Head to head
Saguaro vs Joshua Tree: How to Choose
The short answer
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.
Pick Saguaro National Park if
- Towering giant saguaro cactus forests are the specific draw
- You want easy access right outside Tucson
- You prefer a quieter park focused on scenic drives and short walks
Pick Joshua Tree National Park if
- Surreal trees and world-class rock scrambling are the goal
- You want easy access from Los Angeles or Palm Springs
- You want more hiking and climbing options in one park
Side by side
| Saguaro National Park | Joshua Tree National Park | |
|---|---|---|
| Best time | Late winter into spring (February through April) | Spring (March through May), with a second push in cool fall weekends |
| Entrance fee | $25 per vehicle, good for 7 days and both districts ($20 motorcycle, $15 per person on foot or bike). No timed-entry reservation. Card only, no cash. | $30 per private vehicle, valid 7 days. No timed-entry reservation required. America the Beautiful annual pass ($80) covers entry. |
| Size | 92k acres | 795k acres |
| Visitors | 0.9M / year | 3.0M / year |
| Nearest airport | Tucson International Airport (TUS), about 25 to 35 minutes by car to either the east (Rincon) or west (Tucson Mountain) district. | PSP (Palm Springs International), about 45 minutes to the West Entrance |
Who wins on what
| Decision | Winner | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Best for first-timers | Joshua Tree National Park | More to do, with the photogenic trees, rock piles, and varied trails. |
| Most iconic plant life | Saguaro National Park | The giant columnar saguaro cactus forests are unique to this park. |
| Best for rock scrambling | Joshua Tree National Park | The boulder piles are a playground for climbers and families alike. |
| Easiest access | Either | Saguaro flanks Tucson and Joshua Tree is near Palm Springs; both are very reachable. |
| Best hiking variety | Joshua Tree National Park | A wider range of trails and scrambles across its larger backcountry. |
| Best in winter | Either | Both are best in the cooler months and dangerous in peak summer heat. |
| Best for a short visit | Saguaro National Park | Its two compact districts and loop drives suit a focused half day each. |
Can you do both?
Both are Southwest desert parks but are several hours apart, with Saguaro near Tucson and Joshua Tree near Palm Springs, so combining them means a road trip rather than a quick pairing. Visit either in the cooler months, since both are dangerously hot in midsummer.
Frequently asked questions
- Is Saguaro or Joshua Tree better?
- Joshua Tree is the more flexible choice, with surreal trees, rock scrambling, and easy LA access. Saguaro wins if standing among giant cactus forests near Tucson is your goal.
- When is the best time to visit these parks?
- Visit both in the cooler months from late fall through early spring. Summer brings dangerous heat to both Saguaro and Joshua Tree.
- Which park is easier to reach?
- Both are easy to reach. Saguaro flanks the city of Tucson, while Joshua Tree sits a short drive from Palm Springs and within day-trip range of Los Angeles.
- Which has better hiking?
- Joshua Tree offers more hiking and scrambling variety across a larger park. Saguaro focuses more on scenic drives and shorter walks among the cactus forests.
Plan your visit
Whichever park wins for you, here is the gear keyed to these conditions, the tools to size your trip, and related guides.
What to pack
Plan with our tools
Planning either trip? Each park guide has when-to-go, what-to-pack, and camping reservation details. Browse the full national parks index.