Record numbers of travelers are visiting national parks to photograph wildlife, and it’s doing more good than most people realize

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Nature Photography Day, observed every June 15, has never had a better backdrop than now. Outdoor and nature-immersive travel is surging across the board, with more travelers than ever building entire trips around what they can find, frame and photograph in the wild. Whether someone is a seasoned wildlife photographer or just discovering what a camera can do on a trail, this year the timing could not be more fitting.

Acadia National Park: Acadia Dam.
Acadia National Park: Acadia Dam. Photo Credit: NPS.

Searches for stays near national parks in the United States are up 35% year over year on Airbnb, outpacing all other booking categories on the platform, with nature and outdoor experiences now its most booked experience type. A separate research found that 54% of travelers would consider birdwatching on their next trip, a sign that observation-driven travel has moved well past niche status. Nature Photography Day was established by the North American Nature Photography Association in 2006 to connect that impulse to conservation. 

The Great Smoky Mountains draw photographers year-round

The most visited national park in the country is also among the most rewarding for photographers willing to arrive before dawn. Great Smoky Mountains National Park spans the Tennessee-North Carolina border, its ridgelines layered in the blue-gray mist that gives the range its name. The park’s wildlife corridors support black bears, white-tailed deer, and more than 240 bird species

June brings dense canopy, wildflowers at elevation and long golden hours at the forest edge. Airbnb named it its top trending U.S. national park destination for 2026. The sheer density of subjects within a single frame sets it apart from drier western parks.

Grand Teton draws photographers to the Snake River

Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming pairs one of the most dramatic mountain ranges in North America with a valley floor that puts wildlife within reach of nearly every camera. The jagged peaks of the Teton Range rise abruptly from Jackson Hole with no foothills to soften the transition, giving photographers a backdrop that requires almost no composition work.

Schwabacher Landing along the Snake River is the most photographed spot in the park. Still water reflecting the Tetons at dawn draws photographers year-round. June brings wildflower meadows in full bloom, grizzly bears active in open meadows, moose along the river corridors and bald eagles overhead, making it one of the most wildlife-dense months on the park calendar.

Acadia offers a coastal texture that few parks match

Acadia National Park in Maine combines pink granite coastline, tidal pools and the summit of Cadillac Mountain, the highest peak on the North Atlantic seaboard at 1,530 feet. June brings migratory birds along the coast, lupines blooming near Jordan Pond and soft morning fog that diffuses light across the rocky shore.

Otter Point and Ocean Drive offer easy access to dramatic coastal compositions. Low tide along the Bar Island sandbar reveals intertidal detail that rewards a macro lens as much as a wide-angle one.

The Olympic Peninsula rewards patience

Olympic National Park in Washington state includes three distinct ecosystems: temperate rainforest, open meadow and Pacific coastline, giving photographers the option to move between entirely different visual environments in a single day. The Hoh Rain Forest produces a low-canopy green light unlike anything found in drier parks. Roosevelt elk move through the valley floor, bald eagles patrol the river corridor and the sea stacks of Rialto Beach offer one of the most dramatic coastal compositions on the West Coast. June is among the best months to photograph here, before summer crowds arrive in earnest.

Photography changes what travelers bring home

Nature-focused travel has grown beyond scenery-chasing. Travelers who build itineraries around photographing wildlife and terrain are choosing destinations based on migration windows, bloom cycles and the quality of light at a specific time of year.

An image of a puffin on an Icelandic cliff or an elk in morning mist in the Hoh carries a different weight than a souvenir. It is a record of a place as it actually exists, made by someone who arrived to see it clearly. As more travelers come with cameras rather than checklists, the places they document stand to benefit most.

Mandy is a luxury travel, fine dining and bucket-list-adventure journalist with expert insight from 46 countries. She uncovers unforgettable experiences around the world and brings them to life through immersive storytelling that blends indulgence, culture and discovery, and shares them with a global audience as co-founder of Food Drink Life. Her articles appear on MSN and through the Associated Press wire in major U.S. outlets, including NBC, the Daily News, Boston Herald, the Chicago Sun-Times and many more.

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