect of the bound single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) oligomer on the putative "open" and "closed" conformations of this loop is studied. In the Apo substrate state, the two loop conformations are nearly isoergonic (ΔAO→C = -0.22 kcal mol-1), explaining the structural ambiguity observed in Apo NS3h crystal structures. The bound ssRNA is seen to stabilize the "open" conformation (ΔAO→C = 1.97 kcal mol-1) through direct protein-RNA interactions at the top of the loop. Interestingly, a small ssRNA oligomer bound over 13 Å away from the loop is seen to affect the free energy surface to favor the "open" structure, while minimizing barriers between the two states. Both the mechanism of the "open" to "closed" transition and important residues of the RNA-binding loop structures are characterized. From these results, point mutations that are hypothesized to stabilize the "closed" RNA-binding loop and negatively impact RNA-binding and the RNA-enhanced NTPase activity are posited.