Illinois’ 60+ state parks span 330,000+ acres across a landscape far more diverse than most visitors expect — from the dramatic sandstone canyons of Starved Rock and Garden of the Gods to tallgrass prairies, Mississippi River bluffs, and ancient Native American mounds. With free entry to all state parks, Illinois has one of the most accessible park systems in the country.
Quick Facts
| Total Parks | 60+ state parks & recreation areas |
| Total Acreage | 330,000+ acres |
| Entry Fee | Free at all state parks |
| Annual Visitors | 40+ million |
| Top Park | Starved Rock State Park (2+ million visitors/year) |
| Website | Illinois DNR |
📋 Illinois State Parks are FREE — no entry fees, no annual pass needed. Camping fees apply ($6–$35/night). → See our Complete 50-State Annual Pass Price Guide for comparison.
Top 10 Illinois State Parks — In-Depth
1. Starved Rock State Park — Illinois’ #1 Park
Starved Rock draws 2+ million visitors annually to its 18 sandstone canyons carved by glacial meltwater along the Illinois River. In spring and winter, seasonal waterfalls cascade over moss-covered canyon walls. The park has a historic CCC-built lodge (1933), making it one of the few state parks with a full-service restaurant and overnight lodge.
- Must-do: French Canyon and St. Louis Canyon (waterfalls after rain/snowmelt)
- Unique: 18 named canyons in a 2,630-acre park — canyon density like nowhere else in the Midwest
- Lodge: CCC-built stone lodge with restaurant (book months ahead)
- Trails: 13 miles of well-marked canyon trails
2. Matthiessen State Park — Starved Rock’s Quieter Twin
Matthiessen sits just 2 miles from Starved Rock with its own dramatic canyons but a fraction of the crowds. The upper and lower canyon trails feature waterfalls, moss-covered walls, and geological features rivaling its famous neighbor.
3. Garden of the Gods — Shawnee’s Crown Jewel
Garden of the Gods in the Shawnee National Forest features 320-million-year-old sandstone formations with names like Camel Rock, Devil’s Smokestack, and Anvil Rock. The Observation Trail offers panoramic views across the Shawnee Hills — one of the most photographed spots in Illinois.
4. Giant City State Park
Giant City in southern Illinois features massive sandstone blocks arranged like city streets — the “Giant City” formations. A CCC-built lodge (1930s) serves acclaimed Southern cooking, and the park’s climbing routes attract boulderers from across the Midwest.
5. Pere Marquette State Park
Pere Marquette overlooks the confluence of the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers from dramatic limestone bluffs. The CCC-built lodge is a masterpiece with a 700-ton stone fireplace. Winter brings bald eagle viewing at the nearby Audubon Center.
6. Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site
Cahokia Mounds is a UNESCO World Heritage Site — the largest pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico. Monks Mound, the largest earthen structure in the Americas, rises 100 feet above the Mississippi floodplain. The site preserves 70 of the original 120 mounds from a city that at its peak (1100 AD) was larger than London.
7. Mississippi Palisades State Park
Mississippi Palisades features dramatic limestone bluffs towering 250+ feet above the Mississippi River. Trails wind along cliff edges with spectacular river views, and the bluffs host unique plant communities.
8. Apple River Canyon State Park
Apple River Canyon in northwest Illinois is a hidden gem with limestone canyons, spring-fed streams, and some of the state’s best wildflower displays.
9. Ferne Clyffe State Park
Ferne Clyffe in the Shawnee Hills has a massive 150-foot semi-circular bluff shelter, seasonal waterfall, and excellent hiking through a fern-filled canyon.
10. Illinois Beach State Park
Illinois Beach is the state’s only remaining Lake Michigan beach park — 6.5 miles of sandy beach and dune habitat, plus the Illinois Beach Resort & Conference Center.
Parks by Region
Northern Illinois — River Canyons
- Starved Rock — 18 sandstone canyons, CCC lodge (2M+ visitors/yr)
- Matthiessen — Canyon twin of Starved Rock, fewer crowds
- Illinois Beach — Only remaining Lake Michigan beach park
- Mississippi Palisades — 250ft bluffs over Mississippi River
- Apple River Canyon — Limestone canyons, wildflowers
Central Illinois — Prairie & Rivers
- Pere Marquette — Mississippi/Illinois confluence, CCC lodge, eagles
- Cahokia Mounds — UNESCO World Heritage, pre-Columbian city
Southern Illinois — Shawnee Hills
- Garden of the Gods — 320M-year-old rock formations, panoramic views
- Giant City — Massive sandstone blocks, CCC lodge, climbing
- Ferne Clyffe — Bluff shelter, waterfall, fern canyon
- Cave-in-Rock — River pirate cave on the Ohio River
Best Parks by Activity
Best for Hiking
- Starved Rock — 13 miles through 18 canyons
- Garden of the Gods — Sandstone formations and Shawnee views
- Giant City — Rock scrambles through “city streets”
- Mississippi Palisades — Cliff-edge bluff trails
Best for Camping
- Starved Rock — Near the CCC lodge and canyons (133 sites)
- Giant City — Southern Illinois forest setting
- Pere Marquette — River bluff camping
Best for Families
- Starved Rock — Easy canyon walks, lodge with restaurant
- Illinois Beach — Lake Michigan swimming, resort
- Cahokia Mounds — Educational UNESCO site, museum
Best for Rock Climbing
- Giant City — Top-rope and bouldering on sandstone
- Jackson Falls (Shawnee NF) — Sport climbing destination
CCC Lodge Heritage
Illinois has some of the finest Civilian Conservation Corps lodges in the country — all still operating as overnight accommodations with restaurants:
- Starved Rock Lodge (1933) — Stone-and-timber canyon-side lodge
- Pere Marquette Lodge — Massive stone fireplace (700 tons), river bluff dining
- Giant City Lodge — Southern Illinois comfort food, forest setting
Insider Tips
- ALL Illinois state parks are free — no entry fee, no pass needed
- Starved Rock waterfalls are seasonal — best in spring after snowmelt or after heavy rain
- Matthiessen is just 2 miles from Starved Rock — visit both in one trip for half the crowds
- Garden of the Gods sunset from Observation Trail is one of Illinois’ most iconic views
- Pere Marquette in January for bald eagle viewing — hundreds congregate near the confluence
- Book CCC lodges months in advance — Starved Rock and Pere Marquette fill up fast
When to Visit
| Season | Experience | Crowds |
| Spring (Mar–May) | Canyon waterfalls, wildflowers, ideal hiking | High at Starved Rock |
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | Lake Michigan beaches, Shawnee Hills, hot | High |
| Fall (Sep–Nov) | Fall color in canyons and Shawnee Hills | Very High at Starved Rock |
| Winter (Dec–Feb) | Frozen waterfalls, eagle watching, lodge fires | Moderate |
FAQs
Are Illinois state parks free?
Yes — all Illinois state parks have free entry. Camping fees range from $6–$35/night.
What is the best state park in Illinois?
Starved Rock is #1 with 18 canyons and 2M+ visitors/year. Garden of the Gods has the best rock formations. Giant City has the best lodge restaurant.
Are there waterfalls at Starved Rock?
Yes — seasonal waterfalls form in multiple canyons after rain or snowmelt. Spring (March-May) and winter freeze/thaw cycles create the best waterfall conditions.
Is southern Illinois worth visiting?
Absolutely — the Shawnee Hills contain Garden of the Gods, Giant City, Ferne Clyffe, and Cave-in-Rock — some of the most dramatic scenery in the Midwest.
Can I stay overnight in a state park lodge?
Yes — Starved Rock Lodge, Pere Marquette Lodge, and Giant City Lodge are all CCC-built lodges with overnight rooms and restaurants.
Explore More
From 18 sandstone canyons to a UNESCO World Heritage city, from Mississippi River eagles to 320-million-year-old rock formations — Illinois’ 60+ free state parks offer far more than meets the eye.
Use our Park Finder to explore all Illinois state parks.






















