Backpacking at Arches

Backpacking at Arches

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Overview

About This Trail

Arches backcountry is a no-trail survival test. You navigate unmarked, rough terrain through some of the most spectacular desert geology in the country. Water is scarce—you'll carry everything you need. This is for self-sufficient backpackers only; expect exposure, technical terrain, and temperatures that swing 50° in a day.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Strenuous (Expert)

Trail Highlights

Explore Arches' backcountry geology without crowds. Navigate unmarked terrain through desert landscape. Designated campsites and at-large zones offer solitude you won't find on day trails.

Insider Tips

• Get your permit in person from the Backcountry Permit Office in Moab—not the visitor center. Saves a return trip. • Ask the permit rangers for current campsite conditions, water status, and route advice. They know the backcountry better than anyone. • Courthouse Wash is the most flow-prone drainage; check current conditions and avoid it during/after heavy rain or monsoon season. • The false summit trick: some climbs look like the top but aren't. Over-estimate mileage and time. • Bring a topo map and compass. GPS can fail; know how to navigate without it. • Secure all food or use bear canisters. You're responsible for keeping animals away. • Rock art and cultural sites are protected. Look but don't touch—don't draw graffiti or deface anything. • Vacate campsites by 10 AM. It's a regulation and a safety matter.

Best Season to Hike

April-May (spring) and September-October (fall) offer the best temperature window. Winter is passable but cold and icy on north slopes. Summer is dangerous (100°F+, dehydration, monsoon storms).

Hiking Tips

  • Carry 1 gallon (4L) water minimum per day; in summer, double that. Filter at Courthouse Wash if flowing—never depend on it.
  • Get your permit from the Backcountry Permit Office in Moab (not the visitor center). Plan 7 days ahead; office open weekdays 8 AM–12 PM, 1–4 PM MT.
  • Bring a Wag Bag or Restop II. All solid human waste must be packed out. Don't throw bags in toilets.
  • Study your route before you go. Routes are unmarked. Ask rangers at the permit office for campsite and zone access details.
  • Lightning: rock overhangs won't save you. If your hair stands on end, squat low, cover ears, remove metal backpacks.
  • Slickrock is slippery when wet/icy and crumbles easily. More climbers get stuck descending than ascending.
  • Vacate campsites by 10 AM. Food storage is your responsibility. Pack out all trash.
  • Check weather. Desert temps soar. Late summer brings violent storms. Temperatures can swing 50°F in 24 hours.

Family Info

Not suitable for young children. Terrain is rough, water sources scarce, hazards are serious (flash floods, lightning, loose rock, extreme heat). Requires self-sufficiency and backcountry experience. Older teens with desert and backcountry training may participate with expert leadership. Service animals allowed if individually trained to perform specific tasks.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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