National Parks in the United States
Explore 62 national parks with trail info, visitor stats, weather data, and hotel reviews. Find the perfect park for your next outdoor adventure.
Showing 11 parks in Pacific
Yosemite National Park
Granite monoliths, thundering waterfalls, and ancient giant sequoias in the Sierra Nevada's crown jewel valley.
Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks
Home to the world's largest trees and the deepest canyon in North America, hidden in the southern Sierra Nevada.
Olympic National Park
Glacier-capped peaks, temperate rainforests, and rugged Pacific coastline all within a single extraordinary park.
Mount Rainier National Park
The most glaciated peak in the contiguous United States, rising 14,411 feet above wildflower-carpeted alpine meadows.
Channel Islands National Park
Five rugged islands off the Southern California coast harbor rare wildlife and pristine marine ecosystems found nowhere else on Earth.
Crater Lake National Park
The deepest lake in America fills an ancient volcanic caldera with impossibly blue water surrounded by towering cliffs.
Death Valley National Park
The hottest, driest, and lowest national park in North America reveals a stark landscape of extremes and surprising beauty.
Lassen Volcanic National Park
All four types of volcanoes converge in this steaming landscape of boiling mud pots, fumaroles, and alpine lakes.
North Cascades National Park
A rugged wilderness of jagged peaks, ancient glaciers, and pristine alpine lakes hidden in the heart of Washington State.
Pinnacles National Park
Towering volcanic spires, talus caves, and California condors soaring above a dramatic landscape forged by ancient eruptions.
Redwood National Park
Walk among the tallest trees on Earth in a misty cathedral of ancient coast redwoods stretching to the sky.