National Park visits up from last year, including in off-season

WASHINGTON—While overall visitation continues to grow across America’s national parks, visitors are increasingly discovering opportunities in less well-known parks and during the off-season.

The National Park Service has announced that 400 national parks reported a total of 325.5 million recreation visits in 2023, an increase of 13 million or 4% over 2022. In addition to the continued growth in overall numbers, NPS data shows that visitation is increasing in the more traditional off-seasons at many parks, with more visits in the spring and fall than seen in years past. And 20 parks—many of them less well-known—broke visitation records in 2023.

“From Kaloko Honokōhau National Historic Park in Hawai’i to Congaree National Park in South Carolina, parks are attracting more visitors each year to learn about our shared history,” National Park Service Director Chuck Sams said. “Our national parks tell our shared American story. I’m glad visitors are finding hidden gems, exploring in the off-season and finding new ways to have a great time in our national parks.”

Visitation figures and trends guide how the National Park Service manages parks to ensure the best experience possible for park visitors. The Visitation Statistics Dashboard on NPS.gov provides recreational visit statistics for every park in the U.S. for 2023 and also for previous years, dating back to 1979 for some parks. Of the 429 parks in the National Park System, 400 parks counted visitors in 2023. For the first time, there are now parks reporting their visitation numbers from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and four U.S. territories. Five national parks began reporting in 2023, and this is the first year a park from Delaware is included.

The 20 parks that broke visitation records in 2023:

• Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site
• Congaree National Park
• Dry Tortugas National Park
• Glacier Bay National Park & Preserve
• Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
• Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument
• John Muir National Historic Site
• Joshua Tree National Park
• Kaloko Honokōhau National Historic Park
• Keweenaw National Historic Park
• Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park
• Lincoln Memorial
• Longfellow House Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site
• Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historic Park
• Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Memorial
• Minidoka National Historic Site
• Mojave National Preserve
• New River Gorge National Park & Preserve
• Nez Perce National Historic Park
• Ninety Six National Historic Site

Natural disasters and increasingly severe weather events affected visitation at some parks. Summer heat, wildland fires, and storms and natural disasters, floods and landslides required a number of parks to close for periods of time in 2023.

Some parks that were impacted include:
• Death Valley National Park was entirely closed August 20 until October 15 due to flood damage.
• Much of the Chilkoot Trail at Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park in Alaska was closed due to flooding in 2023.
• Haleakalā National Park closed the Summit and Kīpahulu districts from August 8 until August 25 due to wildland fires and high winds.

##RVT1145b

RV Travel
RV Travel
Our goal at RVtravel.com, now in our 24th year of continuous online publication, is to provide a comprehensive source of quality news, advice, and information about RVs and the RV lifestyle. Our writers are all (human) RVing experts who write for you, not advertisers, stockholders or Google rankings. You won't find more valuable information about RVing anywhere else—and with no spam, ever.

Sign up for America's favorite RVing newsletter

The FREE RVtravel.com newsletter is filled with great RV information, advice, and news written by RV experts, delivered right to your inbox. Never any SPAM and we will NEVER sell your information! When you subscribe, you'll get three checklists that every RVer should have as a thank you!

A Permanent Address for RV Freedom — Full-time RVers trust America’s Mailbox for mail forwarding, residency help, and reliable support from the road.

Our most popular articles this week:


Amazon Prime Day is coming soon but…
The deals are already on! Click here and see if what you’ve been wanting or needing is on sale. And if it’s not now, it might be soon!


THE BEST WAY TO SUPPORT US?
Tell other RVers about us! If you love us and our newsletters, chances are other RVers will too! You could tell your campsite neighbors how great we are, you could post a newsletter or story you enjoyed on your Facebook, you could write us a love letter on the campground bulletin board… You get the picture. Spread the word—help us out! THANK YOU!

Comments

Please follow our rules for commenting.

1 Comment

Neal Davis
2 years ago

Thank you, RV Travel! Interesting changes. I cannot decide if they are surprising or not, but either way, this is them. 🙂 Those 9 not visited must be pretty remote!