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The bare granite dome of Stone Mountain rising above the forest in North Carolina

State Park · North Carolina

Stone Mountain State Park

A North Carolina Blue Ridge foothills park built around a 600-foot granite dome, with a strenuous summit loop, a 200-foot waterfall, world-class rock climbing, trout streams, and a large family campground.

Hikers on the open granite slabs of the Stone Mountain summit

Field briefing

Stone Mountain State Park changes fast with season and elevation.

Before you go

Stone Mountain is the granite-dome park of the North Carolina foothills, not to be confused with the Georgia one.

There is no day-use fee, so the trip is about the hike and the campsite: the Stone Mountain Loop is a real workout with steep granite and stairs, the campground is large but books out for fall, and the trout streams and climbing routes give the park depth beyond the summit. Start early on the loop and carry water, since the open rock gets hot and exposed.

Best window
April to October for hiking, climbing, and camping; fall color is the standout
Signature routes
Stone Mountain Loop Trail, Stone Mountain Falls
Pack focus
Water, route logistics, weather checks

The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.

Location
North Carolina
Best time
April to October for hiking, climbing, and camping; fall color is the standout
Entrance
No day-use fee at Stone Mountain State Park

When to go

Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.

Spring

Moderate crowds

Mild and green, with high trout-stream flow and good climbing temperatures.

Pack Layers, traction for wet granite, and rain protection.

Summer

High crowds

Warm and humid, with the granite dome heating up and afternoon storms possible.

Pack Sun protection, plenty of water, and an early start for the exposed summit.

Fall

High crowds

Crisp days, excellent climbing weather, and strong foliage on the escarpment.

Pack Warm layer, headlamp, and a campsite reserved well ahead.

Winter

Low crowds

Cold and quiet, with ice possible on the steep granite and shaded trails.

Pack Insulation, traction, and caution on the slick summit slabs.

Top things to do

  • Stone Mountain Loop Trail

    The signature hike: a strenuous loop that climbs the granite dome for summit views, passes a historic homestead, and descends alongside the tall waterfall.

  • Stone Mountain Falls

    A roughly 200-foot waterfall sliding down open granite, with a long stair descent beside it on the loop trail.

  • Granite dome rock climbing

    The bare granite face is a regional traditional climbing destination, with classic multi-pitch routes. Climbing groups should check the park's group climbing permit rules.

How long to spend

Anchor the day around Stone Mountain Loop Trail

Move exposed miles to the morning and keep water, shade, and storm checks ahead of the wish list. For one day in Stone Mountain State Park, make Stone Mountain Loop Trail the non-negotiable, add Stone Mountain Falls only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Granite dome rock climbing as the flexible finish.

  1. 1Start with Stone Mountain Loop Trail: The signature hike: a strenuous loop that climbs the granite dome for summit views, passes a historic homestead, and descends alongside the tall waterfall.
  2. 2Add Stone Mountain Falls: A roughly 200-foot waterfall sliding down open granite, with a long stair descent beside it on the loop trail.
  3. 3Use Granite dome rock climbing as the optional finish, not as a reason to rush the whole day.

Plan your trip

Turn Stone Mountain's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Historic homestead cabin and church along the Stone Mountain Loop Trail

Build around conditions

Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.

Plan your trip

4 quick tools, already seeded for Stone Mountain State Park. Tune the numbers around temperature swings, footing, layers, and how much margin the route needs.

  1. 01Size your water for a mild day on the trail
  2. 02Dial in your pack base weight before you load up
  3. 03Find the pack size a multi-day trip here needs
  4. 04Check you will sleep warm down to about 30F

What to pack

Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.

Pack planning

Decide what Stone Mountain State Park asks of your kit before you start checking boxes.

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.

  • First constraintHydration and exposureWater, Electrolyte mix, hat, sunscreen, sunglasses, 4 more
  • Route realityFooting and tractionHiking boots, Hiking socks, Trekking poles
  • Load choicePack and carry systemBackpacking pack
  • If overnightSleep and shelterBackpacking tent, Sleeping bag, Sleeping pad, 1 more

Checklist mode

24 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.

  1. Dates and season are set.
  2. Primary route, campground, or lodge is chosen.
  3. Water, footwear, and overnight needs are sized.

Gear for Stone Mountain

The buying guides that match what Stone Mountain asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.

Where to stay

Camp inside the park at the family campground, which has 90 sites on three loops, plus four primitive backcountry sites along Widow's Creek Trail for hikers who want a remote night. The towns of Sparta, Elkin, and Wilkesboro offer lodging, food, and supplies when the campground is full, and the park sits a reasonable drive from the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Camping reservations

Camping reservations

Reserve Stone Mountain's family campground early for fall.

The park's family campground spreads 90 tent and RV sites across three loops, and it fills on fall-color weekends. Four primitive backcountry sites along Widow's Creek Trail offer a hike-in alternative.

Reviewed June 11, 2026

Booking window

North Carolina State Parks campsites reserve through the state ReserveAmerica system. Reserve fall weekends well ahead, since the foothills draw heavy autumn crowds.

  • The family campground has 90 sites for tents and RVs on three loop roads.
  • Four primitive backcountry sites sit along Widow's Creek Trail, about 1.5 to 3 miles from the parking area.
  • There is no day-use fee, but camping, group climbing, some event permits, and facility reservations carry fees.

Where to book or verify

Stone Mountain camping

Official camping page with campground and backcountry details.

NC campsite reservations

North Carolina State Parks reservation information through ReserveAmerica.

Search Recreation.gov

Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.

Campgrounds to know

Family campground

Details
Booking
Reserve through the North Carolina ReserveAmerica system.
Season
Open seasonally; verify the campground window before relying on it.
Sites
90 tent and RV sites on three loop roads.
The main base for the summit loop, waterfall, and trout streams.

Widow's Creek backcountry sites

Details
Booking
Reserve through the North Carolina system.
Season
Seasonal hike-in access.
Sites
Four primitive sites, each for up to six people, 1.5 to 3 miles in.
For hikers who want a quiet night away from the family campground.

Getting there and practical info

The bare granite dome of Stone Mountain rising above the forest in North Carolina

Plan the handoff from arrival to shuttle.

Parking, pedestrian entrances, and shuttle timing decide how calmly the first morning starts.

Getting there

Get to Stone Mountain State Park, then remove the first-morning friction.

Access rhythm
Plan the last mile
Region
North Carolina
  1. Car strategy

    Stone Mountain State Park sits in the Blue Ridge foothills of northwestern North Carolina, off US 21 between Sparta and Elkin, near the Blue Ridge Parkway.

  2. Car strategy

    Most visitors drive in from the Winston-Salem, Wilkesboro, or Boone areas, then use the family campground or one of the trailhead parking areas as the base for the summit loop.

Pair this with lodging: sleep where the park transfer is simple, especially if your route needs an early start.

Frequently asked questions

Is this Stone Mountain in North Carolina or Georgia?

This is the North Carolina park, a granite-dome state park in the Blue Ridge foothills near Sparta. It is a separate place from Stone Mountain Park in Georgia, which is a different attraction near Atlanta.

How hard is the Stone Mountain Loop Trail?

It is strenuous: about a 4.5-mile loop that climbs the open granite dome to the summit, passes a historic homestead, and descends a long set of stairs beside the roughly 200-foot waterfall. Start early, carry water, and use real footwear, since the bare rock is steep and exposed.

Do you need a reservation to camp at Stone Mountain State Park?

Reservations are recommended, especially for fall weekends, when the 90-site family campground fills. Both the family campground and the four primitive backcountry sites reserve through the North Carolina state system.

Keep planning