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Black lava flows and cinder cones stretching across the Craters of the Moon plain

Destinations

Idaho outdoors

Jagged Sawtooth peaks, alpine lakes, lava fields, and a waterfall taller than Niagara, all with shockingly few crowds.

Top parks in Idaho

See all 28 parks
Black lava flows and cinder cones stretching across the Craters of the Moon plain
National Park Service

Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve

A vast ocean of black lava flows, cinder cones, and lava-tube caves in central Idaho, with a scenic loop road and a free cave permit you must pick up in person.

The clear deep blue water of Lake Pend Oreille meeting a forested shoreline at Farragut State Park, mountains rising beyond the lake, bright summer day
State park

Farragut State Park

A 4,000-acre forest park on the deep, clear southern tip of Lake Pend Oreille, with a World War II naval-training history, big campgrounds, lake access, and a long trail and mountain-bike network.

Payette Lake from the forested Ponderosa peninsula at McCall
State park

Ponderosa State Park

A forested peninsula reaching into Payette Lake at McCall, with old-growth ponderosa pines, lake overlooks, summer water recreation, and groomed winter trails. A reservation-first summer park.

Crystal-clear spring water bursting from a basalt canyon wall into a turquoise pool at Box Canyon Springs in Thousand Springs State Park, lush green vegetation, southern Idaho
State park

Thousand Springs State Park

A scattered southern Idaho park of six units along the Snake River Plain, where spring water bursts from canyon walls at Box Canyon, Ritter Island, Niagara Springs, and the waterfalls of Malad Gorge.

Bruneau Dunes State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Bruneau Dunes State Park

Bruneau Dunes State Park boasts the tallest single-structured sand dune in North America, with sandboarding, fishing, hiking, horseback riding, and an observatory for stargazing.

Heyburn State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Heyburn State Park

Heyburn State Park, the oldest park in the Pacific Northwest, spans three lakes and the St. Joe River, offering camping, cabins, paddling, biking, hiking, and horseback riding.

Harriman State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Harriman State Park

Harriman State Park sits within an 11,700-acre wildlife refuge in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, with 22 miles of trails, world-renowned fly fishing, wildlife viewing, and a historic ranch.

Priest Lake State Park
State Park
Peckycox / CC BY-SA 4.0

Priest Lake State Park

Priest Lake State Park lies along the eastern shore of clear, 19-mile Priest Lake below the Selkirk Mountains, with dense forests, abundant wildlife, and a nine-hole disc golf course.

Hells Gate State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Hells Gate State Park

Hells Gate State Park sits on the Snake River at Idaho's lowest elevation, offering camping, fishing, biking, a marina, jet boat tours into Hells Canyon, and a Lewis and Clark center.

Planning a Idaho trip

What Idaho gives you outdoors

Idaho is one of the most underrated outdoor states in the country, and that is exactly its charm. You get the kind of jagged, granite-spired mountains people drive to the Tetons for, but with quieter trails and fewer people on them. The headliner is the Sawtooth National Recreation Area, a 754,000-acre stretch of saw-toothed peaks holding more alpine lakes than almost anywhere on the continent. Day hikes like Alice Lake and bigger loops like the Alice-Toxaway thread between glacial basins, granite spires, and dense pine forest.

Beyond the Sawtooths, the variety is the story. At Twin Falls, Shoshone Falls drops 212 feet on the Snake River, taller than Niagara, and roars loudest in spring when snowmelt is high. Out on the high desert, Craters of the Moon is a surreal field of black lava flows, cinder cones, and caves, and a certified International Dark Sky Park where the stargazing is exceptional. There is no national park inside Idaho's borders, so the best experiences live in its national forests, recreation areas, and state parks rather than on a single marquee map pin.

The sweet spot for most of the state is mid-June through September, when high mountain trails are clear of snow and the alpine lakes are swimmable. Shoshone Falls peaks earlier, in spring, and Craters of the Moon shows wildflowers around mid-June with its loop road open roughly May through November. Pack for big daily temperature swings: mountain mornings can sit in the 40s F while afternoons climb into the 80s F, so layers, a warm midlayer, rain protection, sun cover, and broken-in boots will carry you through almost any Idaho day.

Getting around Idaho

Getting around

Boise Airport (BOI) is the main gateway and the most practical place to land for the bulk of Idaho's outdoor country. If you are focused on the panhandle in the north, fly into Spokane, Washington (GEG) instead, which sits much closer to Coeur d'Alene than Boise does. A rental car is essential; public transit does not reach the trailheads, and distances between regions are long.

From Boise, the Sawtooths and Sun Valley are an easy half-day push. Stanley, the gateway town for the Sawtooth National Recreation Area, is roughly 130 miles and about 3 hours northeast. Sun Valley and Ketchum are about 150 miles and 2.5 to 3 hours away, with the Sawtooth area sitting about an hour north of Sun Valley, so many travelers base in one and day-trip to the other. Craters of the Moon is about 170 miles and just under 3 hours from Boise, and pairs naturally with a Sun Valley loop since they sit on the same general route.

The big gap is north to south. Coeur d'Alene and the panhandle are roughly 400 miles from Boise, a 7 to 8 hour drive over winding mountain roads through McCall, which is why flying into Spokane makes more sense for a northern trip. Within any single region, plan for slow, scenic two-lane highways rather than interstates, and top off fuel in town since gas stations thin out fast once you leave the valleys.

State park directory

Every Idaho state park

A source-backed inventory layer for planning breadth. Full Kit Authority guides are marked when a park has camping detail, rules, and packing notes; the rest link straight to the official page.

28 parks

3 full guides · 26 with photos

  • Farragut State Park

    State Park

    Farragut State Park, a former World War II naval training station on Lake Pend Oreille, offers camping, cabins, disc golf, fishing, hiking, biking, equestrian facilities, and WWII history.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Disc Golf
    • Fishing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Full guide
  • Ponderosa State Park

    State Park

    Ponderosa State Park sits on a peninsula in Payette Lake near McCall, offering campsites and cabins amid a scenic mountain setting with hiking, biking, paddling, and Nordic skiing.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Full guide
  • Thousand Springs State Park

    State Park

    Thousand Springs State Park is divided into six units in southern Idaho's Magic Valley, offering Oregon Trail history, gorge hiking, fishing, wildlife viewing, and historic structures.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Picnicking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Full guide
  • Ashton to Tetonia Trail

    State Trail

    The Ashton-Tetonia Trail is a 29.6-mile rail-trail offering sweeping views of the Teton range and historic grain elevators, open to hiking, biking, and horseback riding.

    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Horseback Riding
    • Winter Sports

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Bear Lake State Park

    State Park

    Bear Lake State Park sits in southeastern Idaho on a turquoise lake known as the Caribbean of the Rockies, a water lover's paradise for swimming, boating, and fishing.

    • Camping
    • Boating
    • Swimming
    • Fishing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Bruneau Dunes State Park

    State Park

    Bruneau Dunes State Park boasts the tallest single-structured sand dune in North America, with sandboarding, fishing, hiking, horseback riding, and an observatory for stargazing.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Fishing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Castle Rocks State Park

    State Park

    Castle Rocks State Park attracts rock climbers from around the world with hundreds of routes, and offers hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding amid a dramatic geologic landscape.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • City of Rocks National Reserve

    State park system area

    City of Rocks National Reserve is renowned for granite spires and one of the finest granite-face climbing sites anywhere, with hiking, mountain biking, horseback riding, and California Trail history.

    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Horseback Riding
    • Climbing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Coeur d’Alene’s Old Mission State Park

    State Park

    Coeur d'Alene's Old Mission State Park preserves Idaho's oldest standing building, the Sacred Heart Mission, with a visitor center exhibition and access to the Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes.

    • Biking
    • Historic Site

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Dworshak State Park

    State Park

    Dworshak State Park lies on the western shore of Dworshak Reservoir, offering camping, boating, fishing, swimming, hiking, waterskiing, and disc golf.

    • Camping
    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Swimming

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Eagle Island State Park

    State Park

    Eagle Island State Park is a 545-acre park west of Boise bordered by the Boise River, featuring a swimming beach, picnic area, disc golf, and over five miles of trails.

    • Hiking
    • Swimming
    • Picnicking
    • Disc Golf

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Harriman State Park

    State Park

    Harriman State Park sits within an 11,700-acre wildlife refuge in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, with 22 miles of trails, world-renowned fly fishing, wildlife viewing, and a historic ranch.

    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Horseback Riding

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Hells Gate State Park

    State Park

    Hells Gate State Park sits on the Snake River at Idaho's lowest elevation, offering camping, fishing, biking, a marina, jet boat tours into Hells Canyon, and a Lewis and Clark center.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Biking
    • Boating

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Henrys Lake State Park

    State Park

    Henrys Lake State Park surrounds a high mountain lake considered one of the finest trout fisheries in the West, with nature trails for hiking, biking, and wildlife viewing near Yellowstone.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Heyburn State Park

    State Park

    Heyburn State Park, the oldest park in the Pacific Northwest, spans three lakes and the St. Joe River, offering camping, cabins, paddling, biking, hiking, and horseback riding.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Lake Cascade State Park

    State Park

    Lake Cascade State Park offers hundreds of campsites along 86 miles of shoreline, with windsurfing, boating, fishing, hiking, and mountain biking, plus nearby whitewater on the Payette River.

    • Camping
    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Lake Walcott State Park

    State Park

    Lake Walcott State Park offers a world-class disc golf course, fishing, a shaded day-use area, and access to the Minidoka National Wildlife Refuge for some of the best birding in southern Idaho.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Disc Golf
    • Fishing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Land of the Yankee Fork State Park

    State Park

    Land of the Yankee Fork State Park brings Idaho's frontier mining history to life with an interpretive center, gold panning, ghost towns, a gold dredge, and the Challis Hot Springs.

    • Camping
    • Swimming
    • Historic Site

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Lucky Peak State Park

    State Park

    Lucky Peak State Park near Boise comprises three day-use units for swimming, picnicking, fishing, boating, and biking, including a sandy beach and a full-service marina.

    • Swimming
    • Picnicking
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Massacre Rocks State Park

    State Park

    Massacre Rocks State Park on the Snake River is rich in Oregon Trail history and geologic wonders, with miles of hiking trails, rock climbing, and a challenging disc golf course.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Climbing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • McCroskey State Park

    State Park

    Mary Minerva McCroskey State Park offers epic views of the Palouse Divide along the 17-mile Skyline Drive, with cedar forests, secluded camping, and multi-use trails.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Horseback Riding

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Priest Lake State Park

    State Park

    Priest Lake State Park lies along the eastern shore of clear, 19-mile Priest Lake below the Selkirk Mountains, with dense forests, abundant wildlife, and a nine-hole disc golf course.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Boating
    • Fishing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Round Lake State Park

    State Park

    Round Lake State Park is a forested park in Idaho's panhandle set on a 58-acre lake, with hiking, fishing for rainbow trout and bass, wildlife viewing, and shaded campsites.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Three Island Crossing State Park

    State Park

    Three Island Crossing State Park marks a famous Oregon Trail crossing of the Snake River, with camping, cabins, picnic areas, a disc golf course, and an interpretive center.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Picnicking
    • Disc Golf

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
Show 4 more Idaho parks
  • Trail of the Coeur d’Alenes

    State park system area

    The Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes is a 73-mile paved trail across the Idaho panhandle, ideal for cycling, walking, skating, birding, and winter Nordic skiing and snowshoeing.

    • Biking
    • Hiking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Winter Sports

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Winchester Lake State Park

    State Park

    Winchester Lake State Park is a small forested park in the Camas Prairie offering fishing, camping, mountain biking, canoeing, year-round yurts, and winter Nordic skiing.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Fishing
    • Biking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Coeur d’Alene Parkway

    State park system area

    Coeur d'Alene Lake Parkway State Park is a paved, non-motorized parkway along the north shore of Lake Coeur d'Alene, part of the North Idaho Centennial Trail for walkers, hikers, and cyclists.

    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Boating
    • Picnicking

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page
  • Twin Peaks Ranch State Park

    State Park

    Twin Peaks Ranch State Park spans 677 acres of remote high country south of Salmon, with a guest lodge, fishing ponds, a warm spring, and access to over 2,000 miles of trails.

    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Fishing

    Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation

    Official page

Inventory source: USGS PAD-US 4.1. Photos are public-domain or Creative Commons via Wikimedia Commons, credited per image. Official reservations and rules remain state-specific, so use the state booking links before committing to dates.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best national park in Idaho?

Idaho does not have a national park inside its borders, so the closest equivalents are its national recreation areas and monuments. The Sawtooth National Recreation Area is the standout for alpine hiking and lakes, while Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve is the most unusual, a vast field of black lava flows and caves that also draws stargazers as a Dark Sky Park.

When is the best time to visit Idaho's parks and outdoor areas?

Mid-June through September is the prime window for high country like the Sawtooths, when trails are snow-free and alpine lakes are swimmable. Shoshone Falls is most dramatic in spring as snowmelt drives high water, and Craters of the Moon is best from April to October, with wildflowers around mid-June and its loop road typically open May through November.

Do I need a car to explore Idaho's outdoors?

Yes. There is no practical public transit to Idaho's trailheads and outdoor areas, and the regions are spread far apart. Rent a car at Boise Airport for most of the state, or fly into Spokane and rent there if you are heading to the northern panhandle around Coeur d'Alene.

How far is the Sawtooth area from Boise?

Stanley, the main gateway town for the Sawtooth National Recreation Area, is about 130 miles and roughly 3 hours northeast of Boise. Sun Valley sits about 2.5 to 3 hours away and lies about an hour south of the Sawtooths, so many visitors base in one town and day-trip to the other.

Keep exploring