In-Depth Guide to Arizona State Parks
Arizona’s 33 state parks bring you face-to-face with the Southwest’s most dramatic landscapes — from saguaro-studded deserts to red rock canyons, ancient cliff dwellings, and cool ponderosa forests. While the national parks dominate Arizona’s reputation, the state parks offer equally stunning scenery with far fewer crowds — and now feature cabins at several parks. 3+ million annual visitors.
Park Pass & Fees
| Pass/Fee | Cost | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Pass | $200/year | All 33 parks; weekends/holidays included |
| Daily Vehicle Fee | $7–$30 | Varies by park |
| Camping (Standard) | $15–$35/night | Tent/RV; hookups available |
| Cabins | $60–$100/night | Kartchner, Lost Dutchman, Dead Horse Ranch |
📋 Arizona State Parks: $200/year annual pass (increased from $75 in 2025). → See our Complete 50-State Annual Pass Price Guide or our 50-State Park Fees Study.
⚠️ 2026 Price Change: Annual pass jumped to $200 (from $75). No lower-tier option. Reservations via azstateparks.com — book up to 13 months ahead. Popular cabins and Kartchner cave tours sell out fast.
Parks by Region
Northern Arizona — Sedona & Colorado Plateau
Slide Rock State Park — Oak Creek Canyon’s legendary natural water slide on smooth sandstone. Day use only — no camping. Summer weekends: arrive before 9 AM or park closes to capacity. Water temp ~60°F. Red Rock State Park — Sedona red rock nature preserve (day use only; no swimming). Unlike Slide Rock, this is a quiet educational park. Dead Horse Ranch State Park — Verde Valley camping hub near Cottonwood. Log cabins with full-size bed, bunk bed, AC/heat, picnic table, fire ring. 230+ bird species — premier Verde Valley birding. Riordan Mansion State Historic Park — stunning 1904 Arts & Crafts mansion in Flagstaff.
Central Arizona — Sonoran Desert
Lost Dutchman State Park — Arizona’s most visited state park at the base of the Superstition Mountains. 5 cabins (queen bed + 2 bunk sets; sleep 6; AC/heat, electricity, 2 porches, fire ring with grill; no pets in cabins). 135 campsites (68 with electric/water). The Siphon Draw Trail leads to the iconic Flatiron summit. Tonto Natural Bridge State Park — the world’s largest natural travertine bridge (183 feet high). Swimming hole below. Fool Hollow Lake Recreation Area — mountain lake near Show Low, cool summer camping at 6,300 ft elevation.
Southern Arizona — Sky Islands & Caves
Kartchner Caverns State Park — a living cave system consistently voted Arizona’s #1 attraction. Guided tours through a 3.5-mile cave with stunning formations. 2-room cabins (queen bed + 2 bunk sets; sleep 6; AC/heat, microwave, mini-fridge; cabins 3 & 4 pet-friendly). Campground with RV hookups, flush toilets, showers. Book cave tours well in advance. Catalina State Park — Santa Catalina Mountains foothills near Tucson. 120 campsites with hookups. Romero Canyon hike to pools. ⚠️ 2026: Campground A restroom/shower building closed for renovation (Feb–Apr 2026). Patagonia Lake State Park — mountain lake with 300+ bird species. Oracle State Park — dark sky park and wildlife corridor.
Western Arizona — Colorado River
Lake Havasu State Park — London Bridge views, jet skiing, boating paradise. Buckskin Mountain State Park — Colorado River camping and tubing. Cattail Cove State Park — Lake Havasu shoreline houseboating.
Cabin & Camping Guide
| Park | Cabins | Campsites | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lost Dutchman SP | 5 (sleep 6) | 135 (68 hookup) | Superstition views; Siphon Draw Trail |
| Kartchner Caverns SP | 2-room (sleep 6) | RV hookups | Living cave tours; microwave/fridge in cabin |
| Dead Horse Ranch SP | Log cabins | Tent + RV | Verde Valley; 230+ bird species; near Sedona |
| Patagonia Lake SP | — | Tent + RV | Mountain lake; 300+ birds; rare specialties |
| Buckskin Mountain SP | — | RV + tent | Colorado River tubing; water sports |
| Catalina SP (Tucson) | — | 120 (hookups) | Santa Catalina foothills; Romero Pools |
Cabin tips: Bring your own linens, sleeping bags, pillows, and cooking utensils — nothing provided. No cooking inside cabins (use fire ring/grill outside). Cabins fill months in advance — book up to 13 months ahead. Check pet policy per cabin.
Insider Tips
🌵 Local Knowledge
- Slide Rock — arrive before 9 AM: Summer weekends, the park closes to capacity by mid-morning. No camping — day use only. The natural water slide is on smooth sandstone in Oak Creek — water is a refreshing 60°F. Nearby camping: Manzanita Campground (1 mi south, tent-only) or Pine Flat Campground (6 mi north).
- Kartchner Caverns — book tours first: This is a living cave (still forming) — guided tours only. The Big Room and Rotunda tours sell out weeks ahead. Temperature inside: 72°F year-round. No cameras, no backpacks in the cave. The 2-room cabins are surprisingly well-equipped (microwave, mini-fridge, AC).
- Lost Dutchman — desert hiking rules: 1 gallon of water per person per hour of hiking. Start before dawn in summer. The Siphon Draw Trail to the Flatiron is strenuous but iconic — summit views of the entire Valley. Wild javelinas and rattlesnakes are common — store food properly.
- Dead Horse Ranch — Sedona backdoor: Minutes from Sedona but at a fraction of the accommodation cost. Log cabins + birding trails along the Verde River. 230+ species documented. The wine tasting rooms of Cottonwood/Jerome are a short drive.
- Monsoon season (Jul–Sep): Sudden afternoon thunderstorms with lightning. Flash floods can fill dry washes in minutes. Never camp in dry washes. Check weather before all hikes.
- Oracle — genuine solitude: If you want to escape crowds, Oracle State Park is a true dark sky park with a wildlife corridor and minimal visitors. Stargazing here rivals anywhere in the state.
Desert Oasis Guide
| Park | Water Feature | Temp |
|---|---|---|
| Slide Rock | Oak Creek natural water slide | ~60°F (refreshing!) |
| Tonto Natural Bridge | Travertine pool + waterfall | Cool canyon shade |
| Patagonia Lake | Mountain lake + beach | Swimmable summer |
| Lake Havasu | Colorado River reservoir | Warm summer |
| Kartchner Caverns | Underground streams | 72°F year-round |
State Parks Near Arizona’s Major Cities
Arizona’s state parks ring its biggest cities with desert, cave, and red-rock escapes. Here are the closest to each hub, with approximate drive times.
Near Phoenix
Lost Dutchman State Park — Arizona’s most-visited state park — sits about 45 minutes east at the base of the Superstition Mountains, with cabins and the iconic Siphon Draw hike. Picacho Peak State Park (about 1 hour southeast) is a spring-wildflower and summit-hiking favorite, and Tonto Natural Bridge State Park (about 1.75 hours north near Payson) spans the world’s largest travertine bridge.
Near Tucson & Southern Arizona
Catalina State Park is about 20 minutes north in the Santa Catalina foothills, and Oracle State Park (about 45 minutes north) is a dark-sky gem. Kartchner Caverns State Park (about 1 hour southeast), a living cave voted Arizona’s #1 attraction, and Patagonia Lake State Park (about 1 hour south), a birding hotspot, round out the region, along with Roper Lake State Park to the east.
Near Sedona & Flagstaff
Slide Rock State Park (about 20 minutes north of Sedona) is the legendary Oak Creek water slide, and Red Rock State Park (about 15 minutes southwest) is a quieter nature preserve. Dead Horse Ranch State Park and Jerome State Historic Park anchor the Verde Valley, while Riordan Mansion sits right in Flagstaff and Homolovi State Park protects ancestral Puebloan sites to the east.
When to Visit
| Season | Highlights | Watch Out For |
|---|---|---|
| Spring (Mar–May) | Desert wildflowers, perfect temps, birding peak | Slide Rock crowded weekends |
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | Mountain parks (Fool Hollow, Slide Rock) | Desert parks 110°F+; start before dawn |
| Fall (Sep–Nov) | Comfortable temps, Oak Creek fall color | Monsoon storms (Jul–Sep) |
| Winter (Dec–Feb) | Ideal desert hiking; Kartchner year-round | Cold at elevation; limited mountain access |
Planning around the seasons? Explore our national guides to the best state parks for spring wildflowers, summer swimming, fall foliage, and winter camping & snow sports — plus our guide to the best times to visit state parks by region.
FAQs
How many state parks are in Arizona?
Arizona has 33 state parks across about 63,000 acres, managed by Arizona State Parks & Trails — from cave-and-desert parks like Kartchner Caverns to the red rocks of Slide Rock and Colorado River shorelines. The 2026 annual pass is $200 (up from $75). (Source: Arizona State Parks & Trails.)
How many national parks are in Arizona?
Arizona has three national parks — Grand Canyon National Park, Saguaro National Park near Tucson, and Petrified Forest National Park — plus around 18 national monuments and historic sites (Organ Pipe Cactus, Chiricahua, Canyon de Chelly, Montezuma Castle, Sunset Crater, and more). Arizona’s state parks make excellent, less-crowded complements — Catalina and Oracle near Saguaro, and Homolovi near Petrified Forest. These federal parks are separate from Arizona’s 33 state parks. (Source: nps.gov.)
How much is the annual pass in 2026?
$200/year — increased from $75 in 2025. Covers all 33 parks including weekends/holidays.
Are there cabins?
Yes — Lost Dutchman (5 cabins), Kartchner Caverns (2-room cabins), Dead Horse Ranch (log cabins). Bring your own linens. Book 13 months ahead.
Can I swim at Slide Rock?
Yes! Natural water slide on smooth sandstone. Day use only. Arrive before 9 AM on summer weekends — the park closes to capacity.
What is Kartchner Caverns?
A living cave system — guided tours through 3.5 miles of formations at 72°F year-round. Voted Arizona’s #1 attraction. Book tours in advance.
Are dogs allowed in Arizona state parks?
Dogs are allowed at most Arizona State Parks on trails and in campgrounds, though allowances vary by park and visitors should check individual park pages before traveling. Dogs must be tethered on a leash 6 feet or shorter at all times. No single statewide swim-beach rule; some parks provide designated dog beaches (e.g. Cattail Cove’s dog beach). Pet-friendly cabins and camping are offered at several parks (e.g. Alamo Lake, Dead Horse Ranch, Lyman Lake); dogs are not allowed in the cabins at Lost Dutchman State Park. Buckskin Mountain and River Island State Parks have fenced off-leash dog parks for registered guests. Rules verified July 2026 via azstateparks.com. Full 50-state comparison: Dog Rules in America’s State Parks.
Living caves, natural water slides, and Superstition Mountain cabins — explore Arizona’s 33 state parks.


































