Passes & Fees
New Mexico residents pay $5/vehicle for day use — and enjoy free entry from October 1 through April 30 each year. Non-residents pay $10/vehicle year-round. Walk-ins and cyclists enter free. An Annual Day-Use Pass costs $40 resident / $180 non-resident. Camping ranges from $10–$18/night for developed sites.
Parks by Region
Southern Desert & Chihuahuan
City of Rocks State Park features bizarre volcanic pinnacles rising from the desert floor — a 35-million-year-old volcanic ash formation that has eroded into a labyrinth of stone columns. The park offers exceptional stargazing as a designated International Dark Sky Park. Rockhound State Park is the only park in New Mexico where visitors are encouraged to collect minerals — up to 15 pounds of jasper, agate, and quartz per visit.
Rio Grande Corridor
Elephant Butte Lake State Park is New Mexico’s most popular park — a 36,000-acre reservoir on the Rio Grande with excellent bass and walleye fishing, sandy beaches, and water sports. Percha Dam State Park downstream offers a quieter, bird-watching-focused experience along a cottonwood bosque. Caballo Lake State Park connects the two with additional reservoir recreation.
Cibola & Western Mountains
El Morro National Monument (NPS, but nearby) echoes through state parks like Bluewater Lake State Park — a high-altitude trout lake surrounded by sandstone cliffs. El Vado Lake State Park and Heron Lake State Park sit side by side in the Chama Valley, connected by a 5.5-mile trail. Heron Lake is New Mexico’s only “no-wake” lake — perfect for kayaking.
Northern Mountains & High Country
Hyde Memorial State Park at 8,300 feet is the gateway to Santa Fe’s Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Cimarron Canyon State Park carves through a dramatic Palisade cliff canyon along US 64, with trophy trout fishing in the Cimarron River. Eagle Nest Lake State Park offers Moreno Valley views and cold-water fishing in the Enchanted Circle.
Best Parks by Activity
Best for Hiking
- Cimarron Canyon State Park — Palisade cliff canyon trails
- Hyde Memorial State Park — Mountain trails near Santa Fe
- Sugarite Canyon State Park — Mesa and coal camp ruins
- Oliver Lee Memorial State Park — Dog Canyon into the Sacramentos
Best for Fishing
- Elephant Butte Lake — Bass, walleye on New Mexico’s largest lake
- Eagle Nest Lake State Park — Trout and kokanee at 8,200 feet
- Cimarron Canyon — Trophy brown trout in the Cimarron River
- Navajo Lake State Park — Quality waters below the dam
Best for Stargazing
- City of Rocks State Park — International Dark Sky Park
- Clayton Lake State Park — Observatory with public star parties
- Bottomless Lakes State Park — Remote Pecos Valley dark skies
- Sugarite Canyon State Park — High elevation clear skies
Best for Families
- Rockhound State Park — Collect your own minerals
- Bottomless Lakes State Park — Swim in turquoise sinkholes
- Living Desert Zoo & Gardens (near Carlsbad parks) — Desert wildlife
- Elephant Butte Lake — Sandy beach swimming
Best Time to Visit
| Season | Highlights |
|---|---|
| Spring (Mar–May) | Desert wildflowers, free resident entry, cool hiking |
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | Lake swimming, monsoon afternoon storms, mountain cool |
| Fall (Sep–Nov) | Golden aspens, Balloon Fiesta season, free resident entry starts Oct |
| Winter (Dec–Feb) | Free resident entry, dark sky stargazing, mild desert hiking |
FAQs
Do New Mexico residents get free state park entry?
Yes — from October 1 through April 30 each year, New Mexico residents enter all state parks free. Summer day use is just $5/vehicle.
What is the most unique New Mexico state park?
City of Rocks State Park, with its volcanic pinnacle labyrinth and International Dark Sky designation, is the most otherworldly. Rockhound State Park (collect your own minerals) is the most interactive.
Can I collect rocks at New Mexico state parks?
Yes — Rockhound State Park specifically allows visitors to collect up to 15 pounds of minerals including jasper, agate, and quartz.
What is Bottomless Lakes State Park?
Despite the name, these aren’t bottomless — they’re nine cenote-like sinkholes filled with turquoise water, with Lea Lake offering a swimming beach at a natural “pool.”
Start Your New Mexico Adventure
New Mexico’s 35 state parks showcase the Land of Enchantment’s geological wonders — from volcanic rock cities to turquoise sinkholes, desert mineral collecting to dark sky stargazing. Whether you’re fishing for walleye at Elephant Butte or exploring palisade canyons at Cimarron, these parks deliver an experience as unique as the state itself.
