go to content go to search box go to global site navigation

Utah

Hiking activities in Utah

‹ Prev

of 2

  1. Norwegian Outdoor Exploration Center

    Take a hike with Norwegian Outdoor Exploration Center, a nonprofit educational guide service supporting at-risk youths. It leads terrific wildflower and backcountry tours for about $20 per person.

    reviewed

  2. Backcountry Hikes

    Only 1% of all visitors venture onto the backcountry hikes. You won't walk among many hoodoo formations here, but you will pass through forest and meadows with distant views of rock formations. And oh, the quiet. The 23-mile Under-the-Rim Trail, south of Bryce Amphitheater, can be broken into several athletic day hikes. The 11-mile stretch between Bryce Point and Swamp Canyon is one of the hardest and best. Get backcountry permits and trail info from rangers at the visitor center.

    reviewed

  3. Backcountry

    Zion has hundreds of miles of backcountry hiking trails, wilderness camping and enough quiet to hear the whoosh of soaring ravens overhead. The most famous route is the unforgettable Narrows, a 16-mile journey into skinny canyons along the Virgin River's north fork (June through October). Plan on getting wet: at least 50% of the hike is in the river. The trip takes 12 hours; split it into two days, spending the night at one of the designated campsites you reserved or finish the hike in time to catch the last park shuttle. The trail ends among the throngs of day hikers on Riverside Walk at the north end of Zion Canyon. A trailhead shuttle is necessary for this and other…

    reviewed

  4. Zion Canyon

    Spring to fall, the mandatory shuttle stops at all major trailheads along Zion Canyon Scenic Dr, allowing one-way hikes. In low season you can park at these stops, but you'll have to hike back to your car.

    Of the easy-to-moderate trails, the paved, mile-long Riverside Walk (1 mile) at the end of the road is a good place to start. When the trail ends, you can continue along in the Virgin River for 5 miles to Big Springs; this is the bottom portion of the Narrows – a difficult backpacking trip. Yes, you'll be hiking in the water (June through October), so be prepared.

    A steep, but paved, half-mile trail leads to the lower of the Emerald Pools. Here water tumbles from above…

    reviewed

  5. Windows Trail

    Tight on time? Do part or all of the easy 1-mile round-trip, which brings you up to North Window, where you can look out to the canyon beyond. Continue on to South Window and castle-like Turret Arch. Don't forget to see Double Arch, just across the parking lot.

    reviewed

  6. Rim Trail

    The easiest hike, this 0.5- to 5.5-mile-long (one-way) trail outlines Bryce Amphitheater from Fairyland Point to Bryce Point. Several sections are paved and wheelchair accessible, the most level being the half mile between Sunrise and Sunset Points. In the summer, you could easily take the shuttle to any one point and return from another instead of backtracking to a car.

    reviewed

  7. Ranger-Led Activities

    During summer and early fall, rangers lead canyon-rim walks, hoodoo hikes, geology lectures, campfire programs and kids' ecology walks. If you're here when skies are clear and the moon's full, don't miss the two-hour Moonlight Hike among the hoodoos. Register same-day at the visitor center, but do so early.

    reviewed

  8. Peekaboo Trail

    The fairly level 7-mile-long Peekaboo Trail, which leaves from Bryce Point, allows dogs and horses. Not recommended in high summer – it doesn't always smell the best.

    reviewed

  9. Negro Bill Canyon Trail

    The moderately easy trail includes a 2.5-mile walk along a stream. (The totally politically incorrect canyon name refers to a prospector who grazed his cows here in the 1800s.) Scoot down a shaded side canyon to find petroglyphs, then continue to the 243ft-wide Morning Glory Natural Bridge, at a box canyon. Plan on three to four hours.

    reviewed

  10. Navajo Loop

    Many moderate trails descend below the rim, but this is one of the most popular. The 1.4-mile trail descends 521ft from Sunset Point and passes through the famous narrow canyon Wall Street. Combine part of the Navajo with the Queen's Garden Trail for an easier ascent. Once you hike the 320ft to Sunrise Point, follow the Rim Trail back to your car (2.9-mile round-trip).

    reviewed

  11. Advertisement

  12. Mountain Vista Touring

    Guided trips include hot springs and moonlight hikes.

    reviewed

  13. Mossy Cave Trail

    Outside main park boundaries (east of the entrance), off Hwy 12 at Mile 17, take the easy half-mile one-way walk to the year-round waterfall off Mossy Cave Trail, a summertime treat and frozen winter spectacle.

    reviewed

  14. La Sal Mountains

    To escape summer's heat, head up Hwy 128 to the Manti–La Sal National Forest lands in the mountains east of Moab and hike through white-barked aspens and ponderosa pines.

    reviewed

  15. Kolob Terrace Road

    Fourteen miles west of Springdale, Kolob Terrace Rd takes off north from Hwy 9, weaving in and out of BLM and national park highlands. (The road is closed due to snow from at least November to March.) Wildcat Canyon Trailhead lies about 28 miles north, after a hairpin turn. From here, follow the Wildcat Canyon Trail till you get to the turnoff for Northgate Peaks Trail. You'll traipse through meadows, filled with wildflowers in spring, and pine forests before you descend to the viewpoint overlooking the peaks. It's a whole different – and much less visited – side of Zion. Wildcat Canyon to Northgate Peaks overlook is 2.2 miles one-way. About 5 miles north of Wildcat…

    reviewed

  16. Kolob Canyons Road

    In the northwestern section of the park, the easiest trail is at the end of the road: Timber Creek Trail (0.5 miles) follows a 100ft ascent to a small peak with great views. The main hike is the 2.7-mile-long Taylor Creek Trail, which passes pioneer ruins and crisscrosses the creek. The 7-mile one-way hike to Kolob Arch has a big payoff: this arch competes with Landscape Arch in Arches National Park in terms of being one of the biggest in the world. Fit hikers can manage it in a day, or continue on to make it a multiday backcountry trans-park connector.

    reviewed

  17. A

    Hickman Bridge Trail

    This popular walk (1 mile, moderate) includes a canyon stretch, a stunning natural bridge and wildflowers in spring. Mornings are coolest; it starts about 2 miles east of the visitor center off Hwy 24.

    reviewed

  18. Grand Wash Trail

    Also along Scenic Dr, a good dirt road leads to Grand Wash Trail (2.25 miles, easy), a flat hike between canyon walls that, at one point, tower 80 stories high but are only 15ft apart. You can follow an offshoot to Cassidy Arch (2 miles).

    reviewed

  19. Fairyland Loop

    With a trailhead at Fairyland Point north of the visitor center, the 8-mile round-trip makes for a good half-day hike (four to five hours). The tall hoodoos and bridges unfold best if you go in a clockwise direction. On the trail there's a 700ft elevation change, plus many additional ups and downs.

    reviewed

  20. Devils Garden Trail

    At the end of the paved road, 19 miles from the visitor center, Devils Garden trailhead marks the beginning of a 2- to 7.7-mile round-trip hike that passes at least eight arches. Most people only go the relatively easy 1.3 miles to Landscape Arch, a gravity- defying 290ft-long behemoth. Further along the trail gets less crowded, and grows rougher and steeper toward Double O Arch and Dark Angel Spire. The optional, difficult Devils Garden Primitive Loop has narrow-ledge walking and serious slickrock hiking. Ask rangers about conditions before attempting.

    reviewed

  21. Delicate Arch

    You've seen this arch before: it's the unofficial state symbol and is pictured on what seems like every piece of Utah tourist literature ever printed. The best way to experience the arch is from beneath it. Park near Wolfe Ranch, a well-preserved 1908 pioneer cabin. From there a footbridge crosses Salt Wash (near Native American rock art) and marks the beginning of the moderate-to-strenuous, 3-mile round-trip trail to the arch itself. The trail ascends slickrock, culminating in a wall-hugging ledge before reaching the arch. Tip: ditch the crowds by passing beneath the arch and continuing down the rock by several yards to where there's a great view, but fewer folks (bring…

    reviewed

  22. Advertisement

  23. Deep Desert Expeditions

    Archaeological hikes, photo treks, multiday guided backpacking, catered camping and Fiery Furnace walks – in winter, too!

    reviewed

  24. Corona Arch Trail

    To see petroglyphs and two spectacular arches, hike the moderately easy 3-mile, two-hour walk. You may recognize Corona from a well-known photograph showing an airplane flying through it – this is one big arch.

    reviewed

  25. Capitol Gorge Trail

    At the end of Scenic Dr is Capitol Gorge Trail (1 mile, easy), which leads past petroglyphs. Spur trails lead to Pioneer Register, where names carved in the rock date back to 1871, and the Tanks, giant water pockets. Look for the spur to the Golden Throne formation off Capitol Gorge Trail (another mile).

    reviewed

  26. Bristlecone Loop

    The 1-mile Bristlecone Loop, at road's end near Rainbow Point, is an easy walk past 1600-year-old bristlecone pines, with 100-mile vistas.

    reviewed

  27. Fiery Furnace

    Advance reservation is usually necessary for the three-hour ranger-led Fiery Furnace hikes that explore the maze of spectacularly narrow canyons and giant fins. This is no walk in the park. (Well, it is, but…) Be prepared to scramble up and over boulders, chimney down between rocks and navigate narrow ledges. The effort is rewarded with a surprising view – an incredibly thin arch or soaring slot – around every turn. The ranger stops plenty of times to talk (and let hikers rest).

    If you're an accomplished route-finder and want to go it alone, you must pay a fee, watch a video and discuss with rangers how to negotiate this confusing jumble of canyons before they'll…

    reviewed