Dunes Overlook Trail
A short forested walk from the visitor center to an overlook of the entire dune field. No permit.
Colorado · Stamp 18 / 63
The tallest dunes in North America, sitting where a desert has no business being, ringed by 13,000-foot peaks.
Colorado is not a place most people associate with sand dunes, which is exactly what makes this park so disorienting in the best way. Wind sweeping across the San Luis Valley for millennia has piled sand against the base of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, building the tallest dune field in North America, with Star Dune topping out around 750 feet, all of it sitting at 8,200 feet elevation and ringed by peaks over 13,000 feet.
Every spring, snowmelt from the mountains creates Medano Creek along the dune field's edge, a shallow, surge-flowing stream that behaves almost like a tide pool, rising and falling in pulses that kids can wade in and adults inexplicably cannot stop watching. It usually dries up by midsummer, so the timing matters if that's the draw.
Come for the surreal scale of the dunes. Stay for the night sky, among the darkest certified anywhere in the country. Read the story, trust the live data above for what is open today, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
The desert is not a wasteland, but a mysterious and lovely place, waiting for people to see it with more than their eyes.Adapted from Minerva Hoyt, whose desert-protection advocacy shaped early National Park Service policy
Six ways to spend your time, from wading a surge-flow creek to sandboarding down a 700-foot dune.
A shallow, pulsing stream at the base of the dunes, usually flowing from April through June, gone by midsummer.
Families · springRent a board in nearby towns; the park doesn't rent them. The dunes make for a genuinely fast, if sandy, ride down.
The signature activityAn International Dark Sky Park where the Milky Way is visible without any equipment on a clear new-moon night.
Stargazers · after darkA short, steep trail to a waterfall tucked in a narrow slot canyon, with a view back over the dune field from the approach road.
Half day · easy add-onThe only campground inside the park, with dune-field views right from many sites. Reserve ahead in peak season.
Campers · book aheadA short walk from the visitor center to a view over the entire dune field and the mountains behind it.
Everyone · 20 minAnswer 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.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a reminder that there are no marked paths on the sand itself.
A short forested walk from the visitor center to an overlook of the entire dune field. No permit.
No trail, just the shallow creek at the dune field's edge. Flows strongest with mountain snowmelt from April through June. No permit.
No marked trail; the route is whatever ridge you choose to follow up loose sand. A commanding view once you're up, and a genuine workout getting there. No permit.
The tallest dune in North America, reached by an exposed sand trek with no shade and no marked route. Start at dawn and carry more water than seems reasonable. No permit.
A rocky creekside scramble to a waterfall tucked into a narrow canyon just outside the main dune field. No permit.
A forested climb through Montville Nature Trail into a mountain pass, a cool contrast to the exposed sand elsewhere in the park. No permit.
Free backcountry permits at the visitor center for overnight camping · no permit for day hikes on the dunes or trails
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.
Almost never needs to drink free water at all, extracting what it needs from seeds. Its tracks are common on the dunes at dawn, though the animal itself is rarely seen.
Common in the grasslands and forest edges surrounding the dune field, especially active at dawn and dusk.
Works the high, rocky terrain of the mountains ringing the dunes, occasionally visible from the Mosca Pass trail.
A species found only in this dune field and nowhere else on Earth, adapted specifically to life on shifting, sun-baked sand.
Present in the forested slopes bordering the dune field, rarely encountered on the open sand itself.
Hunts the open grasslands and dune edges, occasionally visible riding thermals off the Sangre de Cristo foothills.
Digs extensive burrow systems beneath the dune surface, emerging only at night to forage, leaving distinctive tracks each morning.
One of the few plants able to root directly in shifting sand, helping stabilize the dune edges where grassland meets the dune field.
Tracks the seasonal path of Medano Creek, the only reliable sign of where the water flows each spring before it dries up.
A low, silvery-leaved plant found along the dune margins, tough enough to survive the extreme heat of the exposed sand.
Common in the grasslands surrounding the dunes, blooming with bright yellow flowers in late spring.
Covers the lower slopes of the Sangre de Cristo range bordering the park, giving way to alpine tundra higher up.
A low, fragrant flower that appears on the dune margins after summer rains, one of the few blooms tough enough for the shifting sand.
Star Dune rises about 750 feet from base to summit, making it the tallest dune in North America.
The dune field sits at roughly 8,200 feet elevation, ringed by peaks in the Sangre de Cristo range that top 13,000 feet.
Medano Creek's surge-flow pattern, rising and falling in pulses, is a rare phenomenon found in very few places on Earth.
Great Sand Dunes is an International Dark Sky Park, among the darkest night skies certified anywhere in the contiguous United States.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Great Sand Dunes deep dive lives on the journal.
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.
North through Colorado: from a desert of sand to a tundra above the trees.
Open Stamp 11 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Great Sand Dunes into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.