See Every US National Park on this EPIC Cross-Country Road Trip

Road Trip to all of the US National Parks - Itinerary to see every national park

In 2017 I traveled to every single US national park with my husband. During the planning stages we very quickly realized there wasn’t much online to help us plan our itinerary. Of course there were blog posts listing all the national parks and plenty of people saying how they would hypothetically road trip to all of them… but we couldn’t find any maps or itineraries from someone who had firsthand taken a United States national park road trip to ALL of them in one consecutive trip.

Keep reading to find out how we came up with our itinerary, whether or not the trip was a success, and if in retrospect we would make any changes. I will also do my best to share all the insiders secrets on how you can see every US national park in one life-changing road trip!

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US National Park Road Trip

Road Trip to Visit All the National Parks

There are currently 63 national parks in America, 51 in the lower 48 states, 8 in Alaska, 2 in Hawaii, and 2 in American territories (US Virgin Islands, American Samoa). In this blog post, I will share an itinerary to visit EVERY national park, not just those in the 48 contiguous states. 

Note: In 2017 there were 59 national parks and 4 more have been added since our road trip. So I have gone ahead and included them in this US national parks road trip itinerary in the order we would have visited them. *besides New River Gorge National Park in West Virginia.

I put together a checklist of all the national parks, so you can mark each off as you visit them! In addition, it’s free to download via my travel resource library! Click the image below.

National Park Checklist Free Printable Download - Renee Roaming
Best National Park Road Trip Itinerary - Grand Teton National Park Van Life
Outside of Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming

Best National Park Road Trip Itinerary

I frequently get asked what the ultimate national park road trip would be. I don’t have all the answers, but I do know a lot about our own itinerary to see all the national parks and looking back I think it was almost perfect!

Planning such an extensive trip

So how did we decide on our optimal US national parks road trip? Let me tell you, it was A LOT of work to logistically map out such an extensive trip. We spent many hours (who am I kidding… we spent DAYS) researching, plotting directions into Google Maps, and also making spreadsheets. Our goal was to see every US national park with minimal backtracking and to arrive in each park during an ideal season. 

Our cross country national park road trip started on April 1st and finished on October 31st, spanning 7 months total. That included traveling to all the national parks in the contiguous United States, plus the other 12.

We ended up driving over 25,000 miles, taking 26 flights, and visiting 39 states + 2 US territories. We skipped out on winter conditions in most parks and visited many of the tropical parks before peak summer temperatures hit. I think we timed it perfectly to visit many of the most beautiful parks during the height of hiking season. 

See Every US National Park on this EPIC Cross-Country Road Trip - Yosemite National Park Van Life
Driving into the Yosemite Valley, California

Would we do it differently?

Overall we were happy with the itinerary we created to see the US national parks on one road trip. We wouldn’t make any major changes but these are some things we may have adjusted in hindsight:

  • If it had of been an option to start earlier in the year then we may have chosen to visit the Florida parks and USVI during winter. 
  • Rocky Mountain National Park is best experienced during summer, so we may have opted to include that before or after Grand Teton National Park if we had the time for extra driving.

I do want to mention that it looks like we went FAR out of the way to visit Great Basin National Park. Well that’s because we did 😂, it really is in the middle of nowhere! We could have technically visited between our Zion and Bryce Canyon stops (adding about 5 hours of driving), but visiting during April wasn’t an option for us. We knew the park can get very snowy in winter and spring and some sections are closed to visitors. Instead we visited in early October and the fall conditions were beautiful!

Keep in mind that the best national park road trip route for your family may look different to ours. You could technically hop on the route at whatever point was closest to your own… you’ll see what I mean when you view the map below!

Map to visit every national park

Map to visit every national park

Here is our exact itinerary to see all the US national parks, plus the inclusion of the 3 newly added parks. If you’re viewing on desktop and want to see this US national parks map in more detail then click here for a full page version.

This interactive map of our national parks road trip shows the order we visited each park, our “as the crow flies” route, plus links to detailed guides for each national park. I will also link to these guides further down the blog post.

*best viewed on desktop

You can zoom in and see the route closer or if you’re on desktop I recommend clicking here for a full page version.

Van life in Capitol Reef
Exploring Capitol Reef National Park, Utah

How long would it take to visit all the national parks?

I briefly mentioned earlier that our national parks trip took us 7 months (April – November). In saying that, I don’t want you to think that this is the only time frame to see all the US national parks. In fact, taking 10-12 months would be even better if you had the time and finances.

You also need to consider that we didn’t visit White Sands, Gateway Arch, New River Gorge, and Indiana Dunes during that 7 month trip (because they weren’t designated national parks at the time). I would also say these 3 parks would have added on around 1.5 weeks to our national parks road trip itinerary.

How long to spend in each national park?

We never felt overly rushed during our 7 month national park road trip, but we did have many long driving days. For instance, our itinerary typically included 1-2 days in the smaller parks. 3-4 days in the larger and more popular parks, and also a week or more in some of the super remote Alaskan parks. 

For example, we spent 1 day exploring Carlsbad Caverns, 2 days exploring Joshua Tree, 3 days exploring Grand Canyon, 4 days exploring Great Smoky Mountain, 5 days exploring Yosemite, and 9 days exploring Gates of the Arctic. Parks that we planned to extensively hike or backpack in were allotted more days compared to parks that are known for their drive-up lookouts and easy to access views.

Planning a national parks road trip itinerary will also be different for everyone. We met some travelers who were on a mission to visit every national park but were spreading the journey out over multiple years. We have also heard of people doing the same style trip but in only a few months.

You can make your national park road trip as carefree or as adventurous as you like. We personally opted for somewhere in the middle – slow enough to get a good feel of the parks. But fast enough to finish our trip before winter started. Whether you plan to hike or backpack in the national parks will also help decide what length and style of trip you plan.

Plan your trip with our national park book - Roaming America
Joshua Tree van life
Cruising through Joshua Tree National Park, California

What are the best national parks?

Did you know I have a blog post that features every national park ranked from best to worst? My husband and I used a rating system that factored in beauty, trails, accessibility, transport, crowds, facilities, and overall how photogenic they were.

Here’s a summary of the parks we found to be the best and worst!

Best national parks

These were the 10 best US national parks based on our ranking system:

  1. Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
  2. Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska
  3. Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, Alaska
  4. Denali National Park, Alaska
  5. Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
  6. Yosemite National Park, California
  7. Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska
  8. Glacier National Park, Montana
  9. Katmai National Park, Alaska
  10. Lake Clark National Park, Alaska
Worst national parks

These were the 10 worst US national parks based on our ranking system. But keep in mind that all the parks are amazing and I am not saying these aren’t worth visiting. They just don’t have the same “wow” factor. Also keep in mind that the 4 new national parks were not considered when making this list (Gateway Arch, New River Gorge, White Sands, Indiana Dunes):

  1. Congaree National Park, South Carolina
  2. Biscayne National Park, Florida
  3. Pinnacles National Park, California
  4. Channel Islands National Park, California
  5. Kobuk Valley National Park, Alaska
  6. Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio
  7. Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota
  8. Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota
  9. Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida
  10. Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas
  11. Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Colorado
Van Life Couple
Side trip to the Alabama Hills of California

Planning your national parks trip

I have an entire blog post about how to best plan your national park visits. It goes into detail on when to start planning, how to write out an itinerary, how to create your own map, what to pack, how to buy a national park pass, and more! Check it out here.

PIN to refer to later!

Best Route to Visit Every Single US National Park - Renee Roaming
Road Trip to Every Single US National Park - Renee Roaming

9 comments

  1. Hello, wow this will be such a great resource to plan my journey to the parks! I’m starting with American Samoa and I’m on my way there now. I’d be grateful if you could send me your impressions on that park. I’m on a very slow internet connection and couldn’t open all the links in your blog.
    Thanks so much! Susanne

  2. I disagree with your best and worst list. We’ve only been to around 30 so far, but Yosemite was so crowded I’d put it on the worst list. Joshua Tree we found anti climactic and would put on the worst list also.
    Voyager however was one of our favorites. We rented a canoe and camped out on an island there. I also think Black Canyon of the Gunnison should not be on the worst list.

    1. I agree with Yosemite being crowded, but how beautiful the scenery and the hikes kinda makes up for it…. kinda. Living nearby, I never go unless it’s for hiking Half Dome or something specific.

      I would not put Pinnacles in the worst list. One full day there is enough, though, and the weather is oh-so-important. It’s blazing hot a lot of the time, but if timed right (like directly after a rain) and if hiking is important in the ranking, then Pinnacles is definitely better than the worst. There is a cave to hike through with water running down the rocks, a long hiking loop to explore with steps carved into the rock to walk up/down, super scenic photo ops, California Condors to see, rock climbers to watch sometimes, electrical sites in the campground, and there aren’t many people 🙂

  3. That is some walkabout. You are living the dream while you’re still young. Outstanding.

  4. I bought your Roaming America book and love it! I’m using it for inspiration as I create a similar book for America’s Great Loop. Thank you for sharing your epic journey to all of the US National Parks with us!

  5. WOW so much helpful planning info in this blogpost. Thanks Renee for generously sharing your journey, maps, ideas and recommendations.

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