Head to head
National park comparisons
Deciding between two parks? Each comparison gives a clear verdict, who each park is right for, a factual side-by-side, and a who-wins-on-what call. 58 matchups and counting.
Zion National Park vs Bryce Canyon National Park
Pick Zion if you can only do one. The towering canyon walls, the Narrows, and the variety of trails make it the more complete first visit, and it photographs like nowhere else. The exception is anyone who wants gentle days, fewer crowds, and the surreal hoodoo amphitheater without committing to big climbs: that traveler should choose Bryce Canyon, which delivers its signature view from the rim in minutes.
Yellowstone National Park vs Grand Teton National Park
Pick Yellowstone if you can only do one. Nothing else in the country combines geysers, hot springs, canyons, and the densest wildlife watching, and it is the park most people travel across the world to see. The exception is the traveler who wants jaw-dropping mountain scenery with far less driving and far fewer logistics: that person should choose Grand Teton, where the peaks rise straight off the valley floor and the highlights cluster within an easy drive.
Yosemite National Park vs Sequoia National Park
Pick Yosemite if you can only do one. The granite cliffs, waterfalls, and the valley itself make it one of the most spectacular landscapes anywhere, and it is the more complete first visit. The exception is anyone whose main goal is standing beneath the largest living trees on earth with a fraction of the crowds: that traveler should choose Sequoia, where the General Sherman Tree and the giant groves are the entire point.
Zion National Park vs Grand Canyon National Park
Pick Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It is the single most overwhelming view in the national park system and a true bucket-list sight that needs no hiking to appreciate. The exception is the traveler who wants to be inside the landscape rather than looking out at it: that person should choose Zion, where you hike the canyon from the bottom up and the experience is hands-on rather than panoramic.
Arches National Park vs Canyonlands National Park
Pick Arches if you can only do one. The concentration of world-famous arches, including Delicate Arch, plus short rewarding trails make it the easier and more iconic first visit. The exception is the traveler who wants sweeping, Grand-Canyon-scale overlooks and real solitude: that person should choose Canyonlands, where the Island in the Sky district trades crowds for vast, empty grandeur.
Glacier National Park vs Yellowstone National Park
Pick Yellowstone if you can only do one. Its geysers, hot springs, and unmatched wildlife make it the more singular, do-it-once experience, and it has a longer usable season. The exception is the hiker who lives for jaw-dropping alpine scenery and the Going-to-the-Sun Road: that traveler should choose Glacier, where the mountains and high-country trails outclass anything in Yellowstone, as long as the trip falls in its short summer window.
Rocky Mountain National Park vs Grand Teton National Park
Pick Grand Teton if you can only do one. The peaks rise straight off the valley floor for an instantly iconic skyline, and the mix of mountains, lakes, and wildlife in a compact area is hard to beat. The exception is the traveler prioritizing easy access from a major city and a classic high-altitude road trip: that person may prefer Rocky Mountain, which sits a short drive from Denver and centers on the spectacular Trail Ridge Road.
Yosemite National Park vs Yellowstone National Park
Pick Yellowstone if you can only do one. The combination of geysers, hot springs, and the densest wildlife in the country gives it variety no other park matches, and it is the classic American national park experience. The exception is the traveler chasing dramatic vertical scenery and world-class day hikes: that person should choose Yosemite, where granite cliffs and waterfalls deliver a more concentrated, hike-driven trip.
Joshua Tree National Park vs Death Valley National Park
Pick Joshua Tree if you can only do one. The surreal trees, rock-scrambling, and easy access from Los Angeles and Palm Springs make it the friendlier, more flexible desert visit. The exception is the traveler who wants extreme, otherworldly scale and is comfortable with remoteness: that person should choose Death Valley, where the salt flats, dunes, and below-sea-level basins feel like another planet.
Bryce Canyon National Park vs Grand Canyon National Park
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It is the single most overwhelming view in the park system and an essential bucket-list sight. The exception is the traveler who wants something stranger and more intimate, with cooler weather and far fewer crowds: that person should choose Bryce Canyon, where the orange hoodoo amphitheater is unlike anywhere else and you can hike right down among the spires.
Olympic National Park vs Mount Rainier National Park
Pick Mount Rainier if you can only do one. The towering volcano, the wildflower meadows at Paradise, and easy access from Seattle make it the more focused, family-friendly visit. The exception is the traveler who wants remarkable variety in a single park, from rainforest to rugged coastline: that person should choose Olympic, which trades a single iconic peak for three distinct ecosystems.
Acadia National Park vs Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Pick the Great Smoky Mountains if you want the more complete and accessible visit. Free entry, misty ridgelines, 800 miles of trail, and an easy location for most of the eastern US make it the default. The exception is the traveler drawn to the meeting of mountains and ocean: that person should choose Acadia, where granite peaks drop into the Atlantic and the rugged Maine coastline is the whole appeal.
Sequoia National Park vs Kings Canyon National Park
Pick Sequoia if you can only do one. The General Sherman Tree, the dense giant forest, and the headline groves make it the more iconic and accessible first visit. The exception is the traveler chasing a dramatic canyon and deeper backcountry quiet: that person should choose Kings Canyon, where a glacial gorge as deep as any in the country trades crowds for raw scale.
Grand Canyon National Park vs Yosemite National Park
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It delivers the single most overwhelming view in the park system with no hiking required, making it the easiest bucket-list payoff anywhere. The exception is the traveler who wants to be active and inside the scenery: that person should choose Yosemite, where granite walls, waterfalls, and world-class day hikes reward people who want to move.
Glacier National Park vs Grand Teton National Park
Pick Grand Teton if you want the easier, more flexible visit. The peaks rise straight off the valley floor, the highlights cluster in one compact valley, and the season is longer and more forgiving. The exception is the hiker who lives for high alpine trails and the Going-to-the-Sun Road: that person should choose Glacier, where the mountains and high country outclass nearly anywhere, as long as the trip falls in its short summer window.
Arches National Park vs Zion National Park
Pick Zion if you can only do one. The towering canyon walls, the Narrows, and the sheer trail variety make it the more complete and dramatic first visit. The exception is the traveler who wants postcard landmarks with short, easy hikes and less commitment: that person should choose Arches, where Delicate Arch and the famous arches deliver big rewards on brief trails.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park vs Shenandoah National Park
Pick the Great Smoky Mountains if you can only do one. Free entry, misty ridgelines, abundant wildlife, and 800 miles of trail make it the more complete southern Appalachian visit. The exception is the traveler who wants an easy, scenic drive close to Washington DC with simpler logistics: that person may prefer Shenandoah, where Skyline Drive strings together overlooks along a single ridge.
Rocky Mountain National Park vs Glacier National Park
Pick Glacier if you want the most spectacular alpine scenery and you can travel in summer. The Going-to-the-Sun Road, turquoise lakes, and high passes outclass nearly anywhere, as long as the trip falls in its short open window. The exception is the traveler prioritizing easy access and a longer season: that person should choose Rocky Mountain, which sits a couple of hours from Denver and centers on the high Trail Ridge Road.
Saguaro National Park vs Joshua Tree National Park
Pick Joshua Tree if you can only do one. The surreal trees, the boulder piles for scrambling, and easy access from Los Angeles and Palm Springs make it the more flexible, do-more desert visit. The exception is the traveler who wants to stand among towering giant cacti right outside a city: that person should choose Saguaro, where the iconic columnar cactus forests near Tucson are the entire point.
Everglades National Park vs Big Bend National Park
Pick the Everglades if you want unique wildlife and easy access. The vast wetland ecosystem, the alligators and wading birds, and the short drive from Miami make it the more accessible and singular visit. The exception is the traveler chasing desert mountains, canyons, and true remoteness under some of the darkest skies in the country: that person should choose Big Bend, where the Chisos Mountains and the Rio Grande canyons reward the long drive in.
Olympic National Park vs North Cascades National Park
Pick Olympic if you can only do one. The remarkable variety, from rainforest to alpine peaks to wild Pacific coastline, makes it the more complete and accessible first visit. The exception is the backcountry-minded traveler who wants jagged, glaciated peaks and near-total solitude: that person should choose North Cascades, one of the least-visited parks in the country and a hiker's wilderness.
Capitol Reef National Park vs Canyonlands National Park
Pick Canyonlands if you can only do one. The vast, Grand-Canyon-scale overlooks from the Island in the Sky and the sense of true wilderness make it the more dramatic visit. The exception is the traveler who wants an easy, approachable park with a scenic drive, historic orchards, and far less effort: that person should choose Capitol Reef, the quiet and underrated middle of Utah's Mighty Five.
Badlands National Park vs Theodore Roosevelt National Park
Pick Badlands if you can only do one. The dramatic, sharply eroded spires and stripes, plus easy access right off Interstate 90, make it the more iconic and convenient visit. The exception is the traveler who wants abundant wildlife, including bison and wild horses, with deeper solitude: that person should choose Theodore Roosevelt, where the North Dakota badlands stay quiet and the wildlife viewing is exceptional.
Carlsbad Caverns National Park vs Mammoth Cave National Park
Pick Carlsbad Caverns if you want the more jaw-dropping single experience. The Big Room is an enormous, heavily decorated chamber you can explore at your own pace, and the self-guided descent is unforgettable. The exception is the traveler drawn to the sheer scale and history of the longest cave system on earth: that person should choose Mammoth Cave, where ranger-guided tours wind through hundreds of miles of mapped passages.
Yellowstone National Park vs Glacier National Park
Pick Yellowstone if you can only do one. Geysers, hot springs, and the densest wildlife watching in the country give it variety no other park matches, and it has a much longer usable season. The exception is the hiker who lives for alpine scenery and the Going-to-the-Sun Road: that traveler should choose Glacier, where the peaks and high-country trails outclass anything in Yellowstone, as long as the trip falls in its short summer window.
Zion National Park vs Yosemite National Park
Pick Yosemite if you can only do one. The granite cliffs, waterfalls, and the valley itself form one of the most spectacular landscapes anywhere, and the range of hiking is hard to beat. The exception is the traveler who wants a more compact, hands-on park where a shuttle handles the driving and you hike up through the canyon itself: that person should choose Zion, which trades Yosemite's scale for immersive, water-bound trails.
Grand Teton National Park vs Rocky Mountain National Park
Pick Grand Teton if you can only do one. The peaks rise straight off the valley floor for an instantly iconic skyline, and the mix of mountains, lakes, and wildlife in a compact area is hard to beat. The exception is the traveler prioritizing easy access from a major city and a classic high-altitude road trip: that person may prefer Rocky Mountain, which sits a short drive from Denver and centers on the spectacular Trail Ridge Road.
Death Valley National Park vs Grand Canyon National Park
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It delivers the single most overwhelming view in the park system with no hiking required, making it the easiest bucket-list payoff anywhere. The exception is the traveler chasing extreme, otherworldly scale who is comfortable with remoteness: that person should choose Death Valley, where salt flats, dunes, and below-sea-level basins feel like another planet.
Acadia National Park vs Shenandoah National Park
Pick Acadia if you can only do one. Granite peaks dropping into the Atlantic, sunrise from Cadillac Mountain, and the carriage trails make it the more dramatic and complete visit. The exception is the traveler who wants an easy, low-effort park within reach of Washington, DC, where the scenery comes from the car window: that person should choose Shenandoah, built around Skyline Drive and its Blue Ridge overlooks.
Mount Rainier National Park vs North Cascades National Park
Pick Mount Rainier if you can only do one. The towering volcano, the wildflower meadows at Paradise, and easy access from Seattle with trails for every fitness level make it the more rewarding and approachable visit. The exception is the experienced hiker who prizes solitude above all: that person should choose North Cascades, one of the least-visited parks in the country, where rugged peaks and quiet trails reward those willing to work for them.
Glacier National Park vs Olympic National Park
Pick Glacier if alpine scenery is what you came for. The Going-to-the-Sun Road, glaciated peaks, and turquoise lakes give it the more singular, jaw-dropping experience, though only in its short summer window. The exception is the traveler who wants remarkable variety in one park, from rainforest to rugged coast to mountains, with a longer usable season: that person should choose Olympic, which trades a single iconic drive for three distinct ecosystems.
Grand Canyon National Park vs Arches National Park
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It is the single most overwhelming view in the park system and an essential bucket-list sight that needs no hiking to appreciate. The exception is the traveler who wants playful, photogenic landmarks they can hike right up to with short trails: that person should choose Arches, where Delicate Arch and the Windows pack big rewards into brief, well-marked walks.
Yosemite National Park vs Rocky Mountain National Park
Pick Yosemite if you can only do one. The granite cliffs, waterfalls, and the valley itself form one of the most spectacular landscapes anywhere, and the hiking is world class. The exception is the traveler prioritizing easy access from a major city and a high-altitude scenic drive: that person may prefer Rocky Mountain, which sits a short drive from Denver and centers on the spectacular Trail Ridge Road.
Zion National Park vs Capitol Reef National Park
Pick Zion if you can only do one. The towering canyon walls, the Narrows, and Angels Landing make it the more iconic and complete first visit, and it photographs like nowhere else. The exception is the traveler who wants similar red-rock scenery with a fraction of the crowds, no permit lottery, and the unique Fruita orchards: that person should choose Capitol Reef, the quietest of Utah's parks.
Yellowstone National Park vs Rocky Mountain National Park
Pick Yellowstone if you can only do one. Nothing else combines geysers, hot springs, and the densest wildlife watching in the country, and it is the park most people travel across the world to see. The exception is the traveler prioritizing easy access from a major city and a high-altitude scenic drive: that person may prefer Rocky Mountain, which sits a short drive from Denver and centers on the spectacular Trail Ridge Road.
Bryce Canyon National Park vs Capitol Reef National Park
Pick Bryce Canyon if you can only do one. The orange hoodoo amphitheater is unlike anywhere else, the signature view comes fast from the rim, and easy loops drop you right among the spires. The exception is the traveler who wants broader red-rock scenery, even fewer crowds, and the unique Fruita orchards: that person should choose Capitol Reef, the quietest of Utah's parks and a more relaxed visit.
Sequoia National Park vs Grand Canyon National Park
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It is the single most overwhelming view in the park system and a true bucket-list sight that needs no hiking to appreciate. The exception is the traveler who wants a calmer, greener trip standing beneath the largest living things on earth: that person should choose Sequoia, where the General Sherman Tree and the giant forest deliver a quieter, more intimate kind of awe.
Redwood National and State Parks vs Sequoia National Park
Pick Sequoia if you can only do one. The General Sherman Tree, the dense giant forest, and the clustered, easy-to-reach groves make it the more iconic and accessible big-tree visit. The exception is the traveler drawn to the tallest trees on earth set against a wild Northern California coastline: that person should choose Redwood, where towering coast redwoods, fog-soaked groves, and rugged beaches combine in a way Sequoia cannot match.
Mount Rainier National Park vs Glacier National Park
Pick Mount Rainier if you want the easier, more accessible visit. The towering volcano, the wildflower meadows at Paradise, and a short drive from Seattle make it the more focused trip with a longer usable season. The exception is the hiker who lives for vast glaciated wilderness and the Going-to-the-Sun Road: that person should choose Glacier, where the mountains and high-country trails outclass nearly anywhere, as long as the trip falls in its short summer window.
Crater Lake National Park vs Mount Rainier National Park
Pick Mount Rainier if you can only do one. The towering volcano, the wildflower meadows at Paradise, and far more hiking make it the more complete and active visit, with easy access from Seattle. The exception is the traveler whose goal is one singular, unforgettable view: that person should choose Crater Lake, where the impossibly blue caldera lake delivers its headline straight from the rim, even if the rest of the park is quieter.
Joshua Tree National Park vs Zion National Park
Pick Zion if you can only do one. The towering canyon walls, the Narrows, and the variety of trails make it the more dramatic and complete visit, and it photographs like nowhere else. The exception is the traveler who wants an easygoing desert park within reach of Los Angeles, full of surreal trees and rock-scrambling: that person should choose Joshua Tree, which trades big climbs for a relaxed, photogenic playground.
Death Valley National Park vs Zion National Park
Pick Zion if you can only do one. The towering canyon walls, the Narrows, and the variety of trails make it the more rewarding and hike-friendly visit, and it photographs like nowhere else. The exception is the traveler chasing extreme, alien landscapes at vast scale: that person should choose Death Valley, where salt flats, dunes, and below-sea-level basins feel like another planet, as long as the trip avoids its punishing summer heat.
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve vs White Sands National Park
Pick Great Sand Dunes if you want the more dramatic landscape. The tallest dunes in North America rise more than 700 feet against the Sangre de Cristo mountains, and a seasonal creek at their base adds a rare desert water feature. The exception is the traveler who wants surreal, photogenic white sand that is easy to sled and explore: that person should choose White Sands, where vast fields of pure-white gypsum make for effortless, otherworldly fun.
Carlsbad Caverns National Park vs Guadalupe Mountains National Park
Pick Carlsbad Caverns if you can only do one. The enormous underground rooms and the easy walk into the Big Room deliver a jaw-dropping payoff with little effort, making it the more accessible and crowd-pleasing visit. The exception is the hiker who wants strenuous trails and big summit views: that person should choose Guadalupe Mountains, home to the highest peak in Texas and rugged backcountry that rewards real effort.
Shenandoah National Park vs New River Gorge National Park and Preserve
Pick Shenandoah if you want the easier, more scenic-drive-focused visit. Skyline Drive runs the length of the park with dozens of overlooks, waterfall hikes branch off easily, and access from the Washington area is simple. The exception is the active traveler who wants whitewater rafting, world-class climbing, and the drama of a deep river gorge: that person should choose New River Gorge, where the iconic bridge and the river itself are the main event.
Mesa Verde National Park vs Grand Canyon National Park
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It is the single most overwhelming view in the park system and a true bucket-list sight that needs no hiking to appreciate. The exception is the traveler drawn to human history rather than raw landscape: that person should choose Mesa Verde, where the remarkably preserved ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings offer an experience no other national park provides.
Big Bend National Park vs Guadalupe Mountains National Park
Pick Big Bend if you can only do one. Its combination of desert, mountains, and the Rio Grande's canyons gives it far more variety, and it is one of the great remote wilderness parks in the country. The exception is the focused hiker chasing summit views: that person may prefer Guadalupe Mountains, home to the highest peak in Texas, where rugged trails and fall color in McKittrick Canyon are the main draw.
North Cascades National Park vs Glacier National Park
Pick Glacier if you can only do one. Its highlights are more accessible thanks to the Going-to-the-Sun Road, the alpine scenery is world-class, and the wildlife watching is exceptional. The exception is the experienced hiker who wants raw, jagged wilderness and near-total solitude: that person should choose North Cascades, one of the least crowded parks in the country, where the rugged peaks reward those willing to work for the views.
Watkins Glen State Park vs Letchworth State Park
Pick Watkins Glen if you want the single most concentrated waterfall walk in the East. The Gorge Trail packs 19 waterfalls into about two miles of stone steps and tunnels, and you are inside the gorge the whole way. The exception is the traveler who wants scale and variety over a short trip: that person should choose Letchworth, the much larger park whose three thundering falls, deep canyon walls, and rim drives reward a full day or an overnight.
Valley of Fire State Park vs Goblin Valley State Park
Pick Valley of Fire if you can only do one. Its blazing red sandstone, scenic drive, and iconic stops like Fire Wave and the Pink Canyon make it the more varied and accessible desert park, and it sits about an hour from Las Vegas. The exception is the traveler who wants something genuinely strange and hands-on: that person should choose Goblin Valley, a Utah park where you roam freely among thousands of mushroom-shaped hoodoos in a way few parks allow.
Dead Horse Point State Park vs Goblin Valley State Park
Pick Dead Horse Point if you want the single best overlook of the two. Its viewpoint of the gooseneck bend in the Colorado River, 2,000 feet below, is one of Utah's most photographed scenes and needs almost no hiking. The exception is the traveler who wants a hands-on, otherworldly landscape rather than a single grand view: that person should choose Goblin Valley, where you wander freely through a maze of mushroom-shaped hoodoos.
Tallulah Gorge State Park vs Cloudland Canyon State Park
Pick Tallulah Gorge if you want the more dramatic single feature. The descent past Hurricane Falls to a swaying suspension bridge over a 1,000-foot gorge, with six waterfalls in view, is the most intense day hike in the Georgia state park system. The exception is the traveler who wants celebrated rim hiking and broad canyon views: that person should choose Cloudland Canyon, whose West Rim Trail has been ranked among the best hikes in the country and whose waterfalls trail is the bigger leg workout.
Ricketts Glen State Park vs Hocking Hills State Park
Pick Ricketts Glen if waterfalls are the whole point. Pennsylvania's Falls Trail strings 21 named falls, including the 94-foot Ganoga Falls, onto a single demanding loop with no equal in the region for sheer waterfall density. The exception is the traveler who wants iconic rock formations, caves, and easier walking the family can share: that person should choose Hocking Hills, Ohio's most popular park, where Old Man's Cave, Ash Cave, and the recess caves headline shorter, gentler trails.
Starved Rock State Park vs Matthiessen State Park
Pick Starved Rock if you want the headline experience. Illinois's most famous park has 18 sandstone canyons, seasonal waterfalls, a historic lodge, and a visitor center, making it the more complete and amenity-rich visit. The exception is the traveler who wants the same canyon-and-waterfall scenery without the parking chaos and weekend crowds: that person should choose Matthiessen, the quieter park just ten minutes away whose more rugged trails many visitors find prettier.
Custer State Park vs Makoshika State Park
Pick Custer if you can only do one. South Dakota's flagship park delivers free-roaming bison herds, the Wildlife Loop Road, the Needles Highway, and easy pairing with Mount Rushmore, making it the more complete and scenic visit. The exception is the traveler fascinated by badlands and paleontology: that person should choose Makoshika, Montana's largest state park, where eroded hoodoos and Hell Creek fossils, including T. rex and Triceratops finds, are the entire draw.
Smith Rock State Park vs Silver Falls State Park
Pick Silver Falls if you want the more universally rewarding visit. The Trail of Ten Falls loops past ten waterfalls in a lush forest, including several you can walk behind, and it suits almost anyone, making it Oregon's signature state park hike. The exception is the climber or the traveler drawn to dramatic high-desert scenery: that person should choose Smith Rock, the birthplace of American sport climbing, where sheer tuff cliffs and the airy Misery Ridge trail are the draw.
Palo Duro Canyon State Park vs Garner State Park
Pick Palo Duro Canyon if you want the bigger scenic payoff. The second-largest canyon in the country, with its red rock walls and the iconic Lighthouse formation, makes it the more dramatic Texas park and a true bucket-list landscape. The exception is the family that wants cool river swimming and a classic Hill Country camping scene: that group should choose Garner, the state's most-visited park for camping, where the Frio River and summer tradition are the whole draw.
Baxter State Park vs Franconia Notch State Park
Pick Franconia Notch if you want the more accessible and varied visit. This New Hampshire park packs the Flume Gorge, the Cannon Mountain tramway, the Basin, and easy lake walks into a compact corridor right off the highway, making it ideal for families and short trips. The exception is the serious hiker chasing true wilderness and the climb up Mount Katahdin: that person should choose Baxter, Maine's vast, rugged park where the terminus of the Appalachian Trail and strict wilderness rules are the entire point.
Or browse the full national parks index to plan a single park end to end.