California and Nevada · Pacific
Death Valley National Park
Death Valley National Park spans more than 3 million acres across California and Nevada, protecting below-sea-level basins, salt flats, dunes, badlands, canyons, oases, mining history, and high mountain viewpoints. NPS highlights the park’s extremes: record summer heat, steady drought, winter snow on peaks, rare wildflower blooms, and wildlife adapted to harsh desert conditions. First-time visitors usually prioritize Badwater Basin, Zabriskie Point, Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes, Artists Drive, Dante’s View, Golden Canyon, and Furnace Creek.
The park suits photographers, geology fans, stargazers, road-trippers, hikers visiting in cool weather, and travelers who appreciate desert scale. Sunrise is excellent at Zabriskie Point and the dunes; sunset works well at Dante’s View, Artists Palette, and the badlands. A rushed visit from Las Vegas can cover several paved highlights in one long day, but two or three days are better for Ubehebe Crater, Mosaic Canyon, Golden Canyon, night-sky viewing, and longer drives.
Entrance passes are required and the park does not accept cash. NPS lists a $30 private-vehicle pass, $25 motorcycle pass, $15 per-person pass, and $55 annual pass. Summer visits require serious heat planning: NPS emphasizes limited cell service, more than 3 million acres of parkland, and the need to prepare. Hike early, avoid lower-elevation exertion in heat, carry extra water, check road conditions, and never rely on a phone signal for rescue.
Best overall seasons are late fall through spring; summer is mainly for short, carefully timed sightseeing from air-conditioned vehicles. Amenities cluster around Furnace Creek and Stovepipe Wells, with fuel and lodging distances large by national-park standards. Nearby pairings include Las Vegas, Beatty, Lone Pine, Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, and Mojave Desert road trips.
Visitor Tip: Treat driving distances and heat as the main logistics, not minor details. Fill fuel, carry water for every passenger, and check road closures before heading to remote viewpoints or unpaved roads.
Sources
- NPS verified below-sea-level basin context, major sights, heat safety emphasis, limited cell service warning, current fee amounts, and cashless payment policy.
- Independent reference material verified park size, California/Nevada location, national monument and national park history, and gateway geography.
- An official state tourism page did not open cleanly during this pass; visitors should verify seasonal road, lodging, and campground status through NPS and local operators.




