Borrego Palm Canyon Campground
Details- Booking
- Reserve through ReserveCalifornia.
- Sites
- Developed campground near the visitor center and palm canyon trailhead.
- Best first choice for a first Anza-Borrego trip.

State Park · California
California's huge desert park: palm canyons, badlands, wildflowers, dirt roads, primitive camping, and a winter-to-spring planning window.

Field briefing
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park changes fast with season and elevation.
Before you go
The park is enormous, so the useful question is not just what looks good on a map, but what your vehicle, water capacity, and heat plan can handle.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Mild to warm, with wildflowers in the right rainfall years.
Pack Sun protection, water, and a flexible flower-route plan.
Dangerously hot for long hikes and exposed dirt roads.
Pack Avoid midday hiking, carry emergency water, and check vehicle limits.
Cooling but still hot early in the season.
Pack Sun shirt, water, and layers for cool nights.
Best all-around desert hiking weather, with cold nights.
Pack Warm camp layer, headlamp, and water even on cool days.

The classic first hike: a desert wash climbing toward native fan palms and bighorn sheep habitat.

Use the overlooks and short walks when heat, road conditions, or vehicle clearance make deeper exploration a bad call.
The park is famous for dispersed-style desert camping, but fire, vehicle, and resource rules matter.
Move exposed miles to the morning and keep water, shade, and storm checks ahead of the wish list. For one day in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, make Borrego Palm Canyon the non-negotiable, add Badlands viewpoints only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Primitive desert camping as the flexible finish.
Turn Anza-Borrego Desert's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Build around conditions
Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.
Plan your trip
4 quick tools, already seeded for Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. Tune the numbers around temperature swings, footing, layers, and how much margin the route needs.
Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.
Kit Authority
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park packing list
0 of 25 packed. Check items as you pack, then take this list to the store, trailhead, or campsite.
Pack planning
Use this as a constraint check while you are still shaping the trip. The active checklist becomes useful once your route, dates, and sleep plan are set.
Checklist mode
25 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Anza-Borrego Desert asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
Borrego Springs is the easiest lodging base, with food, fuel, and quick access to the visitor center and Borrego Palm Canyon. Campers should choose Borrego Palm Canyon or Tamarisk Grove when they want facilities, and primitive areas only when they are prepared for desert self-sufficiency.
Camping reservations
Anza-Borrego mixes reservable developed campgrounds with broad primitive camping rules, so the official page matters more than a generic campground search.
Reviewed June 8, 2026
Booking window
ReserveCalifornia handles reservable California State Parks campgrounds. Treat popular winter and wildflower dates as early booking windows.
Where to book or verify
Official park page with current notices, camping status, road notes, and visitor center details.
Official California State Parks reservation portal.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Campgrounds to know

Plan the handoff from arrival to shuttle.
Parking, pedestrian entrances, and shuttle timing decide how calmly the first morning starts.
Getting there
Car strategy
Most visitors drive from San Diego, Palm Springs, or the Los Angeles area into Borrego Springs.
Car strategy
A normal car works for the main paved highlights, but many dirt-road routes require more clearance, careful weather judgment, and a willingness to turn around.
Pair this with lodging: sleep where the park transfer is simple, especially if your route needs an early start.
Winter through early spring is the safest and most comfortable window. Summer heat can make long hikes and remote dirt-road plans dangerous.
The park allows primitive camping in many areas, but rules are specific and can change with fire restrictions, road closures, and resource protection. Developed campgrounds should be reserved through ReserveCalifornia.