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National Parks

Explore America’s national parks. Discover our most treasured places, supported by people like you, and start your travel planning here by finding your park.

  • Ebey's Landing National Historical Reserve

    Ebey's Landing provides a vivid historical record including the first exploration of Puget Sound by Captain George Vancouver in 1792.

  • Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site

    America's only Nobel Prize winning playwright, Eugene Gladstone O'Neill, chose to live in California at the climax of his writing career.

  • Fort Point National Historic Site

    Fort Point National Historic Site defended San Francisco Bay from California's Gold Rush to World War II.

  • Fort Vancouver National Historic Site

    Fort Vancouver was the administrative headquarters and main supply depot for the Hudson's Bay Company's fur trading operations in the large Columbia Department.

  • Gates of The Arctic National Park and Preserve

    Lying north of the Arctic Circle, this remote park and preserve is the northernmost national park in the U.S. and the second largest, spanning 8,472,506 acres.

  • Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve

    Covering 3.3 million acres of mountains, glaciers, wild coastlines, and fjords, Glacier Bay is one of the world's largest international protected areas.

  • Golden Gate National Recreation Area
    Golden Gate National Recreation Area, with views of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, offers much to its many visitors every year.
  • Great Basin National Park

    This national park is home to ancient bristlecone pine trees, abundant wildlife, lakes and streams, and limestone caverns, including the stunning Lehman Caves.

  • Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument

    Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument, a national park in Idaho, contains the largest concentration of Hagerman Horse fossils in North America.

  • Sunset in the clouds
    Haleakalā National Park

    Haleakalā National Park, a national park on the Hawai'ian island of Maui, is a superb example of the Hawai'ian Islands' native ecosystems.

  • Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park
    The park in Hawai'i encompasses diverse environments that range from sea level to the summit of the earth's largest volcano at 19,999 cubic miles, Mauna Loa.
  • John Day Fossil Beds National Monument

    John Day Fossil Beds National Monument's breathtaking scenery is a place where visitors can explore ancient plants and animals.

  • John Muir National Historic Site

    John Muir National Historic Site's spacious and eclectic mansion invites visitors to explore Muir's accomplishments to the National Park Service.

  • Joshua Tree National Park
    Visitors can explore 800,000 acres of beautiful terrain in Joshua Tree National Park, where wildlife thrives in temperatures over 100 degrees.