The crowds are back at America’s biggest parks, and savvy travelers are already heading somewhere else

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Getting into Yosemite, Arches, Glacier and Mount Rainier used to mean booking ahead like it was a restaurant with a six-month wait. That changed this summer, and in July, during National Park and Recreation Month, the open gates are only good news for travelers who know which parks are actually worth the drive.

An adult and a child walk and run on a dirt path among large trees in a forest, both smiling and appearing relaxed, celebrating National Park and Recreation Month.
Photo credit: Depositphotos.

Timed-entry reservations, online lotteries and sold-out entry windows had become the new normal for anyone trying to visit a popular park at peak season. The parks that adopted those systems saw real results, with shorter queues, better-distributed crowds and visitors who actually got to see something other than a parking lot.

The new method worked well enough that losing it this season is already showing up at trailheads and entrance roads across the country. Several high-profile parks dropped or revised their reservation systems this season, and what replaced them is something parks are still working out.

The demand was always there

National parks recorded 323 million recreation visits in 2025, with 26 individual parks setting new records. That happened despite a 43-day partial government shutdown, the longest on record, that forced temporary closures and reduced staffing across the system. The appetite for public lands has not peaked. What changed is simply who is managing the flow at the gate, and increasingly, the answer is nobody until it becomes a problem.

Yosemite and Arches without a gate

Yosemite’s reservation system is gone for the first time since the pandemic scrambled how Americans thought about park access. The result on peak summer weekends has been, depending on who you ask, liberating or chaotic.

Parking lots in the Valley fill by mid-morning. When they do, the park temporarily closes entrances and redirects traffic until spaces open, a reactive solution that works better in theory than in a line of 200 cars on a two-lane road. The practical workaround is straightforward: arrive before 9 a.m. or skip the car entirely.

The YARTS bus system runs from gateway towns, including Merced and Mariposa, directly into the Valley. It sidesteps the parking situation entirely and costs less than the fuel to idle in a queue.

Bike rentals inside the Valley put Half Dome views and El Cap meadow within 15 minutes on wheels. Half Dome permits still require a lottery through Recreation.gov. That part did not change.

Arches in Utah is operating without timed-entry tickets for the first time since 2022, and the crowds that the reservation system was designed to thin are back. The counter-move favored by people who know the park well: go the wrong direction first. While most visitors race straight to Delicate Arch during peak hours, starting at the Park Avenue or Windows sections lets a visitor move through quieter terrain while the bottleneck sorts itself out.

When Arches is genuinely overflowing, Canyonlands’ Island in the Sky district sits 30 minutes down the road and absorbs overflow traffic far more comfortably than Arches ever could. Of the major parks, Rocky Mountain in Colorado is one of the few still running a formal timed-entry system, requiring advance reservations through mid-October for the Bear Lake Road corridor and most of the park during peak hours.

Parks that are worth the detour

The parks rewarding visitors most this summer tend to be the ones that never had reservation systems in the first place. The North Cascades in Washington is one of the least-visited parks in the entire system, and its sharp peaks, glacier-fed lakes and forest valleys that stretch for miles sit a few hours from Seattle, with walk-up access on any day of the week. That window does not stay open forever.

Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota draws a fraction of the crowds at the country’s most popular parks, including the nearly 11.6 million who packed into the Great Smoky Mountains last year. The trade-off is everything a crowded park cannot offer: bison herds crossing the road, wild horses moving through badlands painted in gold and red and campsite availability on a Tuesday in July. The North and South Units run scenic drives that rival anything in the better-known western parks, with no entrance queue.

Congaree in South Carolina makes the case that spectacular does not have to mean vertical. Old-growth bottomland forest, some of the tallest trees in the eastern United States, and flat boardwalk trails that work for nearly any fitness level make it one of the most genuinely accessible parks in the system. Summer visits run quietly. The brief spring firefly season draws a crowd, but by July, the place belongs mostly to herons and the people who thought to look it up.

What park traffic means for towns

Park visitors pumped $56.3 billion into the U.S. economy in 2024, supporting 340,100 jobs, with lodging spending alone generating $11.1 billion in direct economic output. Gateway towns, the Springdales and Estes Parks of the park world, feel every policy change in their occupancy rates and restaurant receipts before anyone writes a report about it.

In Estes Park, Colorado, Mayor Gary Hall publicly pushed back against the new $100-per-person surcharge now charged to non-U.S. residents at 11 major parks, including Rocky Mountain, Zion, Glacier and the Grand Canyon. The concern is practical: international visitors who once paired park visits with stays in gateway towns may choose differently when admission costs rise significantly for many of them, and the towns built around that traffic absorb the consequence first. 

The experiment is still running

The national park system is in the middle of an access experiment with no settled answer yet. What the first crowded months of this reservation-free summer suggest is that managing 323 million visits with reactive traffic cones and temporary closures is a different proposition than managing them with advance planning.

The parks offering the most unencumbered experiences right now are often the ones most people scroll past on their way to booking Yellowstone. That is not a small thing; the trail conditions at Theodore Roosevelt are not inferior to anything in the Tetons, and the sunrise at Congaree does not require a lottery. What those parks require is the decision to go somewhere most people have not thought to go yet, which in July turns out to be the best crowd-beating strategy of all.

Jennifer Allen is a retired chef turned traveler, cookbook author and nationally syndicated journalist; she’s also a co-founder of Food Drink Life, where she shares expert travel tips, cruise insights and luxury destination guides. A recognized cruise expert with a deep passion for high-end experiences and off-the-beaten-path destinations, Jennifer explores the world with curiosity, depth and a storyteller’s perspective. Her articles are regularly featured on the Associated Press Wire, The Washington Post, Seattle Times, MSN and more.

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