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Cumberland Falls, the wide curtain waterfall on the Cumberland River in Kentucky

Destinations

Kentucky outdoors

Sandstone arches, the East's deepest cave country, and waterfall gorges, all with no state-park entry fees.

Top parks in Kentucky

See all 46 parks
A snow- and frost-covered hardwood forest stretching across the rolling hills seen from the Doyel Valley Overlook in Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky, on a clear winter day.
National park

Mammoth Cave

The world's longest known cave system, with over 400 mapped miles of passages under green Kentucky hills.

Cumberland Falls, the wide curtain waterfall on the Cumberland River in Kentucky
State park

Cumberland Falls State Resort Park

Kentucky's resort park around the 'Niagara of the South,' home to one of the few reliable moonbows in the world, plus DuPont Lodge, cottages, and a campground.

The 65-foot Natural Bridge sandstone arch in the Red River Gorge
State park

Natural Bridge State Resort Park

A 65-foot sandstone arch in the Red River Gorge: the Original Trail, a seasonal sky lift, Hemlock Lodge, cottages, two campgrounds, and free entry and parking.

Carter Caves State Resort Park
State Resort Park
Wikimedia Commons

Carter Caves State Resort Park

A resort park in northeastern Kentucky with more than 20 caverns, lodge accommodations, camping, 33 miles of trails, fishing, and gem mining.

Pine Mountain State Resort Park
State Resort Park
Wikimedia Commons

Pine Mountain State Resort Park

Kentucky's first state park, established in 1926, with a lodge, cottages, cabins, the Wasioto Winds golf course, hiking trails, and a swimming pool.

Lake Cumberland State Resort Park
State Resort Park
Habigrm2 / CC0

Lake Cumberland State Resort Park

A resort park on Lake Cumberland with year-round cabins and camping, an indoor pool, hiking trails, disc golf, mini golf, fishing, and boating.

John James Audubon State Park
State Park
Zachjank / CC BY 3.0

John James Audubon State Park

A Henderson park honoring naturalist John James Audubon, with a museum, nature center, more than six miles of trails, a fishing lake, and a 9-hole golf course.

Fort Boonesborough State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Fort Boonesborough State Park

A historic park with a reconstructed working fort and living history demonstrations, plus a campground, museum, hiking, fishing, and boating.

Barren River Lake State Resort Park
State Resort Park
Wikimedia Commons

Barren River Lake State Resort Park

A lakeside resort park on 10,000-acre Barren River Lake with a lodge, cottages, campground, an award-winning golf course, and hiking and water activities.

Planning a Kentucky trip

Kentucky packs a lot of terrain into a state most people just drive through. The headline act is underground: the longest cave system on Earth sits beneath the rolling hills near the I-65 corridor, holding a steady 54F year-round no matter what the weather does up top. Above ground, the state is built around sandstone and water. The Red River Gorge in the Daniel Boone National Forest is the crown jewel, with over 100 natural arches, hundreds of miles of trail, and some of the best rock climbing on the planet. Cumberland Falls State Resort Park, the "Niagara of the South," drops a 125-foot-wide curtain of water and is one of the only spots in the Western Hemisphere where you can catch a moonbow on a clear full moon. Out west, Land Between the Lakes spreads forest and shoreline across a huge recreation area for paddling and camping.

The smart move on timing is spring (April to June) and fall (September to October), when surface temperatures sit comfortably in the 60s and 70s F and the hardwoods either bloom or blaze. Summer gets hot and sticky, often pushing past 90F with high humidity, though that is exactly when the cave's cool air feels like a gift. Winter goes quiet and crowd-free, with highs that rarely clear 50F and freezing nights.

On packing, Kentucky rewards layers and grip. Trails run muddy and slick after the state's frequent rain, so waterproof footwear with real tread earns its keep, and a packable rain shell is non-negotiable in spring. If a cave tour is on your list, bring a light midlayer even in July, because 54F feels chilly once you stop moving underground. A good headlamp, plenty of water, and broken-in boots cover most of what the gorges and ridge trails will throw at you.

Getting around Kentucky

Two airports do most of the work. Lexington Blue Grass Airport (LEX) is the natural gateway to the eastern outdoors, sitting roughly an hour west of the Red River Gorge. Louisville International Airport (SDF) is the bigger hub and the better launch point for the western and central parks, about 90 minutes northwest of Mammoth Cave country along Interstate 65. Lexington and Louisville are only about 70 miles apart (a 75 to 90 minute drive), so it is easy to fly into one and explore from either.

You will want a car. Kentucky's outdoor highlights are spread across the state and public transit does not reach them. From Lexington, the Red River Gorge is a quick 60 to 75 minute hop east on the Mountain Parkway. Cumberland Falls sits in the southeast, roughly 2 to 2.5 hours south of Lexington toward the Tennessee line. Mammoth Cave is central, about 90 minutes from Louisville and around 2 hours from Lexington. Land Between the Lakes anchors the far west, a longer haul of roughly 3.5 to 4 hours from Louisville. Roads to the gorges are winding and rural, so build in extra time and fuel up before you leave the interstate.

State park directory

Every Kentucky 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.

46 parks

2 full guides · 36 with photos

  • Cumberland Falls State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park home to the 125-foot Cumberland Falls and its rare moonbow, with lodging, two campgrounds, 17 miles of trails, fishing, and horseback riding.

    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Horseback Riding
    • Swimming

    Kentucky State Parks

    Full guide
  • Natural Bridge State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park built around a 78-foot sandstone arch, with the Hemlock Lodge, cottages, miles of hiking trails, a swimming pool, fishing, and paddling.

    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Paddling
    • Swimming

    Kentucky State Parks

    Full guide
  • Barren River Lake State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A lakeside resort park on 10,000-acre Barren River Lake with a lodge, cottages, campground, an award-winning golf course, and hiking and water activities.

    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Big Bone Lick State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site with active salt springs, Ice Age fossils, a museum, and a living bison herd, plus a campground, trails, and picnic areas.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Playground

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Blue Licks Battlefield State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park marking a Revolutionary War battlefield, with a lodge, cottages, campground, a Pioneer Museum, hiking trails, and a restaurant.

    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Hiking
    • Fishing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Breaks Interstate Park

    State Park

    An interstate park straddling Kentucky and Virginia, known for its deep river gorge, with lodging, camping, hiking, biking, boating, and seasonal whitewater rafting.

    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Boating
    • Fishing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Carr Creek State Park

    State Park

    A lake park centered on Carr Creek Lake, featuring the longest sand beach in the Kentucky State Parks system plus camping, fishing, boating, and picnicking.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Picnicking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Carter Caves State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park in northeastern Kentucky with more than 20 caverns, lodge accommodations, camping, 33 miles of trails, fishing, and gem mining.

    • Hiking
    • Camping
    • Cabins
    • Fishing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Columbus-Belmont State Park

    State Park

    A Civil War park overlooking the Mississippi River, preserving battle earthworks and a museum, with a campground, hiking trail, and picnic areas.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Dr. Thomas Walker State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site commemorating Dr. Thomas Walker with a replica of his cabin, a nature center, mini golf, picnic areas, and primitive camping.

    • Camping
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • E.P. Tom Sawyer State Park

    State Park

    A 554-acre recreation park near Louisville with the largest public outdoor swimming pool in the system, nature trails, a fitness loop, archery, and a dog park.

    • Swimming
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Nature Trails

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Fort Boonesborough State Park

    State Park

    A historic park with a reconstructed working fort and living history demonstrations, plus a campground, museum, hiking, fishing, and boating.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • General Butler State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park at the confluence of the Ohio and Kentucky Rivers, with a lodge, cottages, a historic house, hiking, biking, fishing, and a swimming pool.

    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Grayson Lake State Park

    State Park

    A 1,512-acre park known for sandstone canyons along Grayson Lake, with a campground, an 18-hole golf course, hiking, boating, fishing, and paddling.

    • Hiking
    • Camping
    • Boating
    • Fishing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Green River Lake State Park

    State Park

    A park on 8,210-acre Green River Lake with swimming beaches, a marina, camping, 28 miles of multi-use trails, and mini golf.

    • Swimming
    • Beach
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Greenbo Lake State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on Greenbo Lake with a lodge, cabins, RV camping, a pool with a water slide, hiking, fishing, boating, and horseback riding.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Jefferson Davis State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site marking the birthplace of Confederate president Jefferson Davis, featuring a 351-foot limestone obelisk, a visitor center, and rental pavilions.

    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Jenny Wiley State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    An Appalachian resort park on Dewey Lake offering lodge rooms, cottages, elk viewing, boating, mountain biking, fishing, and over ten miles of hiking trails.

    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Boating
    • Fishing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • John James Audubon State Park

    State Park

    A Henderson park honoring naturalist John James Audubon, with a museum, nature center, more than six miles of trails, a fishing lake, and a 9-hole golf course.

    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Golf
    • Picnicking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Kenlake State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on the shore of Kentucky Lake with a lodge, cottages, a full-service marina, hiking, fishing, boating, and birdwatching.

    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Cabins

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Kentucky Dam Village State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on Kentucky Lake with lodges, cottages, an 18-hole championship golf course, a swimming beach, fishing, boating, and nature trails.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Hiking
    • Golf

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Kincaid Lake State Park

    State Park

    A lake park with an 84-site campground, fishing, boating, paddle boat and kayak rentals, hiking trails, and picnic shelters.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling
    • Camping

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Lake Barkley State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on Lake Barkley with a lodge, cottages, campsites, an 18-hole golf course, a year-round wellness pool, hiking, fishing, and boating.

    • Swimming
    • Golf
    • Hiking
    • Fishing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Lake Cumberland State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on Lake Cumberland with year-round cabins and camping, an indoor pool, hiking trails, disc golf, mini golf, fishing, and boating.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Hiking
    • Disc Golf

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
Show 22 more Kentucky parks
  • Lake Malone State Park

    State Park

    A park on 788-acre Lake Malone with a swimming beach, primitive and RV campsites, fishing, boating, and hiking trails through scenic rock formations.

    • Swimming
    • Beach
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Lincoln Homestead State Park

    State Park

    A historic park at the original home of Abraham Lincoln's mother, with a replica cabin and museum, a championship golf course, disc golf, and a fishing lake.

    • Golf
    • Disc Golf
    • Fishing
    • Picnicking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • My Old Kentucky Home State Park

    State Park

    A historic park around the Federal Hill mansion that inspired Stephen Foster's ballad, with guided tours, an outdoor drama, a golf course, and camping.

    • Golf
    • Camping
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Nolin Lake State Park

    State Park

    A park on 5,795-acre Nolin Lake near Mammoth Cave, with a sandy beach, a 9.2-mile hiking trail, mountain biking, fishing, boating, and camping.

    • Swimming
    • Beach
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Old Fort Harrod State Park

    State Park

    A historic park built around a replica of the 1774 fort founded by James Harrod, with furnished pioneer cabins, a mansion museum, and a pioneer cemetery.

    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Old Mulkey Meetinghouse State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site preserving the oldest freestanding log church in Kentucky, built in 1804, with guided tours, a hiking trail, picnic areas, and a playground.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Playground
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Paintsville Lake State Park

    State Park

    A 1,140-acre eastern Kentucky park on Paintsville Lake with a marina, full-service and primitive campsites, boating, kayaking, fishing, and trails.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Boating
    • Paddling

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site preserving Kentucky's most destructive Civil War battlefield, with a museum, 19 miles of walking trails, and educational interpretive trails.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Pine Mountain State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    Kentucky's first state park, established in 1926, with a lodge, cottages, cabins, the Wasioto Winds golf course, hiking trails, and a swimming pool.

    • Hiking
    • Golf
    • Swimming
    • Cabins

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Taylorsville Lake State Park

    State Park

    A park between Lexington and Louisville on Taylorsville Lake, with a marina, campground, equestrian sites, and a 24-mile multi-use trail system.

    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Waveland State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site centered on an 1848 Greek Revival home built by a grandnephew of Daniel Boone, with mansion tours, gardens, a walking trail, and a playground.

    • Hiking
    • Playground
    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Yatesville Lake State Park

    State Park

    A 2,300-acre eastern Kentucky park on Yatesville Lake with a marina, an 18-hole golf course, a campground, boat-in and hike-in camping, fishing, and trails.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Golf
    • Camping

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Buckhorn Lake State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park in the Appalachian foothills on Buckhorn Lake, offering lodge rooms, cottages, hiking, fishing, boating, and swimming.

    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Swimming

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Dale Hollow Lake State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on 28,000-acre Dale Hollow Lake offering a top-rated golf course, lodge rooms, cabins, camping, fishing, boating, and multi-use trails.

    • Golf
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Hiking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • General Burnside Island State Park

    State Park

    An island park on Lake Cumberland with an award-winning 18-hole golf course, a campground, fishing, boating, and picnic areas.

    • Golf
    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Isaac Shelby Cemetery State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    The smallest park in the Kentucky system, a half-acre cemetery holding the grave of Isaac Shelby, the state's first governor, on the National Register of Historic Places.

    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Kingdom Come State Park

    State Park

    A 1,283-acre mountain park on Pine Mountain with eight scenic overlooks, 14 hiking trails, a fishing lake, a cabin, mini golf, and primitive camping.

    • Hiking
    • Fishing
    • Biking
    • Camping

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Mineral Mound State Park

    State Park

    A park on Lake Barkley featuring The Cullan 18-hole championship golf course, fishing, boating, picnicking, and wildlife viewing.

    • Golf
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Picnicking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Pennyrile Forest State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A forest resort park in Dawson Springs with a lodge, cottages, a golf course, a swimming beach, seven hiking trails, fishing, and paddling.

    • Golf
    • Swimming
    • Beach
    • Hiking

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Pine Mountain State Scenic Trail

    State Scenic Trail

    A 44-mile backcountry scenic trail along Pine Mountain in southeastern Kentucky, part of the Great Eastern Trail, with primitive camping and trail shelters.

    • Hiking
    • Backpacking
    • Camping
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Rough River Dam State Resort Park

    State Resort Park

    A resort park on 5,000-acre Rough River Lake with lodge rooms, cottages, a marina, hiking trails, fishing, boating, and kayaking.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Hiking
    • Paddling

    Kentucky State Parks

    Official page
  • Wickliffe Mounds State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A historic site preserving a Mississippian archaeological village dating to A.D. 1100-1350, with a museum, ceremonial mounds, trails, and picnic areas.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Kentucky State Parks

    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 time of year to visit Kentucky's parks?

Spring (April to June) and fall (September to October) are the sweet spots, with daytime temperatures in the comfortable 60s and 70s F and either wildflowers or fall color on the ridges. Summer is hot and humid, often above 90F, though it is peak season at Mammoth Cave because the cave stays a cool 54F. Winter is quiet and uncrowded but cold, with highs rarely topping 50F.

What is the best national park in Kentucky?

Mammoth Cave National Park is Kentucky's standout national park and the main reason most visitors come. It protects the longest known cave system in the world, with ranger-led tours ranging from easy walks to multi-hour adventures, plus miles of surface hiking and the Green River for paddling. The cave's constant 54F temperature makes it a comfortable visit in any season.

Do Kentucky state parks charge an entrance fee?

No. Kentucky state parks, including Cumberland Falls and the resort parks, do not charge an entry fee, which makes the state unusually budget-friendly for outdoor trips. You will still pay separately for lodge rooms, campsites, and some guided activities, but simply walking in to hike or sightsee is free.

Where can I see the moonbow in Kentucky?

Cumberland Falls State Resort Park in southeastern Kentucky is one of the only places in the Western Hemisphere where you can reliably see a moonbow, a rainbow produced by moonlight. It appears in the mist below the 125-foot-wide falls on clear nights around the full moon. Check the park's published moonbow schedule and aim for a cloudless evening for the best odds.

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