Skip to content
KITAUTHORITY

Head to head

Zion vs Capitol Reef: How to Choose

The short answer

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.

Pick Zion National Park if

  • You want bucket-list canyon hikes like the Narrows and Angels Landing
  • It is your first Utah park and you want the biggest scenic payoff
  • You are comfortable with a busy park and the seasonal shuttle
Full Zion National Park guide

Pick Capitol Reef National Park if

  • You want red-rock scenery with a fraction of Zion's crowds
  • The Fruita orchards and a relaxed scenic drive appeal to you
  • You prefer quiet trails with no permit lottery or shuttle to navigate
Full Capitol Reef National Park guide

Side by side

Zion National ParkCapitol Reef National Park
Best timeApril to May and September to October for mild temperaturesLate spring through early fall (May to October), with a fall fruit-harvest bump in September and October
Entrance fee$35 per vehicle, valid for 7 daysFree to enter the park along Highway 24. The Scenic Drive charges an entrance fee of $20 per vehicle, $15 per motorcycle, or $10 per person on foot or bicycle, valid for 7 days. Covered by the America the Beautiful pass. No timed-entry reservation required.
Size147k acres242k acres
Visitors4.6M / year1.2M / year
Nearest airportSt. George (SGU) about 1 hour; Las Vegas (LAS) about 2.5 hoursSalt Lake City International (SLC), about 3.5 hours by car. Grand Junction Regional (GJT) in Colorado is a closer regional option at roughly 3 hours.

Who wins on what

DecisionWinnerWhy
Best for first-timersZion National ParkThe towering canyon and famous trails are the more iconic introduction.
Fewest crowdsCapitol Reef National ParkCapitol Reef draws roughly a quarter of Zion's visitors and feels far quieter.
Best hikingZion National ParkThe Narrows and Angels Landing are bucket-list routes with no Capitol Reef equivalent.
Easiest logisticsCapitol Reef National ParkNo mandatory shuttle and no Angels Landing permit lottery to plan around.
Most unique featureCapitol Reef National ParkThe historic Fruita orchards let you pick fruit in season, found nowhere else.
Best scenic driveCapitol Reef National ParkIts quiet scenic drive past Fruita rewards visitors with little traffic.
Best for a quiet tripCapitol Reef National ParkLighter crowds and open trails make for a calmer, more solitary visit.

Can you do both?

Both are part of Utah's Mighty Five and sit a few hours apart along the southern Utah route. A common loop links Zion and Bryce Canyon in the west with Capitol Reef to the east, often continuing to Arches and Canyonlands. Pair Zion's canyon hikes with Capitol Reef's quieter trails and Fruita orchards.

Frequently asked questions

Is Zion or Capitol Reef better?
Zion is the better single choice for its iconic canyon and bucket-list hikes. Capitol Reef wins if you want similar red-rock scenery with a fraction of the crowds and no permit lottery.
Which park is less crowded?
Capitol Reef is far less crowded, drawing roughly a quarter of Zion's annual visitors. Outside the main Fruita area, you can often hike a trail without seeing anyone.
What makes Capitol Reef unique?
Capitol Reef holds the largest historic orchards in the national park system, in the Fruita district, where you can pick your own fruit in season. It also avoids Zion's shuttle and permit systems.
Can I visit both on one trip?
Yes. Both belong to Utah's Mighty Five and sit a few hours apart, so a southern Utah road trip can link Zion and Bryce Canyon in the west with Capitol Reef to the east.

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.

Planning either trip? Each park guide has when-to-go, what-to-pack, and camping reservation details. Browse the full national parks index.