PARKS Atlas

United States · 63 National Parks & thousands of public lands

US National Parks Map

All 63 national parks on one map — which ones combine into a single trip, the towns you'd stay in, and the routes between them.

Park, town, and route details are checked by our editors. Pass coverage spans the National Park Service, Forest Service, BLM, Fish & Wildlife, and Army Corps of Engineers. Fees and seasonal status change — confirm current details with the managing agency before you go.

63
National parks, mapped in trip-planning detail
13
Multi-park road trips you can follow
5,600+
Federal sites where your pass is valid

What the map shows you

The parks, the towns, and the roads between

Most trips start with a state — Utah's Mighty 5, California's Sierra and desert parks, Alaska's backcountry — then narrow to the parks, towns, and roads the map lays out below.

The parks themselves

Sixty-three national parks, each one reason enough for a trip. Seeing them together is how you notice the pairs you would never have planned — Sequoia and Kings Canyon share a boundary; Carlsbad Caverns and Guadalupe Mountains are forty minutes apart.

The towns around them

Most of a trip happens just outside the park line — where you sleep, where you eat, where the morning starts. The map plots the towns that serve each park, so your basecamp is a choice you make with the options in front of you.

The roads between them

When two or three parks fall along one drive, that is a road trip waiting to happen. Follow a route like the Mighty 5 and the map frames the whole run — every park on it, the towns in between, and the stops worth pulling over for.

Jump straight to a park

The parks we cover in depth

Every park below has a full trip-planning page — trails, lodging, the towns nearby, permits, and the best time to go. More land here as we publish them.

One more thing the map is showing you

One pass covers nearly all of it

Beyond the 63 national parks, the map plots more than 5,600 federal recreation sites — and a single $80 America the Beautiful National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Pass covers entrance and standard amenity fees at every one. Six agencies, one card on the dash.

National Park Service
Parks, monuments, seashores, and historic sites.
US Forest Service
National forests and grasslands — the most sites by far.
Bureau of Land Management
Open public land across the West.
Fish & Wildlife Service
National wildlife refuges.
Army Corps of Engineers
Lakes, rivers, and shoreline recreation.
Bureau of Reclamation
Reservoirs and water-project land.

A few national park entrances cost more in a single trip than the pass costs all year — add your parks below and see for yourself.

Get the National Park Pass

Is the pass worth it?

Add the parks you'll visit — we'll do the math.

The $80 Annual Pass covers entrance fees at every national park that charges one. Add the parks on your trip; we'll compare what you'd pay at the gate against the pass.

    Your trip

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