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A rare foggy morning in Joshua Tree National Park, with iconic Joshua trees scattered across the open desert plain and low fog rolling over the mountains beyond a winding park road.

City guide

Best national parks near Los Angeles

Los Angeles sits within a half-day reach of a remarkable spread of national parks: desert boulders at Joshua Tree, an island archipelago off Ventura, the giant sequoias of the southern Sierra, and the lowest, hottest desert in North America. This guide ranks them by drive time and payoff.

Short answer

Joshua Tree is closest at about 2.5 hours, with Channel Islands reached by ferry from Ventura about 1.5 hours away by car. Sequoia and Kings Canyon are about 3.5 to 4 hours north, Death Valley about 4 hours, Pinnacles about 4 hours, and Yosemite about 5 to 6 hours. Joshua Tree and Channel Islands are the easiest short trips, while the Sierra and desert parks reward an overnight.

How these parks were ranked for an LA trip

  • Drive time from central Los Angeles, since proximity shapes the whole plan.
  • Whether the park works as a day trip or really needs an overnight.
  • Scenic payoff relative to the distance covered.
  • Season, since the desert parks are best in the cooler months and the Sierra is best in summer.

Recommended parks

Each pick links to the full park guide with season tables, logistics, packing, and route context.

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A rare foggy morning in Joshua Tree National Park, with iconic Joshua trees scattered across the open desert plain and low fog rolling over the mountains beyond a winding park road.Closest park

Joshua Tree

Best for
Boulders, scenic drives, and dark skies
Watch
Summer heat changes everything, there is little water and patchy cell service, and popular weekends crowd the main pullouts.

Joshua Tree is about 2.5 hours east of Los Angeles toward Palm Springs, with surreal trees, bouldering, short trails, and excellent dark skies that make it the easiest park trip from the city.

Open the Joshua Tree guide
Arch Rock, the iconic 40-foot natural sea bridge at the east end of Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Park, rising from the blue Pacific Ocean off the California coast under a clear skyThe island escape

Channel Islands

Best for
Day boats, sea caves, and wildlife off Ventura
Watch
You must book a boat to reach the islands, crossings can be rough, and there are no services once you land, so come fully prepared.

Channel Islands is reached by ferry from Ventura, about 1.5 hours up the coast from Los Angeles, offering wild islands, sea kayaking, hiking, and abundant marine life with almost no crowds.

Open the Channel Islands guide
Wide panoramic view from the summit of Moro Rock in Sequoia National Park, looking out over the granite formations of Castle Rocks and Paradise Peak amid forested Sierra Nevada ridgelines under a clear sky.The giant trees

Sequoia

Best for
The General Sherman Tree and the Giant Forest
Watch
The road up from Three Rivers is steep and winding, and snow can require chains well into spring, so it deserves an overnight.

Sequoia is about 3.5 to 4 hours north of Los Angeles and holds the largest trees on Earth by volume in the Giant Forest, an easy pairing with neighboring Kings Canyon from one base.

Open the Sequoia guide
A wide landscape view of Kings Canyon National Park from the Don Cecil Trail, looking out over forested ridges and the steep granite canyon walls of the Sierra Nevada under a clear sky.The deep canyon

Kings Canyon

Best for
Grant Grove and the Kings Canyon Scenic Byway
Watch
The scenic byway into the canyon floor is seasonal and closes in winter, so confirm it is open before planning that drive.

Kings Canyon shares an entrance and management with Sequoia, so it slots into the same trip, adding Grant Grove and a scenic byway that drops into one of the deepest canyons in the country.

Open the Kings Canyon guide
Wide panoramic landscape of Death Valley National Park at dusk, with layered desert mountain ridges receding under a deep blue twilight sky.The extreme desert

Death Valley

Best for
Badwater Basin, Zabriskie Point, and the dunes
Watch
Summer is genuinely dangerous, with highs above 120F. Carry far more water than feels necessary and watch fuel range between distant stations.

Death Valley is about 4 hours from Los Angeles and delivers a striking desert overnight with Badwater Basin, the Mesquite Dunes, and sunrise at Zabriskie Point.

Open the Death Valley guide
The rock spires of Pinnacles National Park rising above golden chaparral hills at sunset.The quiet detour

Pinnacles

Best for
Talus caves, spires, and condor watching
Watch
The talus caves can close seasonally for bat protection or high water, and summer here is hot, so check conditions and time visits for the cooler months.

Pinnacles is about 4 hours northwest of Los Angeles toward the central coast, a smaller park of volcanic spires, talus caves, and California condors that stays far quieter than the big-name parks.

Open the Pinnacles guide
Yosemite Valley seen from Tunnel View, with El Capitan rising on the left, Bridalveil Fall on the right, and Half Dome in the distance under a clear skyThe granite icon

Yosemite

Best for
Yosemite Valley, the Mist Trail, and Glacier Point
Watch
Waterfalls peak in late spring, Tioga Road closes in winter, and reservations and lodging scarcity can make a spontaneous Yosemite trip expensive.

Yosemite is about 5 to 6 hours north of Los Angeles and is the region's headline park, with towering granite walls, waterfalls, and the famous valley, best built into a multi-day trip.

Open the Yosemite guide

Planning notes

Split short trips from road trips

Joshua Tree and Channel Islands work as easy short trips from Los Angeles. Sequoia, Kings Canyon, Death Valley, Pinnacles, and Yosemite all reward a dedicated overnight or longer.

Pair Sequoia and Kings Canyon from one base

The two parks share an entrance and are managed together, so a single Three Rivers or Grant Grove base covers both without a separate travel day.

Match the park to the season

Joshua Tree and Death Valley are best from fall through spring, while the Sierra parks and Yosemite's high country are best in summer when the roads and trails are open.

Frequently asked questions

What national parks are near Los Angeles?

Joshua Tree is closest at about 2.5 hours, and Channel Islands is reached by ferry from Ventura about 1.5 hours away. Sequoia, Kings Canyon, Death Valley, Pinnacles, and Yosemite are all within roughly 3.5 to 6 hours, making Los Angeles a strong base for park trips.

What is the closest national park to Los Angeles?

Joshua Tree National Park is the closest big park, about 2.5 hours east toward Palm Springs. Channel Islands is also close by car to Ventura, though reaching the islands themselves requires a ferry crossing.

How far is Sequoia National Park from Los Angeles?

Sequoia National Park is about 200 miles and roughly 3.5 to 4 hours north of Los Angeles. It pairs naturally with neighboring Kings Canyon from a single Three Rivers base, so it works best as an overnight rather than a day trip.

Pack and plan this trip

Gear keyed to what these parks are for, the tools to size your days and budget, and explainers worth a read before you go.

More trip planning paths