No park campground
Details- Season
- Day-use only.
- Sites
- No tent or RV camping inside Matthiessen.
- Pair with Starved Rock or book lodging in Utica or Oglesby.

State Park · Illinois
The quieter canyon park next to Starved Rock: dells, seasonal waterfalls, a streambed loop, and five miles of marked trails. Day-use only, no tent camping.

Field briefing
Matthiessen State Park changes fast with season and elevation.
Before you go
It is a day-use park with no tent camping, so plan it as a half-day canyon hike and pair it with Starved Rock or nearby lodging. Go in spring for waterfalls, stay on the marked trails, and expect slick streambed rock. Illinois charges no entrance fee.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Cool and wet, with the best waterfall flow in the dells and slick streambed rock.
Pack Waterproof boots, traction, and clothes you can get muddy.
Warm and shaded in the canyons, with lower water and busy weekends.
Pack Bug protection, water, and shoes that handle the streambed.
Crisp hiking weather and good color in the dells, best in mid-October.
Pack Warm layer, headlamp for shorter days, and a parking plan.
Cold and quiet, with frozen falls and ice on the stairs and dells trails.
Pack Microspikes, insulation, and a willingness to skip iced-over canyon routes.
The Dells
The signature stretch: a sculpted sandstone canyon with seasonal waterfalls between the Upper and Lower Dells.
Cascade Falls and Lake Falls
Two of the park's reliable waterfalls, best after spring rain or snowmelt, with stairs and overlooks for viewing.
Bluff and River trails
The full marked-trail system links the dells, the Vermilion River, and forested bluffs for a longer day.
Keep one flexible slot in the day, because weather, parking, and energy usually decide more than the map does. For one day in Matthiessen State Park, make The Dells the non-negotiable, add Cascade Falls and Lake Falls only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Bluff and River trails as the flexible finish.
Turn Matthiessen's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Build around conditions
Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.
Plan your trip
2 quick tools, already seeded for Matthiessen 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
Matthiessen State Park packing list
0 of 16 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
16 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Matthiessen asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
Matthiessen is day-use only, with no tent or RV camping inside the park, so plan to stay nearby. Utica and Oglesby have the closest lodging, the Starved Rock area lodge and cabins fill the demand for an immersive base, and equestrian campers use the separate trailhead area. Most visitors simply pair Matthiessen with a Starved Rock overnight.
Camping reservations
There is no tent or RV campground inside Matthiessen. Pair it with Starved Rock or book lodging in the Utica and Oglesby area for an overnight trip.
Reviewed June 11, 2026
Booking window
Illinois uses ExploreMoreIL for IDNR camping at parks that allow it. Matthiessen itself does not offer general campground reservations, so book a nearby park or town instead.
Where to book or verify
Official IDNR page with trail maps, hours, and rules.
Illinois reservation portal for nearby parks that allow camping, such as Starved Rock-area sites.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Campgrounds to know

Plan the last mile as carefully as the destination.
Airports, roads, entrances, and local movement belong in the same plan.
Getting there
Arrival note
Matthiessen sits just south of Starved Rock near Oglesby and Utica in north-central Illinois, about 90 minutes southwest of Chicago and close to I-80.
Car strategy
A car is required, and the main lot fills on spring and fall weekends.
Local movement
Because there is no camping, most visitors fold it into a Starved Rock day or overnight.
Pair this with lodging: the simplest base is the one that removes a real morning problem, not just the one nearest the map pin.
No general tent or RV camping is offered inside Matthiessen; it is a day-use park. There is a separate equestrian trailhead area, but most overnight visitors base at nearby Starved Rock or in Utica and Oglesby.
No. Illinois state parks do not charge a vehicle entrance fee, so day-use access to Matthiessen is free.
Matthiessen is smaller, quieter, and built around the sculpted dells canyon and its seasonal waterfalls, while Starved Rock is larger and busier with more canyons and river overlooks. Many visitors hike both in one trip since they are only minutes apart.