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A Park Hub Field Guide
Lat 37.5930° N
Long 112.1871° W
Elevation6,620 – 9,115 ft

Utah · Stamp 05 / 63

Bryce Canyon

National Park · Established 1928

Not a canyon at all: an amphitheater of stone candles, best seen the moment they light.

Area35,835 acres
TrailheadBryce Canyon City, UT
Visitors2.5M / yr
Scroll to begin the ascent
Live · Park open 24 hrsShuttle running Apr–OctNo alerts41°F · clear, thin air Live layer, from the National Park Service
Best windowMay–Sep · winter for snow magicGetting there1.5 hr from Zion · 4 hr from Las VegasFee$35 / vehicle · 7 days
★★★★★ 4.9 from 2,200+ travelers 540 visitor stories 2.5M / yr annual visitors Grounded in live NPS data
Bryce · Mile 01 · The Story

A beautiful lie
called a canyon.

Start with the correction: Bryce is not a canyon. No river carved this. It is a giant staircase of amphitheaters eaten out of a plateau rim by the humblest force in the desert, water that freezes. Two hundred nights a year, meltwater seeps into cracks, freezes, and pries the rock apart a grain at a time. Do that for a few million years and you get hoodoos: thousands of stone spires standing in rows like a city of candles.

The Paiute told it better. The hoodoos, they said, are the Legend People, frozen in stone. Stand at Sunrise Point when the first light hits and watch the amphitheater catch fire, rank after rank of them glowing orange and pink, and the legend feels less like myth and more like reporting.

Then do the thing most visitors skip: walk down among them. Read the story, trust the live data above for what is open today, and when you leave, collect the stamp.

HOODOOS TO 150 FT FIGURE 01 · THE AMPHITHEATER SUNRISE POINT · FIRST LIGHT
It’s a hell of a place to lose a cow.
Ebenezer Bryce · the rancher the amphitheater was named for
Bryce Amphitheater · First Light
"There is nothing so American as our national parks."
Theodore Roosevelt
Bryce · Mile 02 · The Essentials

Best Things to Do in Bryce Canyon

Six ways in, from a rim stroll at 9,000 feet to a saddle among the spires.

See

Sunrise Point at dawn

The amphitheater catching first light is the single best free show in Utah. Arrive 30 minutes early with coffee.

Everyone · dress warm
Do

Walk among the hoodoos

Queen’s Garden down, Navajo Loop up. The rim is the postcard; the floor is the experience.

The signature loop
Drive

The 18-mile scenic drive

Rim overlooks all the way to Rainbow Point at 9,115 feet. Do it south to north so every pullout is on your side.

Road-trippers
Ride

Horseback into the amphitheater

Wranglers run mule and horse trips down among the spires, the way the first tourists saw it.

Families · book ahead
Camp

North Campground

Steps from the rim trail, ponderosa shade, cold clear nights under a protected dark sky.

Campers
Explore

Mossy Cave

A quiet corner off Highway 12 with a waterfall and hoodoos, no rim crowds attached.

The escape
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Plan Your Bryce Canyon Trip

Answer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.

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Field-guide posters and the passport book, from our shop.
When the Crowds ComeMonthly visitors · tap a year
Illustrative shape · wires to official NPS visitation stats · summer peaks shown in gold
Navajo Loop · Wall Street
"Between every two pines is a doorway to a new world."
John Muir
Bryce · Mile 03 · Trails & Viewpoints

Best Hikes in Bryce Canyon, by Difficulty

Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and whether you need a permit before you set a boot down.

Rim Trail · Sunrise to Sunset

Easy
1 mi+50 ft~45 min

The amphitheater’s front porch, paved between the two famous points. Thin air is the only difficulty. No permit.

Mossy Cave

Easy
0.8 mi+120 ft~1 hr

A creekside stroll to a grotto and waterfall on the park’s quiet edge. No permit.

Queen’s Garden + Navajo Loop

Moderate
2.9 mi+625 ft~2.5 hr

The best 3 miles in the park: down through the Queen’s court, up the Wall Street switchbacks. No permit.

Tower Bridge

Moderate
3 mi+800 ft~2.5 hr

A quieter descent to a natural stone bridge below the rim. All the return climb is at the end; save water. No permit.

Peekaboo Loop

Strenuous
5.5 mi+1,555 ft~4 hr

Rolling hard among the hoodoos, sharing the trail with the horse trips. The deepest immersion day hike here. No permit.

Fairyland Loop

Strenuous
8 mi+1,700 ft~5.5 hr

The connoisseur’s loop: fewer people, endless spires, honest climbing at altitude. No permit.

No permits for day hikes below the rim · backcountry permits for the Under-the-Rim Trail via Recreation.gov

Bryce Canyon at a Glance
1  Bryce Canyon Visitor Center
2  Sunrise Point
3  Sunset Point
4  Queens Garden Trailhead
5  Bryce Point
6  Rainbow Point
Shuttle stops shown in visit order. Build a plan above and this map updates to your exact stops.
Bryce · Mile 04 · Life on the Rim

Wildlife in Bryce Canyon: Animals You Might See

Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.

The park’s meadows host colonies of this threatened species found only in southern Utah. The sentry’s bark means you have been reported.

Out on the plateau flats, capable of 55 mph, built to outrun a predator that went extinct ten thousand years ago.

Browsing the ponderosa edges at dawn, unimpressed by the scenery they live in.

Cobalt blue with a black crest, loud, clever, and convinced your trail mix is community property.

Nests on the amphitheater walls and stoops on swifts at speeds no other animal reaches.

A palm-sized ambush hunter of the sage flats that looks like it wandered out of the Cretaceous.

Plant Life in Bryce Canyon: What Grows Here

Ancient bristlecones grip the exposed points near Rainbow Point, wind-carved into sculpture.

The big orange-barked pines below the rim. Press your nose into the cracks on a warm day: butterscotch.

Smooth red bark and pink urn-shaped flowers, carpeting the plateau under the pines.

Penstemon, paintbrush, and iris take over the high meadows for a short, glorious window.

Fun Facts About Bryce Canyon

Fact 01

Bryce is not a canyon. No river runs through it. It is a chain of amphitheaters eaten from the plateau rim by frost.

Fact 02

It holds the largest concentration of hoodoos on earth, and the frost that builds them freezes and thaws about 200 nights a year.

Fact 03

The rim sits above 8,000 feet, so summer days are mild, nights are cold, and the air carries a quarter less oxygen than sea level.

Fact 04

It is a certified International Dark Sky Park. On a moonless night thousands of stars stand over the hoodoos.

Bryce · Provisions
Gear for this parkvia AvantLink
Traction spikes (winter)REI
Sun hoodie (thin air)Backcountry
2L hydration packOsprey
Stay nearbyvia Hipcamp
Plateau sites, Tropic
Red rock views and dark skies, from $28 a night.
Free Bryce checklistdigital · $0
The printable trail and packing checklist in the field-guide style. Take it, join the trail list.
Bryce · Mile 05 · From the Field Journal

Go Deeper on Bryce Canyon

Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Bryce deep dive lives on the journal.

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The field guide, in your pocket
Offline maps and your passport. Join the app waitlist.
Sponsored · Park Hub
Free Bryce checklist
The printable trail and packing list, in the field-guide style.
BrycePark Hub · Collected
Your passport

One stamp,
one story.

Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.

Bryce · Mile 06 · Where to Next

Keep the Journey Going

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Take Bryce home

Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.

Sixty-two parks remain
"The parks do not belong to one state or to one section... they belong as much to the man of Massachusetts, of Michigan, of Florida, as they do to the people of California, of Wyoming, and of Arizona."
Stephen Mather · first director of the National Park Service
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