Minnesota · Midwest
Voyageurs National Park
Voyageurs National Park spans 218,000 acres of lakes, forests, streams, islands, and boreal shoreline in northern Minnesota near International Falls. Established in 1975, Minnesota's only national park is named for the French-Canadian voyageurs who traveled these border waters during the fur trade. It is a water-first park: much of the Kabetogama Peninsula and many campsites, day-use areas, and viewpoints are reached by boat in summer or across frozen routes in winter.
First-time visitors should plan around Rainy Lake, Kabetogama Lake, Namakan Lake, Sand Point Lake, or Crane Lake, then choose a boat tour, canoe or kayak route, houseboat trip, fishing day, or water-access campsite. Highlights include Kettle Falls, Little American Island, Ellsworth Rock Gardens, Anderson Bay, the interior lakes, aurora viewing, fall color, and winter ice roads or snowshoe routes when conditions allow. The park suits paddlers, anglers, houseboat travelers, families comfortable on water, stargazers, winter-sports visitors, and people who prefer quieter national parks.
NPS lists no entrance pass requirement for Voyageurs. Fees apply for camping, houseboat permits, ranger-led boat tours, special interpretive programs, winter equipment rentals, and special-use permits; all tent campsites require reservation and nightly amenity fees, and overnight houseboats, sailboats, and cabin cruisers require permits. A half-day boat tour gives a useful overview, but two to four days are better for paddling, camping, fishing, or staying on a houseboat.
Summer is best for boating, fishing, camping, and swimming, while fall is excellent for color and fewer insects. Winter can be memorable for snowmobiling, skiing, snowshoeing, ice fishing, and dark skies, but safe travel depends on ice reports. Bring navigation tools, insect protection, rain gear, warm layers, life jackets, and bear-safe food storage. Nearby bases include International Falls, Ranier, Kabetogama, Ash River, Crane Lake, and the Boundary Waters region.
Visitor Tip: Reserve camping, boat tours, or houseboat permits before arrival and do not assume you can see the park well from a car. Download maps and check the current water, weather, smoke, and ice reports before leaving the dock.
Sources
- NPS verified acreage, establishment year, water-based character, aurora/dark-sky emphasis, camping and local guide planning, no entrance fee, and fee categories for camping, houseboats, boat tours, and special programs.
- Independent sources verified Minnesota-only national park context, boat-access camping, winter activities, stargazing, major lakes, Kettle Falls, and gateway-community planning.
- An Explore Minnesota tourism page was sought but could not be safely opened through the browsing tool; tourism details were limited to NPS and independent references.




