Skip to content
KITAUTHORITY
Glowing limestone cave interior at Timpanogos Cave National Monument, delicate helictites and stalactites lit warmly, ranger tour group small in frame for scale, deep cavern depth

National Park Service · Utah

Timpanogos Cave National Monument

Three decorated limestone caves above American Fork Canyon, reached by a steep 1.5-mile climb and seen only on a timed, ranger-led tour you reserve in advance on Recreation.gov.

Steep paved switchback Cave Trail climbing the rugged wall of American Fork Canyon, Utah, hikers ascending, sweeping canyon and river below in morning light

Field briefing

Timpanogos Cave National Monument changes fast with season and elevation.

Before you go

Timpanogos Cave is a reservation-first trip.

You cannot enter the caves without a timed, ranger-led tour ticket, and you book those on Recreation.gov, often well ahead in summer. The catch beyond the ticket is the trail: a strenuous 1.5-mile paved path that gains 1,100 feet to reach the cave entrance, so the tour is really a half-day of climbing plus an hour underground. The caves stay near 45F year-round, so bring a jacket even in July. The monument is seasonal, typically open mid-May to early September.

Best window
Mid-May to early September, when the caves and the access trail are open
Signature routes
Cave tour of Hansen, Middle, and Timpanogos caves, Cave Trail
Pack focus
Water, layers

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

Location
Utah
Established
1922
Size
250 acres
Best time
Mid-May to early September, when the caves and the access trail are open
Entrance
No vehicle entrance fee, but a cave tour ticket is required to enter the caves: about $12 for ages 12 and up, $7 for ages 2 to 11, reserved on Recreation.gov
Nearest airport
Salt Lake City (SLC) about 1 hour; Provo (PVU) about 45 minutes

When to go

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

Spring

Moderate crowds

Cool and variable, with the monument opening around mid-May once the trail clears.

Pack Layers, sturdy shoes for the steep paved trail, and water for the climb.

Summer

45F

High crowds

Warm in the canyon, but the caves stay a constant 45F, so bring a jacket.

Pack A warm layer for the cave, plenty of water, sun protection, and a reserved tour time.

Fall

Moderate crowds

Cooling days and shorter hours, with the season usually ending in early September.

Pack Warm layer, water, and a tour booked before the season closes.

Winter

Low crowds

The caves, trail, and visitor center are closed; the canyon road may also close.

Pack Plan a different season; the monument is closed for cave tours in winter.

Top things to do

  • Cave tour of Hansen, Middle, and Timpanogos caves

    The hour-long ranger-led tour through all three connected caves, full of helictites, stalactites, and the famous Great Heart of Timpanogos formation. The only way into the caves.

  • Cave Trail

    The strenuous paved switchback trail that climbs 1,100 feet in 1.5 miles from the visitor center to the cave entrance. You must hike it to take the tour.

  • Historic Lantern Tour

    A seasonal, dimly lit tour that recreates early cave exploration by lantern light, offered on select dates for ages 7 and up.

How long to spend

Anchor the day around Cave tour of Hansen, Middle, and Timpanogos caves

Book the tour time first, then treat surface trails, overlooks, or visitor-center stops as the flexible pieces. For one day in Timpanogos Cave National Monument, make Cave tour of Hansen, Middle, and Timpanogos caves the non-negotiable, add Cave Trail only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Historic Lantern Tour as the flexible finish.

  1. 1Start with Cave tour of Hansen, Middle, and Timpanogos caves: The hour-long ranger-led tour through all three connected caves, full of helictites, stalactites, and the famous Great Heart of Timpanogos formation. The only way.
  2. 2Add Cave Trail: The strenuous paved switchback trail that climbs 1,100 feet in 1.5 miles from the visitor center to the cave entrance. You must hike it to take the tour.
  3. 3Use Historic Lantern Tour as the optional finish, not as a reason to rush the whole day.

Plan your trip

Turn Timpanogos Cave's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

View out the cave entrance high on the canyon wall, framing the green American Fork Canyon and distant Wasatch peaks under blue summer sky

Build around conditions

Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.

Plan your trip

2 quick tools, already seeded for Timpanogos Cave National Monument. Tune the numbers around temperature swings, footing, layers, and how much margin the route needs.

  1. 01Size your water for a cool day on the trail
  2. 02Find the right daypack size for a day out

What to pack

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

Pack planning

Decide what Timpanogos Cave National Monument 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, hat, sunscreen, sunglasses, Navigationmap, downloaded GPS, or a GPS watch, 3 more
  • Route realityFooting and tractionHiking boots, Hiking socks, Trekking poles
  • Load choicePack and carry systemDaypack
  • Season checkLayers for conditionsMoisture-wicking base layers, Insulated jacket, Traction devices for ice

Checklist mode

14 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 Timpanogos Cave

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

Where to stay

There is no lodging or camping inside the monument. The Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest campgrounds in American Fork Canyon, such as Little Mill and Granite Flat, are the closest camping and are reservable on Recreation.gov. For hotels, American Fork, Lehi, and the larger Provo and Orem areas are all within about 30 to 45 minutes, with Salt Lake City an hour north.

Camping reservations

Camping reservations

The cave tour ticket is the reservation that matters. Camping is in the surrounding national forest.

Timpanogos Cave has no campground of its own and is day-use only. The booking that sells out is the timed cave tour on Recreation.gov, not a campsite. For overnights, look to the American Fork Canyon forest campgrounds nearby.

Reviewed June 11, 2026

Booking window

Cave tour tickets are reserved on Recreation.gov and are strongly recommended in advance, especially for summer weekends. Nearby national forest campgrounds are reserved separately on Recreation.gov.

  • A timed cave tour ticket is required to enter the caves and is the single most important thing to book.
  • The monument is day-use only and seasonal, typically open mid-May through early September.
  • Allow about an hour to hike the steep 1.5-mile trail before your tour start time, plus parking time.

Where to book or verify

Reserve Timpanogos Cave tours

Official Recreation.gov page for timed cave tour tickets, the required reservation.

Timpanogos Cave tour details

Official NPS page on tour types, the trail, what to expect, and the season.

Search Recreation.gov

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

Cave tour ticket (required)

A timed, ranger-led tour ticket is required to enter the caves. Book on Recreation.gov.

Campgrounds to know

American Fork Canyon forest campgrounds (nearby)

Details
Season
Generally late spring through early fall, weather dependent.
Sites
Tent and RV sites at Little Mill, Granite Flat, and other Uinta-Wasatch-Cache campgrounds along the canyon.
The closest camping to the monument, in the surrounding national forest rather than inside the monument.

Getting there and practical info

Glowing limestone cave interior at Timpanogos Cave National Monument, delicate helictites and stalactites lit warmly, ranger tour group small in frame for scale, deep cavern depth

Plan the handoff from arrival to shuttle.

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

Getting there

Get to Timpanogos Cave National Monument, then remove the first-morning friction.

Nearest airport
Salt Lake City (SLC) about 1 hour; Provo (PVU) about 45 minutes
Access rhythm
Plan the last mile
Region
Utah
  1. Arrival note

    The monument sits in American Fork Canyon off UT 92, about 10 miles east of American Fork and roughly an hour south of Salt Lake City.

  2. Access note

    A fee station collects an America the Beautiful or recreation pass for the surrounding national forest as you enter the canyon.

  3. Shuttle access

    Park at the visitor center along the river, then hike up to the caves.

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

LocationUtah

Frequently asked questions

Do you need a reservation for Timpanogos Cave National Monument?

Yes, to enter the caves. The caves can only be seen on a timed, ranger-led tour, and you reserve those tickets on Recreation.gov. Tours routinely sell out in summer, so book ahead. There is no vehicle entrance fee, just the tour ticket.

How hard is the hike to Timpanogos Cave?

It is strenuous. The paved trail climbs 1,100 feet in 1.5 miles to reach the cave entrance, and most people take about an hour to walk up. Plan to arrive well before your tour time, and bring water. The hour-long cave tour itself is moderate.

When is Timpanogos Cave open?

The monument is seasonal. The caves, trail, and cave tours typically open in mid-May and close in early September, with exact dates set by snowmelt and trail conditions each year. The caves and trail are closed in winter.

How cold are the caves?

The caves stay near 45F year-round, so bring a jacket or warm layer even on a hot summer day. The contrast with the warm canyon outside surprises many first-time visitors.

Keep planning