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Zion National Park

Utah

Stunning red cliffs, canyon hikes, and river camping opportunities.

Difficulty

Beginner - Advanced

Best Season

April - May, September - October

Type

Canyon

Overview

Zion National Park features stunning red sandstone cliffs, narrow canyon hikes, and the Virgin River. The park offers diverse hiking from easy river walks to challenging scrambles.

Best for: All experience levels; families, hikers, adventure seekers

Size & Scale

Area: 146,597 acres

Elevation: 3,666 - 9,642 ft

Trails: 130

Permits & Fees

Backcountry permit required; Reserve online (popular trails require lottery)

Learn more →

Camping & Accommodations

2 main campgrounds (Watchman and South); Also Zion Ponderosa outside park

Available Campgrounds

  • Watchman Campground
  • South Campground
  • Zion Ponderosa (outside park)
  • Backcountry sites

Must-Visit Trails

Angels Landing

Hard

5.4 mi

Iconic peak, chains scramble, views

The Narrows (river hike)

Moderate

9.4 mi

Canyon walls, river wading

Emerald Pools

Easy-Moderate

3 mi

Pools, waterfalls

The Subway (Zion)

Hard

9.6 mi

Slot canyon, technical scrambling

Wildlife & Nature

Wildlife Present

Mule deer, ringtail cats, mountain lions (rare), Desert bighorn sheep

Wildlife Viewing Tips

Early morning/dusk; mule deer common in valley

Camping Essentials

Packing Tips

Spring/fall ideal (summer extreme heat, winter can have snow). River hikes require water shoes. The Narrows can flash flood.

Hazards to Know

Narrow, exposed drops, flash flood danger (especially Narrows), heat, slickrock

Water Access

Virgin River; filter water. Limited in backcountry.

Accessibility

Emerald Pools and Canyon Overlook accessible; Riverside Walk mostly accessible

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