The 10 least visited US national parks

Clear, cool days are common in September in Kobuk Valley National Park. Kobuk Valley was one of the least visited National Parks last year.

Clear, cool days are common in September in Kobuk Valley National Park. Kobuk Valley was one of the least visited National Parks last year. (Eileen Devinney, National Park Service via CNN)


Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Visitation to U.S. national parks reached 331.9 million in 2024.
  • The least visited parks offer remote wilderness, lacking infrastructure but rich in natural beauty.
  • Gates of the Arctic, Alaska, is the least visited with 11,907 recreation visits.

ATLANTA — Timed entry, long lines of cars at the gates and trails crowded with people angling for the best photo ops. Visitors aren't likely to find any such hurdles at the least visited of the United States' national parks.

Visitation numbers hit a new record for 2024, with the National Park Service's more than 400 sites welcoming a whopping 331.9 million recreation visits.

While Zion National Park in Utah and the Grand Canyon in Arizona are managing summer crowds, these 10 spots will see a small fraction of the millions of visitors crowding the most popular parks.

Some are very remote and lack much of the infrastructure of the blockbuster spots, but there's no shortage of vast, spectacular wilderness to explore.

Here are the 10 least visited U.S. parks for 2024:

1. Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve, Alaska

11,907 recreation visits

With no roads, no trails, no cell service and no established campsites, this massive expanse is a true wilderness experience. The park and preserve has six designated Wild Rivers.

"Visitors may wander at will across 8.4 million acres of superlative natural beauty," the park's website says. Visitors must be self-sufficient, flexible and "able to execute self-extraction and communication, should an emergency situation arise." Arrive prepared.

2. North Cascades National Park, Washington

16,485 recreation visits

Peaks crowned by more than 300 glaciers tower over this Alpine landscape that sees a fraction of the visitors of Washington's other national parks — Mount Rainier and Olympic. While the park itself is sparsely visited, two bordering National Recreation Areas — Ross Lake and Lake Chelan — mean visitation to the combined three-unit North Cascades complex is much higher. Over 1,600 species of plants — more than any other U.S. national park — have been identified on this land that spans temperate rainforest to a dry ponderosa pine ecosystem. North Cascades has more than 400 miles of trails.

3. Kobuk Valley National Park, Alaska

17,233 recreation visits

There are no roads, campgrounds or entrance gates for this 1.8 million-acre expanse's human visitors. Half a million caribou migrate through this park, crossing the Kobuk River and Onion Portage, according to the National Park Service. An 8,000-year tradition of hunting caribou here continues on.

4. Lake Clark National Park & Preserve, Alaska

18,505 recreation visits

Stretching across more than 4 million acres, this national park and preserve is home to three designated Wild Rivers and two National Natural Landmark volcanoes. The land holds 10,000 years of human history and preserves the ancestral homelands of the Dena'ina people.

5. National Park of American Samoa

22,567 recreation visits

Hawaiian Airlines offers direct flights to American Samoa from Honolulu. The park has units on three islands and stretches across 13,500 acres, some 4,000 of which are marine acres that are mostly coral reefs.

6. Isle Royale National Park, Michigan

28,806 recreation visits

An isolated archipelago in Lake Superior, Isle Royale boasts 165 miles of trails and more than 30 campgrounds. It's open from mid-April through the end of October. Ferry and seaplane service typically runs from mid-May through the end of September, according to National Park Service.

There are fewer mammal species here — only 18 — than on the mainland because animals must cross at least 14 miles of Lake Superior. Wolves and moose are among the notable animal residents.

7. Katmai National Park & Preserve, Alaska

36,230 recreation visits

Katmai is an important habitat for thousands of brown bears. One of the world's premier bear-viewing spots, according to the Park Service, Katmai is home to an estimated 2,200 brown bears. Brooks Camp along the Brooks River is one of the most popular viewing spots to observe bears feasting on salmon.

A brown bear feasts on salmon near Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park in an undated image.
A brown bear feasts on salmon near Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park in an undated image. (Photo: John Moore, Getty Images via CNN)

8. Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve, Alaska

81,670 recreation visits

America's largest national park, Wrangell-St. Elias encompasses 13.2 million acres — or about the size of Yellowstone National Park, Yosemite National Park and Switzerland combined, the Park Service says. Most of the park is backcountry, and visitor services are limited. There are some maintained trails in the frontcountry Nabesna and McCarthy areas.

9. Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida

84,873 recreation visits

About 70 miles west of Key West, Dry Tortugas is mostly open water with seven small islands. Garden Key is home to one of the nation's largest 19th-century forts, Fort Jefferson. The park is accessible by boat or plane and is host to nearly 300 species of birds. Bush Key closes every year from February to September so that sooty terns and brown noddies can breed there undisturbed.

10. Great Basin National Park, Nevada

152,068 recreation visits

Mountain peaks meet hot desert valleys here. Great Basin National Park is home to 13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, ancient bristlecone pines, about 40 caves and a wide array of plants and animals. The elevation ranges from 5,000 to 13,000 feet with hiking trails for all levels.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

Related stories

Most recent Outdoors stories

Related topics

OutdoorsU.S.
Marnie Hunter
    KSL.com Beyond Series
    KSL.com Beyond Business

    KSL Weather Forecast

    KSL Weather Forecast
    Play button