Wyoming ยท Mountain West
Grand Teton National Park
Grand Teton National Park protects the abrupt Teton Range, Jackson Hole valley, glacial lakes, the Snake River, historic ranch landscapes, and a major piece of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. The park is visually immediate: jagged peaks rise straight from the valley, with classic first-visit stops at Jenny Lake, Mormon Row, Schwabacher Landing, Oxbow Bend, Snake River Overlook, Signal Mountain, Colter Bay, and the Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center.
The park is ideal for photographers, families, hikers, paddlers, wildlife watchers, anglers with proper permits, cyclists, climbers, and travelers linking Jackson with Yellowstone. Grand Teton is named for the highest peak in the range, and the landscape supports moose, bison, elk, pronghorn, bears, wolves, eagles, and seasonal wildflowers. Current NPS messaging reminds visitors not to collect wildflowers because they support wildlife, pollinators, soil stability, and future blooms.
A quick visit can cover sunrise photography and the main scenic drive in half a day, but one or two full days are better for Jenny Lake, short hikes, historic districts, and wildlife stops. NPS states that vehicle reservations are not needed to enter Grand Teton, but entrance fees are required and the park does not accept cash. Current fees include $35 per private vehicle, $30 per motorcycle, $20 per person, and $70 for a park annual pass; lodging and campgrounds are reservable and can fill months ahead.
Summer has the most services, but also the heaviest crowds and roadside wildlife traffic. Late spring and fall can be excellent for photography and wildlife, while winter brings snow travel, quieter scenery, and limited services. Bring layers, bear-aware habits, binoculars, and patience at pullouts. Nearby pairings include Jackson, the National Elk Refuge, Bridger-Teton National Forest, Yellowstone National Park, and the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Memorial Parkway.
Visitor Tip: Plan sunrise at Mormon Row, Schwabacher Landing, or Oxbow Bend, then move before midmorning parking pressure builds at Jenny Lake. Do not assume a Yellowstone pass covers Grand Teton; NPS says a separate entrance fee is required when traveling between the parks.
Sources
- NPS verified current fee amounts, cashless policy, no vehicle-reservation requirement, separate Yellowstone/Grand Teton fees, permit categories, lodging/campground reservation advice, and visitor services.
- Independent sources verified landscape scale, Greater Yellowstone context, wildlife and recreation themes, and current wildflower etiquette coverage.
- The official Wyoming tourism page did not open cleanly through the research tool in this pass; visitors should verify lodging, campground, and road status directly with NPS and local providers.




