Skip to content
KITAUTHORITY
The vast clear blue expanse of Flathead Lake with rocky pine-studded points in the foreground and snow-capped mountains beyond, bright Montana summer day

Destinations

Montana outdoors

Big Sky country: glacier-carved peaks, the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi, and a short, glorious summer hiking window.

Top parks in Montana

See all 54 parks
St. Mary Lake with tiny Wild Goose Island in the foreground, framed by towering peaks of Glacier National Park, Montana, seen from Going-to-the-Sun Road.
National park

Glacier

A million acres of glacier-carved peaks, turquoise lakes, and the legendary Going-to-the-Sun Road.

Last Stand Hill at Little Bighorn, scattered white marble markers across golden open prairie grass, big Montana sky with dramatic clouds, low warm evening light
National Park Service

Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument

The 1876 battlefield where the Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho defeated Custer's Seventh Cavalry, marked by white headstones across open Montana prairie.

The vast clear blue expanse of Flathead Lake with rocky pine-studded points in the foreground and snow-capped mountains beyond, bright Montana summer day
State park

Flathead Lake State Park

Six lakeshore units strung around Flathead Lake, the largest natural freshwater lake in the western U.S., with boating, swimming, lake-island wildlife, and reservable campgrounds.

Richly decorated limestone cave chamber at Lewis and Clark Caverns, glowing stalactites and stalagmites and flowstone formations softly lit on a ranger tour, deep cavern
State park

Lewis and Clark Caverns State Park

Montana's first state park, built around a ranger-guided tour of one of the largest limestone caverns in the Northwest, with a seasonal cave-tour window, surface trails, and a campground.

Makoshika State Park
State park
Wikimedia Commons

Makoshika State Park

Montana's largest state park: 11,000-plus acres of pine-studded badlands outside Glendive, with dinosaur fossils, the Cap Rock natural bridge, scenic drives, and a small campground.

Anaconda Smoke Stack State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Anaconda Smoke Stack State Park

This park preserves the 585-foot Anaconda Copper Company smelter stack, one of the tallest free-standing brick structures in the world, which may be viewed only from a distance.

Bannack State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Bannack State Park

A National Historic Landmark and Montana's best-preserved ghost town, Bannack was the site of the state's first major gold discovery in 1862 and its first territorial capital.

Beaverhead Rock State Park
State Park
Wikimedia Commons

Beaverhead Rock State Park

This natural rock formation, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was recognized by Sacagawea during the 1805 Lewis and Clark Expedition.

Beavertail Hill State Park
State Park
JohnDavidStutts at English Wikipedia / CC BY 1.0

Beavertail Hill State Park

This 65-acre park on the Clark Fork River offers fishing, floating, and a self-guided nature trail through cottonwoods, with campsites and two rental tipis.

Planning a Montana trip

Montana earns the "Big Sky" name the moment you step outside. This is a state of glacier-carved peaks, alpine meadows, more than 200 lakes tucked into the northern Rockies, and trail mileage that stretches into the thousands. The headliner in the northwest is the state's flagship national park, where the famous Going-to-the-Sun Road climbs over the Continental Divide and turnouts open onto hanging valleys and waterfalls. But Montana rewards travelers who look past the marquee name too.

The state park system fills in the rest. Flathead Lake State Park protects the largest natural freshwater lake west of the Mississippi, a glacier-formed basin that is ideal for paddling and swimming on warm afternoons. Whitefish Lake and Painted Rocks add more shoreline, boating, and quieter trails with the same dramatic mountain backdrop and a fraction of the crowds. Together they make a strong case for building an itinerary that mixes one big park with two or three smaller ones.

Timing matters more here than in most states. The prime window is July through early September, when daytime highs sit in the 70s and low 80s F, the high-country roads are fully open, and the trails are dry. Snow keeps the alpine routes closed well into June, and fall (crisp 50s and 60s F, golden larch, thinner crowds) is a quietly excellent alternative. As for what to pack: think layers above all. Mornings can start in the 40s F and afternoons can spike 30 degrees warmer, with quick-moving thunderstorms common, so a warm midlayer, a rain shell, and broken-in hiking shoes do the heavy lifting on any Montana trip.

Getting around Montana

Montana is big and spread out, so your airport choice shapes the whole trip. Glacier Park International Airport near Kalispell is the closest gateway to the northwest mountains, sitting roughly 30 miles (about 40 minutes) from the West Glacier entrance. Missoula International is a solid alternative to the south, around 137 miles and 2.5 hours from West Glacier along a scenic route. Bozeman Yellowstone International is Montana's busiest airport with the most flights and often the best fares; it is the natural pick if you want to pair the northern parks with Yellowstone to the south.

A rental car is essentially required. Distances are long and public transit between outdoor areas is minimal. From Kalispell, the Flathead Lake and Whitefish areas are short drives of 15 to 40 minutes, making the northwest corner an easy base for several days. The classic big road trip runs north-south between Glacier country and Yellowstone, roughly 350 to 400 miles end to end; Great Falls sits about halfway and works well as a midpoint stop. Fill the tank when you can, carry water, and check road status before mountain drives. High-elevation routes can stay closed by snow into mid-June and reopen on a weather-dependent schedule each summer.

State park directory

Every Montana 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.

54 parks

3 full guides · 40 with photos

  • Flathead Lake State Park

    State Park

    The largest natural freshwater lake in the western U.S. has five mainland units and Wild Horse Island, offering swimming, hiking, boating, and fishing.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Swimming

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Full guide
  • Lewis & Clark Caverns State Park

    State Park

    Montana's first state park features one of the largest known limestone caverns in the Northwest, accessible by guided tour, plus camping and hiking trails.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Cabins
    • Fishing

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Full guide
  • Makoshika State Park

    State Park

    Montana's largest state park features badland formations and fossil remains of Tyrannosaurus rex, Triceratops, and other prehistoric life, with a visitor center.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Backpacking
    • Hiking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Full guide
  • Anaconda Smoke Stack State Park

    State Park

    This park preserves the 585-foot Anaconda Copper Company smelter stack, one of the tallest free-standing brick structures in the world, which may be viewed only from a distance.

    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Bannack State Park

    State Park

    A National Historic Landmark and Montana's best-preserved ghost town, Bannack was the site of the state's first major gold discovery in 1862 and its first territorial capital.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Biking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Beaverhead Rock State Park

    State Park

    This natural rock formation, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was recognized by Sacagawea during the 1805 Lewis and Clark Expedition.

    • Hiking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Beavertail Hill State Park

    State Park

    This 65-acre park on the Clark Fork River offers fishing, floating, and a self-guided nature trail through cottonwoods, with campsites and two rental tipis.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Black Sandy State Park

    State Park

    One of the few public parks on the shores of Hauser Reservoir, this popular campground offers boating, fishing, water skiing, and swimming.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Chief Plenty Coups State Park

    State Park

    Within the Crow Indian Reservation, this National Historic Landmark preserves the log home, sacred spring, and farmstead of Chief Plenty Coups of the Apsaalooke tribe.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Playground

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Council Grove State Park

    State Park

    This day-use park on the Clark Fork River sits in an old-growth ponderosa pine forest and is the site of the 1855 Hellgate Treaty.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Elkhorn State Park

    State Park

    This park preserves Fraternity Hall and Gilliam Hall, picturesque structures from a 19th-century silver-mining ghost town and examples of frontier architecture.

    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Finley Point State Park

    State Park

    This secluded campground on the southeast shore of Flathead Lake sits in an open ponderosa pine forest, with excellent lake trout fishing.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Cabins
    • Fishing

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • First Peoples' Buffalo Jump State Park

    State Park

    This National Historic Landmark features possibly the largest bison cliff jump in North America, with a mile-long sandstone cliff, interpretive trails, and a visitor center.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Hunting
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Fort Owen State Park

    State Park

    This park preserves Fort Owen, founded in 1850 in Salish country and home to Montana's first sawmill, gristmill, and European-style school.

    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Giant Springs State Park

    State Park

    First recorded by Lewis and Clark in 1805, Giant Springs is one of the largest freshwater springs in the country, near Great Falls on the Missouri River.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Picnicking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Greycliff Prairie Dog Town State Park

    State Park

    This 98-acre park protects a black-tailed prairie dog community, with interpretive displays explaining their role in the prairie ecosystem.

    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Lake Elmo State Park

    State Park

    This 64-acre reservoir within Billings is a popular urban park for swimming, non-motorized boating, fishing, and a 1.4-mile nature trail.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling
    • Swimming

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Lake Mary Ronan State Park

    State Park

    This quiet 120-acre park west of Flathead Lake offers fishing for kokanee salmon, yellow perch, and bass, with camping among Douglas fir and western larch.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Les Mason State Park

    State Park

    This peaceful day-use park on the east shore of Whitefish Lake has 585 feet of sand and gravel lakeshore for swimming and picnicking.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling
    • Swimming

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Logan State Park

    State Park

    Located on Middle Thompson Lake within the Thompson Chain of Lakes, this forested park offers swimming, boating, camping, water skiing, and fishing.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Lone Pine State Park

    State Park

    Southwest of Kalispell, this 279-acre park has 7.5 miles of trails and overlooks with views of Flathead Lake, Big Mountain, and Glacier National Park.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Biking
    • Horseback Riding

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Lost Creek State Park

    State Park

    Grey limestone cliffs and granite formations rise 1,200 feet above this canyon, where Lost Creek Falls drops 50 feet and bighorn sheep and mountain goats roam.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Hiking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Madison Buffalo Jump State Park

    State Park

    This high limestone cliff above the Madison River Valley was used by Native Americans for 2,000 years to stampede bison off the semicircular cliff.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Medicine Rocks State Park

    State Park

    Wind-sculpted sandstone formations give this historic park a fascinating landscape, long used by Indian hunting parties and now Montana's first International Dark Sky Sanctuary.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Hiking
    • Biking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
Show 30 more Montana parks
  • Milltown State Park

    State Park

    At the restored confluence of the Clark Fork and Blackfoot Rivers, this 635-acre park offers river trails, overlooks, and a rich cultural heritage.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Missouri Headwaters State Park

    State Park

    This National Historic Landmark marks where the Jefferson, Madison, and Gallatin rivers merge to form the Missouri River, with camping and interpretive displays.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Pictograph Cave State Park

    State Park

    A National Historic Landmark, this park's three caves were home to prehistoric hunters who left over 100 pictographs, viewable along a loop trail.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Pirogue Island State Park

    State Park

    This isolated, cottonwood-covered island in the Yellowstone River is an excellent spot to view waterfowl, bald eagles, and deer, with 2.8 miles of hiking trails.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Hiking
    • Hunting

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Placid Lake State Park

    State Park

    On a tributary of the Clearwater River, this popular campground is known for trout fishing, smooth water, and water sports in the Clearwater and Swan River Valleys.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Rosebud Battlefield State Park

    State Park

    This 3,052-acre National Historic Landmark on the eastern prairie preserves the site of the June 17, 1876 Battle of the Rosebud, a harbinger to Little Bighorn.

    • Hiking
    • Hunting
    • Picnicking
    • Winter Sports

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Sluice Boxes State Park

    State Park

    Belt Creek Canyon slices through limestone in the Little Belt Mountains, with remains of mines, a railroad, and historic cabins along a primitive trail.

    • Backpacking
    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Hunting

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Smith River State Park

    State Park

    This permit-only multi-day float trip follows 59 miles of the Smith River through a remote canyon, noted for spectacular scenery and renowned trout fishing.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Thompson Falls State Park

    State Park

    This shaded, quiet park on the Clark Fork River in the Clark Fork Valley offers fishing, boating, swimming, and an accessible family fishing pond.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Tongue River Reservoir State Park

    State Park

    This 12-mile reservoir among red shale and juniper canyons in southeastern Montana offers excellent crappie, walleye, bass, and pike fishing, boating, and camping.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Tower Rock State Park

    State Park

    This 424-foot rock formation along the Missouri River, noted in the Lewis and Clark journals, was a landmark for Native tribes for centuries.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Travelers' Rest State Park

    State Park

    This National Historic Landmark is the only archaeologically verified campsite of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, long used by Salish and other Native peoples.

    • Fishing
    • Biking
    • Hiking
    • Picnicking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • West Shore State Park

    State Park

    On glacially carved dolomite outcroppings along the west side of Flathead Lake, this 129-acre forested park offers hiking trails, swimming, and a deep-water boat launch.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Whitefish Lake State Park

    State Park

    This secluded campground and beach on Whitefish Lake offers boating, swimming, water skiing, and fishing, with access to the local hiking and biking trail system.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Wild Horse Island State Park

    State Park

    The largest island in Flathead Lake, this boat-access park has old-growth ponderosa pine, trails, bighorn sheep, and a handful of wild horses.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling
    • Hiking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Yellow Bay State Park

    State Park

    In the heart of Montana's sweet cherry orchards on Flathead Lake's east shore, this park offers a gravelly beach for swimming, boating, fishing, and birdwatching.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Ackley Lake State Park

    State Park

    Set in central Montana's Big Sky Country, this 290-acre park surrounds a lake stocked with rainbow trout and tiger muskie below the Little Belt and Snowy Mountains.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Big Arm State Park

    State Park

    Located on Flathead Lake's Big Arm Bay among mature ponderosa pines, this unit offers camping, swimming, fishing, boating, and an archery range with mountain views.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Brush Lake State Park

    State Park

    This mile-long, deep, clear alkaline lake with sandy beaches offers swimming, boating, and water skiing, with a day-use area and a 12-site campground.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Boating
    • Paddling

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Clark's Lookout State Park

    State Park

    On August 13, 1805, Captain William Clark climbed this hill above the Beaverhead River to document his surroundings during the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

    • Hiking
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Cooney State Park

    State Park

    The most popular recreation area in south-central Montana, this reservoir park offers walleye and rainbow trout fishing, boating, water skiing, and five campgrounds.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Fish Creek State Park

    State Park

    Covering more than 5,600 acres, this is the largest state park in western Montana, with native trout streams, abundant wildlife, and old logging roads.

    • Fishing
    • Hiking
    • Hunting
    • Picnicking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Frenchtown Pond State Park

    State Park

    This day-use park surrounds an 18-acre pond west of Missoula, popular for picnicking, swimming, paddling, and four-season fishing for bass, perch, and trout.

    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Swimming
    • Picnicking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Granite State Park

    State Park

    Granite Ghost Town preserves the superintendent's house and Union Hall ruins of a thriving 1890s silver boomtown reached by a steep, winding mountain road.

    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Historic Site

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Painted Rocks State Park

    State Park

    In the West Fork Valley of the Bitterroot Mountains, this reservoir park offers boating, camping, and fishing among granite and rhyolite cliffs colored by lichens.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Salmon Lake State Park

    State Park

    Nestled along the Clearwater River between the Mission and Swan Mountain Ranges, this lake offers fishing, paddling, water sports, and a woodland campground.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Somers Beach State Park

    State Park

    On the northwest shore of Flathead Lake, this 106-acre park has a wide sandy beach revealed from fall through spring, plus wetlands and abundant birdlife.

    • Swimming
    • Picnicking
    • Wildlife Viewing
    • Beach

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Spring Meadow Lake State Park

    State Park

    On the western edge of Helena, this urban day-use park is popular for swimming, fishing, birdwatching, and an .8-mile nature trail around the lake.

    • Fishing
    • Paddling
    • Swimming
    • Hiking

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Thompson Chain of Lakes State Park

    State Park

    This 3,000-acre park stretches over 20 miles along Highway 2, with shoreline access to 18 lakes noted for fishing, boating, and wildlife viewing.

    • Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating
    • Paddling

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

    Official page
  • Wayfarers State Park

    State Park

    Near Bigfork on the northeast shore of Flathead Lake, this unit has rocky cliffs and a mature forest popular for camping, boating, and swimming.

    • Camping
    • RV Camping
    • Fishing
    • Boating

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & 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

When is the best time to visit Montana's national parks?

July through early September is the sweet spot, with daytime highs in the 70s and low 80s F and the high-country roads fully open after the snow clears. Mid-June can still see closures from lingering snowpack at elevation. Fall (September into October) is a quieter alternative, with crisp 50s and 60s F, golden larch trees, and far thinner crowds.

What is the best national park in Montana?

Glacier National Park is the standout, and it is the state's only full national park. It packs glacier-carved peaks, more than 700 miles of trails, over 200 lakes, and the famous Going-to-the-Sun Road that crosses the Continental Divide. If you have time for only one outdoor destination in Montana, Glacier is the one to build around.

Do I need a car to explore Montana's outdoor areas?

Yes. Montana's outdoor destinations are spread across long distances and transit between them is limited, so a rental car is essentially required. Glacier Park International near Kalispell is the closest airport to the northwest mountains, while Bozeman is the busiest hub and the best choice if you also want to reach Yellowstone to the south.

How cold does it get in Montana when hiking?

Even in peak summer, mornings in the mountains can start in the 40s F before afternoons climb into the 70s and 80s F. Quick-moving thunderstorms are common. Pack layers including a warm midlayer and a rain shell so you can adjust as the temperature swings through the day.

Keep exploring