Visited National Parks Map

Arizona · Southwest

Grand Canyon National Park

Grand Canyon National Park protects one of the world’s best-known geologic landscapes: a vast Colorado River canyon exposing layered rock, desert ecosystems, Indigenous homelands, historic lodges, rim trails, and backcountry routes. Most first-time visitors go to the South Rim, where Grand Canyon Village, Mather Point, Yavapai Geology Museum, the Rim Trail, Hermits Rest Road viewpoints, and Desert View Drive make a strong visit possible without hiking below the rim.

The park matters because the canyon reveals hundreds of millions of years of Earth history and remains culturally significant to many Native nations. It is also a complex visitor destination, not a single overlook. The South Rim is open year-round and has the most services; the North Rim is more remote and seasonal, and NPS fee information still flags closure impacts from the 2025 Dragon Bravo Fire. Grand Canyon West and the Skywalk are outside Grand Canyon National Park on Hualapai lands, so they require separate planning and fees.

A half day can cover a few South Rim overlooks, but a full day is better for the shuttle routes, rim walking, museums, and sunrise or sunset photography. Two or three days allow a below-rim hike, Desert View, and a more relaxed shuttle schedule. NPS lists a $35 private-vehicle pass, $30 motorcycle pass, $20 per-person pass, and $70 park annual pass; entry is valid for seven days, no timed-entry reservation is currently required, and entrance stations do not accept cash.

Spring and fall bring the most comfortable rim and hiking weather, while summer heat below the rim can be dangerous and winter can bring snow and ice to the rim. Families, photographers, geology fans, hikers, history buffs, and road-trippers all find good options, but hikers must remember that going down is optional and coming back up is mandatory. Nearby pairings include Flagstaff, Williams, Tusayan, Sedona, Route 66 stops, Navajo and Hopi cultural sites with appropriate planning, and Page or Marble Canyon on longer routes.

Visitor Tip: For a first visit, use the South Rim shuttle system and walk part of the Rim Trail instead of fighting for every parking space. Check current North Rim status before building an itinerary around it.

Sources

  • NPS verified current fee amounts, no timed-entry requirement, cashless entrance stations, South Rim inclusion, campground reservation notes, and North Rim closure alert language present on the fee page.
  • Independent sources verified South Rim first-visit priorities, North Rim/West Rim distinction, and common hiking/viewpoint recommendations.
  • The official Arizona tourism page did not open cleanly through the research tool in this pass; visitors should verify North Rim status and shuttle routes with NPS before travel.
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