9 Best National Parks to Visit in Winter (Dec-Feb)
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9 Best National Parks to Visit in Winter (Dec-Feb)

Yulia Vasilyeva · Founder
7 min read
Updated Jun 2026
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The best national parks to visit in winter are the desert and subtropical ones. Death Valley, Big Bend, Joshua Tree, Saguaro, and the Everglades hit their most pleasant temperatures of the year. Add Grand Canyon South Rim and Bryce Canyon for snow on red rock, plus Yosemite for February's firefall. Skip the snowbound northern parks.

Winter is my favorite season to guide. The summer mobs are gone, lodging is cheap, and the parks that are unbearable in July, brutal desert heat, finally become comfortable. The trick is knowing which way the map flips: head south and low, not north and high. Here are the nine I send people to, and the ones I tell them to skip until spring.

1. Death Valley National Park, California

Death Valley is the single best winter park in the system, full stop. The place that kills hikers with 120°F heat in July sits at average highs around 60-65°F in December and January, with crisp lows in the upper 30s to low 40s. That is perfect hiking weather on the lowest, hottest land in North America. Roads are all open, including the paved route to Badwater Basin at 282 feet below sea level. Skies are usually clear and the light is unreal.

Signature hike: Golden Canyon to Zabriskie Point loop via the badlands and Gower Gulch, about 6 miles, through eroded golden ridges that glow at sunrise. For a shorter day, walk the salt-polygon boardwalk and flats at Badwater (1-2 miles). Bring layers; canyon shade gets genuinely cold.

2. Big Bend National Park, Texas

Big Bend is enormous, remote, and gloriously empty in winter. December and January are the coldest months with desert-floor highs in the mid-60s and overnight lows in the mid-30s, climbing into the 70s by late winter. The Chisos Mountains can get snow while the desert floor stays mild, so you choose your elevation. All three districts, Chisos, desert, and the Rio Grande, are open and the spring-break crowds are still months away.

Signature hike: The Window Trail from the Chisos Basin, about 5.6 miles round trip, descends to a dramatic pour-off framing the desert below. Cap the day with a soak at the Hot Springs (105°F) on the river. Nights here are some of the darkest skies in the country.

3. Joshua Tree National Park, California

Joshua Tree in winter is sunny days in the 60s and freezing nights, occasionally a dusting of snow on the Joshua trees, which is magic. The high desert at 4,000 feet is far more comfortable than the blazing low-desert sections. Rock climbers and scramblers love this season because the granite isn't scorching. All roads are open; just carry water even when it's cold, because the dry air dehydrates you fast.

Signature hike: Ryan Mountain, about 3 miles round trip with 1,000 feet of climb, for a summit view over the whole park. The Hidden Valley loop (1 mile) is an easy, kid-friendly classic through a rock-rimmed basin.

4. Saguaro National Park, Arizona

Flanking Tucson, Saguaro is a winter no-brainer: highs in the 60s, cool mornings near 40°F, and forests of giant cactus you can actually hike among without heatstroke. Both districts, Rincon Mountain (east) and Tucson Mountain (west), are fully open. This is the season the Sonoran Desert wants to be visited, and you can pair it with a comfortable city base.

Signature hike: Valley View Overlook Trail in the west district, about 0.8 miles, for a saguaro-studded vista, or the Hugh Norris Trail for a longer ridgeline push. In the east, the Freeman Homestead loop (1 mile) winds past towering cacti.

5. Everglades National Park, Florida

Winter is THE season for the Everglades, and not by a little. The dry season runs roughly December through April: humidity drops, the mosquitoes that make summer miserable largely vanish, and wildlife concentrates around shrinking water holes. Temperatures sit between about 55°F and 77°F. You will see alligators, wading birds, and if you're lucky a manatee, all far more visible than in the wet season.

Signature hike: The Anhinga Trail near Royal Palm, a 0.8-mile boardwalk loop that is the best wildlife-viewing short walk in any U.S. park in winter. Rent a kayak in Flamingo or the Ten Thousand Islands for a half day on the water.

6. Grand Canyon National Park (South Rim), Arizona

The South Rim is open all year, and winter brings something most visitors never see: snow on the red rock, with the canyon dropping into clear cold air. Rim highs run in the low 40s with lows in the teens and 20s, and snow is common at 7,000 feet, so carry traction. Crowds are a fraction of summer. Note: the North Rim is closed for the season (roads shut by snow, typically mid-October to mid-May), so plan the South Rim only.

Signature hike: The Rim Trail is mostly flat and paved with constant views, perfect when ice makes steep trails risky. Strong hikers can descend Bright Angel a mile or two to Mile-and-a-Half Resthouse, but microspikes are essential on the icy upper switchbacks, and never aim for the river and back in a day.

7. Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah

Bryce in winter is the prettiest park on this list. At 8,000-9,000 feet it gets real snow, and white powder draped over the orange hoodoos is a sight that stops people cold. Highs hover in the 30s-40s with sub-freezing nights. The main road and most overlooks stay plowed and open. Bring snowshoes or microspikes; rim trails turn to packed snow and ice.

Signature hike: The Navajo Loop and Queens Garden combo, about 3 miles, drops you among the hoodoos; in winter the Navajo side is often closed for ice and the route becomes a snowshoe outing, so check conditions and don't descend if it's pure ice. The Rim Trail between Sunrise and Sunset Points is an easy, safer alternative.

8. Yosemite National Park, California (for the firefall)

Most of Yosemite high country (Tioga Road, Glacier Point Road) is snowed shut in winter, but Yosemite Valley stays open year-round and offers a genuinely special February event: the firefall. For about two weeks in mid-to-late February, the setting sun lights up Horsetail Fall so it glows like molten lava. In 2026 the strong window runs roughly February 19-23, with February 21 expected to be best. It needs water flowing and a clear western sky, so it's never guaranteed.

How to see it: Park at Yosemite Falls parking (just west of Yosemite Valley Lodge) and walk about 1.5 miles each way to the El Capitan Picnic Area viewing zone; the glow peaks in a roughly 10-minute window around sunset (about 5:30 p.m.). No reservations are required for the 2026 firefall, but parking restrictions apply, so arrive hours early and dress for cold. Off the firefall dates, the Valley is a quiet, snow-dusted wonderland.

9. Honorable mention: Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

If you can get to the Big Island, Hawaii Volcanoes is a near-perfect winter escape, mild and green while the mainland freezes. Coastal areas sit in the 70s-80s, though the summit of Kilauea at 4,000 feet is cooler and can be rainy and windy. Roads are open year-round. The Kilauea Iki Trail, about 4 miles, crosses a solidified lava-lake crater floor and is one of the most surreal hikes in the country.

Skip these in winter

Don't waste a winter trip on the northern high-country parks. Glacier National Park closes Going-to-the-Sun Road for the season, so the heart of the park is inaccessible. Rocky Mountain shuts Trail Ridge Road and most high trails require avalanche awareness. Yellowstone's interior roads close to regular cars; access is by snowcoach or snowmobile only, which is amazing but expensive and not a casual visit. The Grand Canyon's North Rim is closed entirely until spring. When in doubt this season: go south, go low, and check NPS road status before you drive.

The pattern is simple. Winter rewards the parks that punish you in summer. Trade the snowbound peaks for warm deserts and empty boardwalks, and you'll get the best park weather and the smallest crowds of the entire year.

9 Best National Parks to Visit in Winter (Dec-Feb) FAQs

What is the single best national park to visit in winter?+

Which national parks are closed or hard to visit in winter?+

When is the Yosemite firefall in 2026?+

Are the southern desert parks too cold for hiking in winter?+

Can you hike below the Grand Canyon rim in winter?+

Is the Everglades better in winter or summer?+

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