Park Finder

Good news — you're one step closer to Finding Your Park. Whether you’re looking for a specific activity or trying to locate a park near you, use the filters below to narrow your search and begin your next adventure.

EXPLORE
Displaying 20 parks

Come to Alcatraz for a prison tour while enjoying the historical and cultural experiences unique to the San Francisco Bay.

NULL

History comes to life at this historic park. Plan a national park trip to the scene of the end of the Civil War and experience history with your family.

NULL

Cabrillo National Monument offers a superb view of San Diego's harbor and skyline and includes Old Point Loma Lighthouse, a San Diego icon since 1854.

NULL

Channel Islands has five islands (San Miguel, Santa Rosa, Santa Cruz, Anacapa, and Santa Barbara) off the coast of southern California, near Los Angeles.

NULL

America’s lowest, hottest, and driest national park, adventurous visitors enjoy Death Valley for its many extremes and mysteries such as the sailing stones.

NULL

Preserving natural scenery along the Potomac River, the George Washington Memorial Parkway connects historic sites from Mount Vernon to Great Falls.

NULL

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

NULL

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

Lassen Volcanic

Nestled in the peaceful forests and wilderness of Northern California is Lassen Volcanic National Park, home to hissing fumaroles and boiling mud pots.

NULL

At the Lava Beds National Monument visitors can explore more than 500 lava tube caves, created over the last half-million years by volcanic eruptions.

The Lyndon Johnson Memorial Grove, just outside Washington, D.C., provides a serene setting to canoe or kayak, hike, picnic, or bird watch.

Manzanar National Historic Site in California provides an opportunity to learn about one of the World War II Japanese American incarceration sites.

NULL

Dedicated to the father of the national parks, John Muir, in 1908, this redwood forest along the Pacific coast offers views unlike any other.

Bright red rocks jut upwards from the ground into the sky

Pinnacles National Park is the result of an ancient volcanic eruption. The chaparral, oak woodland, and canyon landscape is home to wildlife.

NULL

Some of the tallest and oldest trees on Earth are in Redwood National Park and State Parks, managed jointly by National Park Service and California State Parks.

NULL

Visit the world’s largest trees at Sequoia, America’s second national park. Kings Canyon is also filled with giants, from immense mountains to deep canyons.

NULL

Hiking along the Appalachian Trail, fly-fishing, and rafting are just some of the possible activities in this national park near Washington, D.C.

Theodore Roosevelt Island, dedicated to America's 26th president and great conservationist, is a manmade forest mimicking the former natural landscape.

Pages