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Lat 37.3358° N
Long 108.4079° W
Elevation6,000 – 8,570 ft

Colorado · Stamp 25 / 63

Mesa Verde

National Park · Established 1906

Nearly 5,000 archaeological sites and 600 cliff dwellings, built by a civilization that called this mesa home for 700 years.

Area52,485 acres
TrailheadMancos, Colorado
Visitors550k / yr
Scroll to begin the ascent
Live · Cliff Palace & Balcony House tours ticketed, buy at visitor center Spruce Tree House closed indefinitely, viewable from overlook 1 active alert 68°F · mesa top Live layer, from the National Park Service
Best windowMay–Oct for full cliff-dwelling tour access Getting there45 min from Cortez · 4.5 hr from Denver Fee$25 / vehicle · 7 days
★★★★★ 4.8 from 3 travelers 1 visitor stories 550k annual visitors Grounded in live NPS data
Mesa Verde · Mile 01 · The Story

Seven hundred years of
life on this mesa.

The Ancestral Pueblo people lived on this mesa for roughly seven hundred years, farming the mesa top and eventually building elaborate cliff dwellings tucked into sandstone alcoves in the final century before they migrated south around 1300. Cliff Palace, the largest, holds 150 rooms and 23 kivas in a single alcove and remains the largest cliff dwelling in North America, likely serving as much as a social and ceremonial center as a residence.

This was the first national park in the United States created specifically to preserve human-made structures rather than natural scenery, and the distinction still shapes how you visit it. Cliff Palace and Balcony House are accessible only by ranger-guided tour, tickets sold at the visitor center; Spruce Tree House, once the most-visited dwelling in the park, has been closed since 2015 after rockfall concerns and remains viewable only from an overlook while stabilization work continues.

Come for the scale of what was built here. Stay for the fact that the mesa is also an International Dark Sky Park, so the same silence that surrounds the ruins by day gets a second act after sunset. Read the story, plan your tour tickets, and when you leave, collect the stamp.

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It seemed as if the whole civilization had been arrested, like flies in amber, in the very moment of its flight.
Willa Cather, on encountering Mesa Verde's cliff dwellings
Cliff Palace · 150 Rooms, 23 Kivas
"The mountains are calling and I must go."
John Muir
Mesa Verde · Mile 02 · The Essentials

Best Things to Do in Mesa Verde

Six ways to spend your time, from a ticketed climb into Cliff Palace to a quiet overlook far from the crowds.

Explore

Tour Cliff Palace

The largest cliff dwelling in North America, 150 rooms and 23 kivas, accessible only on a ranger-guided ticketed tour.

Ticket required · book ahead
Do

Climb into Balcony House

The park's most adventurous tour: a 32-foot entrance ladder, a crawl tunnel, and a final climb up carved stone steps.

Ticket required · not for tight spaces
See

Park Point Overlook

The highest point in the park at 8,572 feet, with a 360° view and an active fire lookout tower.

Everyone · 20 min
Explore

Drive the Mesa Top Loop

A six-mile paved loop with twelve stops at surface ruins and cliff-dwelling overlooks, no ticket required.

Casual · road-trippers
See

Spruce Tree House Overlook

The park's third-largest dwelling, closed to entry since 2015 but clearly visible from the museum overlook.

Everyone · 15 min
Do

Stargaze at an International Dark Sky Park

One of the darkest certified night skies in the region, with occasional ranger-led astronomy programs.

Stargazers · after dark
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Plan Your Mesa Verde 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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Your adventure, printed
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
Park Point · The Highest View
"In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks."
John Muir
Mesa Verde · Mile 03 · Trails & Viewpoints

Best Hikes in Mesa Verde, by Difficulty

Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a clear flag on which cliff dwellings require a ticket.

Ticket · ranger-guided

Cliff Palace Tour

Moderate
0.25 mi+100 ft~1 hr

A short but exposed descent with stone steps and a ladder into the largest cliff dwelling in North America. Tickets sold at the visitor center.

Ticket · ranger-guided

Balcony House Tour

Strenuous
0.25 mi+100 ft~1 hr

The most adventurous tour in the park: a 32-foot ladder, an 18-inch tunnel crawl, and carved stone steps. Not recommended for tight spaces or fear of heights.

Petroglyph Point Trail

Moderate
2.4 mi+300 ft~2 hr

A rocky loop along the canyon rim to one of the park's largest petroglyph panels, then back across the mesa top. No permit.

Spruce Canyon Trail

Moderate
2.1 mi+500 ft~2 hr

A quiet canyon loop below Spruce Tree House, with far fewer visitors than the mesa-top sites. No permit.

Soda Canyon Overlook Trail

Easy
1.3 miflat~1 hr

A flat walk to three overlooks, including the only public view of Balcony House without a ticket. No permit.

Ticket · ranger-guided, seasonal

Long House Tour (Wetherill Mesa)

Moderate
2.25 mi+130 ft~1.5 hr

The park's second-largest dwelling, on the quieter Wetherill Mesa. Tickets required; tours run only in peak season.

Cliff Palace, Balcony House, and Long House require ranger-guided tour tickets, sold at the visitor center · no permit for the overlook trails or Mesa Top Loop

Mesa Verde National Park at a Glance
1  Mesa Verde Visitor & Research Center
2  Cliff Palace
3  Balcony House
4  Spruce Tree House Overlook
5  Park Point
6  Wetherill Mesa
Stops shown in visit order. Build a plan above and this map updates to your exact stops.
Mesa Verde · Mile 04 · Life on the Mesa Top

Wildlife in Mesa Verde: 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.

Common throughout the piñon-juniper woodland covering most of the mesa, often visible along the main park road.

Works the open grasslands and woodland edges, occasionally heard calling at dusk near the campground.

Present in the park's forested canyons, generally shy and most active in late summer during berry season.

Reintroduced to the mesa and now commonly seen in small flocks foraging near the developed areas.

Present but almost never encountered, hunting the mesa's deer population largely unseen.

Common around the archaeological sites, adept at climbing the same sandstone cliffs that hold the ancient dwellings.

Males wander the mesa top each autumn searching for mates, occasionally crossing park roads.

Plant Life in Mesa Verde: What Grows Here

Gives Mesa Verde, Spanish for green table, its name, covering most of the mesa top alongside piñon pine.

Its nuts were a critical food source for the Ancestral Pueblo people who lived here for centuries, still gathered today.

Common in open areas of the mesa, producing bright yellow flowers and edible fruit in late spring and summer.

Its fibers were used by the Ancestral Pueblo people for sandals, rope, and mats; the plant still grows throughout the mesa.

Covers the mesa top in yellow blooms each September and October, a late-season contrast to the greens of summer.

Found in the cooler, shaded canyons below the mesa top, a relic pocket of a wetter climate that once covered more of the region.

Fun Facts About Mesa Verde

Fact 01

Cliff Palace holds 150 rooms and 23 kivas within a single sandstone alcove, the largest cliff dwelling in North America.

Fact 02

Mesa Verde protects nearly 5,000 known archaeological sites, including around 600 cliff dwellings.

Fact 03

This was the first national park established specifically to preserve human-made structures rather than natural scenery, when it was founded in 1906.

Fact 04

Spruce Tree House, once the park's most-visited dwelling, has been closed since 2015 due to rockfall risk from an unstable sandstone arch above it.

Mesa Verde · Provisions
Gear for this parkvia AvantLink
Work gloves (Balcony House)REI
Trekking polesBackcountry
2L hydration packOsprey
Stay nearbyvia Hipcamp
Mesa-top sites near Morefield
Fifteen minutes from the entrance, piñon-juniper shade included, from $28 a night.
Free Mesa Verde checklistdigital · $0
The printable trail and packing checklist in the field-guide style. Take it, join the trail list.
Mesa Verde · Mile 05 · From the Field Journal

Go Deeper on Mesa Verde

Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Mesa Verde 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.
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Free Mesa Verde checklist
The printable trail and packing list, in the field-guide style.
Mesa VerdePark 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.

Mesa Verde · Mile 06 · Where to Next

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Thirty-eight 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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