Park Avenue Viewpoint and Trail

Park Avenue Viewpoint and Trail

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Distance

1.8 mi

Elevation Gain

322 ft

Est. Time

1 hour for the hike itself, but account for crowds and slower pace. Plan 2 hours if stairs are congested.

Route Type

Out-and-back

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

April-May and September-October for mild temps and manageable crowds. November-February for solitude.

Overview

About This Trail

Park Avenue is the park's signature showstopper and traffic jam rolled into one. You get a paved walk into a towering corridor of monoliths—genuinely striking—but expect a queue in peak season. The real grit starts when you descend long stairs into uneven rock and sand with zero shade. Moderate difficulty, 1.8 miles roundtrip, 322 feet of gain. Arrive early or expect congestion on the stairs.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Moderate

Trail Highlights

Towering red-rock monoliths framing a desert corridor. Courthouse Towers Viewpoint at 1 mile. The park's first iconic scenic stop.

Insider Tips

• To avoid steepest stairs, start at the north end (alternate trailhead) • Park Avenue Arch is visible from the parking lot on the right—suspended high on the cliff face • Previous visitors named the rocks: look for 'Queen Nefertiti,' 'Queen Victoria,' and 'The Corndog' (Sausage Rock) • The paved viewpoint is the quick reward; hiking the trail adds another mile and better angle

Best Season to Hike

April-May and September-October for mild temps and manageable crowds. November-February for solitude.

Hiking Tips

  • Bring 2L water minimum—desert sun with zero shade
  • Start at the north end trailhead to skip the steepest stairs
  • Wear sturdy boots; sand and uneven rock demand grip
  • Tuck your pant legs; sand gets everywhere
  • Go early or late; this trail funnels thousands daily March-October
  • Look for Park Avenue Arch in the parking lot (right side, suspended on cliff face)

Family Info

Paved walkway to viewpoint is perfect for young kids and wheelchairs. Stairs beyond are steep and tiring for little legs. Sand gets in shoes. Keep hands on children on stairs—constant foot traffic. Expecting full-sun exposure and crowds.

What Hikers Say

Hikers praise the rock formations and accessibility of the viewpoint, but consistently note the crowds and steep stairs wear you down. The canyon walls are genuinely striking, but don't expect solitude March-October. It's the park's gateway hike for good reason, but timing matters.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

Information is compiled from official sources, verified traveler reviews, and editorial research. Learn how YourNPGuide works →