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Bass Harbor Head Light Station, the iconic white lighthouse perched on the pink granite cliffs of Acadia National Park's rocky Maine coastline, with evergreens and the Atlantic Ocean.

Destinations

Maine outdoors

A rugged coast of granite headlands and a vast north-woods interior, anchored by Mount Katahdin and the Atlantic shoreline.

Top parks in Maine

See all 47 parks
Bass Harbor Head Light Station, the iconic white lighthouse perched on the pink granite cliffs of Acadia National Park's rocky Maine coastline, with evergreens and the Atlantic Ocean.
National park

Acadia

Granite peaks meeting the Atlantic, with the first sunrise in the U.S. from the top of Cadillac Mountain.

Katahdin reflected in Daicey Pond or Katahdin from Togue Pond
State park

Baxter State Park

Maine's wilderness park and Katahdin's home: capped daily entry, a rolling four-month reservation system independent of the state parks, and real backcountry rules.

Panoramic view from the Mount Battie summit over Camden harbor and the islands of Penobscot Bay, sailboats on blue water, autumn foliage on the wooded hillsides, golden afternoon light, Maine midcoast
State park

Camden Hills State Park

Midcoast Maine's where-the-mountains-meet-the-sea park: the Mount Battie auto road and summit tower, real hiking on Megunticook, and a large reservable campground.

The red-and-white candy-striped West Quoddy Head Lighthouse standing on a green coastal headland at the easternmost point of the United States, blue Atlantic and distant Canadian cliffs behind it, dramatic morning light
State park

Quoddy Head State Park

The easternmost point in the United States: the candy-striped West Quoddy Head Light, dramatic coastal cliffs, and a bog boardwalk on a 541-acre day-use peninsula.

Reid State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Reid State Park

Reid State Park was Maine's first state-owned saltwater beach, featuring long, wide sand beaches that are rare in the state.

Popham Beach State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Popham Beach State Park

Popham Beach State Park features a long sand beach with dramatic shoreline changes and dune erosion at the mouth of the Kennebec River.

Sebago Lake State Park
State Park
HarryOTwo at English Wikipedia / CC BY-SA 3.0

Sebago Lake State Park

Sebago Lake State Park, opened in 1938 as one of the five original state parks, is a forested lakeside park on Maine's deepest and second largest lake.

Grafton Notch State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Grafton Notch State Park

Grafton Notch State Park and the Mahoosuc Public Lands are a premier destination for sightseeing and backcountry hiking among spectacular peaks and gorges.

Mount Blue State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Mount Blue State Park

Mt. Blue State Park is Maine's largest state park at roughly 8,000 acres, offering hiking, biking, swimming, and picnicking in the Western Mountains.

Planning a Maine trip

Maine packs two very different outdoor worlds into one state. Along the coast you get granite headlands, working harbors, and trails that drop straight to the Atlantic, with the crown jewel being the rocky shoreline and carriage roads on Mount Desert Island. Push inland and the state opens into the North Woods: lakes, rivers, and a 200,000-acre wilderness park built around Mount Katahdin (5,267 ft), the highest point in Maine and the northern end of the Appalachian Trail.

Your best bets cover that whole range. Baxter State Park is the headliner for serious hikers, with the famous (and exposed) Knife Edge route to Katahdin's summit, plus gentler pond-side walks for everyone else. On the coast, Camden Hills State Park gives you summit views over Penobscot Bay without a brutal climb, and the Mid-Coast towns of Camden, Rockland, and Belfast make easy basecamps. For sandy shoreline, head south to the beaches around the Portland area.

When to go matters here. Summer (highs around 70 F) brings the warmest water and the biggest crowds, especially July and August. Early June rewards you with blooming lupines and thinner traffic. The real sweet spot is October: fall foliage peaks roughly mid- to late-month, daytime temps sit in the 40s F to 60s F, and the summer rush has cleared out. Winters are cold (highs often below 40 F), so plan for short days and snow if you visit then.

The through-line on packing is layers and traction. Coastal mornings start cool and damp even in summer, exposed summits like Katahdin can be 15 to 20 degrees colder and windier than the trailhead, and granite gets slick when wet. Bring a waterproof shell, warm midlayer, sturdy grippy footwear for boulder scrambles and wet rock, and real sun and bug protection (blackflies are a spring reality inland).

Getting around Maine

Two airports do most of the work. Portland International Jetport (PWM) in the south has the most flights and is your gateway to the southern beaches and the Mid-Coast. Bangor International (BGR) sits farther north and is the smarter pick for the wilderness interior: it is only about 90 minutes to Mount Desert Island and roughly two hours to Mount Katahdin and Baxter State Park. A small seasonal airport near Bar Harbor offers limited service right at Acadia's doorstep.

Driving is how you actually see Maine, and distances add up because the state is large. From Portland it is about 175 miles (a 3 to 3.5 hour drive) up to Bar Harbor and the Mount Desert Island parks, but from Bangor that same coastal destination is only about 90 minutes. Portland to Camden on the Mid-Coast runs about 83 miles (1 hour 45 minutes).

For the scenic route, follow Route 1 up the coast from Portland through Brunswick, Bath, Wiscasset, Damariscotta, Rockland, Camden, Belfast, and Bucksport. It is slower than the interstate but it is the classic Maine drive, stitching together harbor towns and ocean views. Inland trips to Baxter run north from Bangor (about 90 miles to the park), and the final access roads are unpaved and slow, so build in extra time. A car is essentially required: public transit between outdoor areas is minimal.

State park directory

Every Maine 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.

47 parks

2 full guides · 25 with photos

  • Camden Hills State Park

    State Park

    Camden Hills State Park's signature location is the scenic vista atop Mt. Battie, with sweeping views of Camden, Penobscot Bay, and surrounding islands.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Horseback Riding
    • Hunting

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Full guide
  • Quoddy Head State Park

    State Park

    Quoddy Head State Park encompasses 541 acres at the tip of America's easternmost peninsula, with a historic lighthouse and up to 5 miles of scenic trails.

    • Beach
    • Hiking
    • Hunting
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Full guide
  • Bradbury Mountain State Park

    State Park

    Bradbury Mountain State Park spans 800 forested acres halfway between Portland and Lewiston-Auburn, with trails, a summit view, and picnic areas.

    • Camping
    • Hiking
    • Horseback Riding
    • Hunting

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Cobscook Bay State Park

    State Park

    Cobscook Bay State Park is a base for family camping in easternmost Maine, surrounded on three sides by the wildlife-rich waters of Cobscook Bay.

    • Beach
    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Colburn House State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Colburn House State Historic Site sits on the east bank of the Kennebec River in Pittston, tied to Benedict Arnold's expedition during the American Revolution.

    • Fishing
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Colonial Pemaquid State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Colonial Pemaquid State Historic Site is one of northern New England's earliest communities, rich in archeological history with a museum of artifacts.

    • Beach
    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Paddling

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Knox State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Fort Knox, Maine's largest historic fort, is an unmodified example of a mid-19th century granite coastal fortification with master granite craftsmanship.

    • Nature Trails
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort McClary State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Fort McClary stands as one of Maine's most important historic forts, preserving evidence of changes in military architecture and technology.

    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Point State Park

    State Park

    Fort Point State Park occupies a long peninsula with panoramic views of the Penobscot River and Bay, plus a fishing pier and scenic trails.

    • Fishing
    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Grafton Notch State Park

    State Park

    Grafton Notch State Park and the Mahoosuc Public Lands are a premier destination for sightseeing and backcountry hiking among spectacular peaks and gorges.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Hunting
    • Picnicking

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Lake St. George State Park

    State Park

    Lake St. George State Park is located on the northwest shore of Lake St. George, with scenic views and year-round recreation.

    • Boating
    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Lamoine State Park

    State Park

    Nestled in Downeast Maine, this oceanfront park offers a quiet alternative with easy access to Bar Harbor and Acadia National Park.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Hunting
    • Paddling

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Lily Bay State Park

    State Park

    Lily Bay State Park offers outdoor recreation with access to Moosehead Lake, including groomed cross-country ski trails in winter.

    • Boating
    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Moose Point State Park

    State Park

    Moose Point State Park is a popular stop along scenic US Route 1 for an afternoon picnic and views of Penobscot Bay.

    • Hiking
    • Hunting
    • Picnicking
    • Playground

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Mount Blue State Park

    State Park

    Mt. Blue State Park is Maine's largest state park at roughly 8,000 acres, offering hiking, biking, swimming, and picnicking in the Western Mountains.

    • Boating
    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Popham Beach State Park

    State Park

    Popham Beach State Park features a long sand beach with dramatic shoreline changes and dune erosion at the mouth of the Kennebec River.

    • Beach
    • Fishing
    • Hunting
    • Paddling

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Rangeley Lake State Park

    State Park

    Rangeley Lake State Park encompasses 869 acres in the heart of Maine's Western Mountains, offering a range of outdoor activities.

    • Boating
    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Reid State Park

    State Park

    Reid State Park was Maine's first state-owned saltwater beach, featuring long, wide sand beaches that are rare in the state.

    • Beach
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Swimming

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Roque Bluffs State Park

    State Park

    Roque Bluffs State Park offers diverse coastal landscapes across 274 acres on Schoppee Point, with a half-mile crescent of sand and pebbles on Englishman Bay.

    • Boating
    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Sebago Lake State Park

    State Park

    Sebago Lake State Park, opened in 1938 as one of the five original state parks, is a forested lakeside park on Maine's deepest and second largest lake.

    • Boating
    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Shackford Head State Park

    State Park

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Swan Lake State Park

    State Park

    Swan Lake State Park is nestled on scenic Swan Lake, with a lifeguarded swimming area, picnic sites with grills, and walking trails.

    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Hunting
    • Swimming

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Two Lights State Park

    State Park

    Two Lights State Park encompasses 41 acres of rocky headlands with sweeping views of the Gulf of Maine and the open Atlantic.

    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Vaughan Woods State Park

    State Park

    Vaughan Woods Memorial State Park is a 165-acre forested tract along the Salmon Falls River, with picnic facilities and trails through old-growth pine and hemlock.

    • Hiking
    • Horseback Riding
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
Show 23 more Maine parks
  • Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park

    State Park

    Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park is a tranquil nature area of white pine forests, salt marsh estuaries, and rocky shorelines along Casco Bay.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Nature Trails
    • Winter Sports

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Allagash Wilderness Waterway

    Wilderness Waterway

    The 92-mile Allagash Wilderness Waterway in northern Maine is one of America's preeminent canoe trips, established as a protected scenic river system in 1966.

    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Camping
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Androscoggin Riverlands State Park

    State Park

    Androscoggin Riverlands State Park is a 2,675-acre expanse near Maine's second largest urban area, with an extensive trail network and wildlife habitat.

    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Horseback Riding

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Aroostook State Park

    State Park

    Aroostook State Park offers primitive camping and day-use, a chance to study Maine's geologic past, and an ideal starting point for discovering the North Maine Woods.

    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Boating
    • Fishing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Birch Point Beach State Park

    State Park

    Birch Point Beach State Park offers scenic views of Penobscot Bay and a crescent-shaped sand beach with swimming in a gentle surf.

    • Fishing
    • Picnicking
    • Swimming
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Damariscotta Lake State Park

    State Park

    Damariscotta Lake State Park is a popular midcoast day-use park on a large freshwater lake in Jefferson, with a sandy beach for swimming and picnicking.

    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Swimming
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Eagle Island State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Eagle Island State Historic Site, a National Historic Landmark off the Maine coast, preserves the summer home of North Pole explorer Admiral Robert Peary.

    • Beach
    • Boating
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Ferry Beach State Park

    State Park

    Ferry Beach State Park features miles of white sand beaches and a rare stand of tupelo trees across a 100-acre area.

    • Beach
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Swimming

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Baldwin State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Built between 1905 and 1912, Fort Baldwin originally consisted of three batteries and played a role during the Revolutionary War and both World Wars.

    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Edgecomb State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    At this three-acre waterfront site, visitors can watch boats, glimpse harbor seals, see nesting osprey, and picnic at Fort Edgecomb State Historic Site.

    • Fishing
    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Halifax State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    The oldest blockhouse in the United States is all that remains of Fort Halifax, at the confluence of the Kennebec and Sebasticook Rivers in Winslow.

    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Kent State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort O'Brien State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Popham State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Fort Popham is a semi-circular granite fort, never completed, whose construction began in 1862 for use during the Civil War.

    • Beach
    • Fishing
    • Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Fort Pownall State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Holbrook Island Sanctuary

    Sanctuary

    Holbrook Island Sanctuary protects upland forests, rocky shores, and an offshore island, offering hiking, nature appreciation, and winter recreation.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Paddling
    • Swimming

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Katahdin Iron Works State Historic Site

    State Historic Site

    A blast furnace and charcoal kiln remain at Katahdin Iron Works, Maine's only nineteenth century iron works operation, which ran between 1843 and 1890.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Mount Kineo State Park

    State Park

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Owls Head Light State Park

    State Park

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Peaks-Kenny State Park

    State Park

    Peaks-Kenny State Park lies on the shores of Sebec Lake, offering a peaceful wooded setting for boating, fishing, swimming, hiking, and picnicking.

    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Penobscot River Corridor

    State park system area

    In the heart of Maine's undeveloped forest land, the Penobscot River Corridor offers remote canoe trips, fishing excursions, and commercial whitewater rafting.

    • Camping
    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Range Pond State Park

    State Park

    Range Pond State Park near Lewiston and Auburn offers a wide sandy beach for swimming and picnicking, with a surfaced promenade along the pond.

    • Boating
    • Paddling
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    Official page
  • Warren Island State Park

    State Park

    Warren Island State Park is a serene spruce-covered island in Penobscot Bay, accessible only by private boat with no public ferry service.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Paddling

    Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands

    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

When is the best time to visit Maine's parks?

October is the standout month: fall foliage peaks from roughly mid- to late-month, daytime temperatures sit in the 40s F to 60s F, and the heavy summer crowds have thinned out. Summer (June through August) is warmest, with highs around 70 F, but it brings the most visitors and the highest lodging prices. Early June is a quieter alternative with blooming lupines, though inland blackflies can be a nuisance in late spring.

What is the best national park in Maine?

Maine's national park is on Mount Desert Island on the coast, and it is the obvious centerpiece of any trip: granite shoreline, carriage roads built for walking and biking, and a summit with sweeping Atlantic views. It is busiest in summer and during October foliage, so arrive early or visit midweek to beat the crowds. From Bangor it is about a 90-minute drive; from Portland plan on roughly three hours.

How hard is it to climb Mount Katahdin in Baxter State Park?

Katahdin is a serious day hike, not a casual stroll. A round trip typically takes 8 to 12 hours over steep, technical terrain, including boulder scrambles and the famously narrow, exposed Knife Edge ridge. Bring layers, sturdy grippy footwear, and plenty of food and water, and reserve a parking and trailhead slot well ahead, especially for July, August, and weekends. If that is too much, Baxter also has gentler pond-side trails for an easier day.

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