By state · NV

National Parks in Nevada.

Nevada's NPS network at a glance: units, designations, visit totals, and what shapes the visiting season.

By Nicholas Major · Last updated

Nevada has two NPS units worth flagging (Great Basin National Park and Lake Mead National Recreation Area, the latter shared with Arizona) plus Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument and segments of the Old Spanish National Historic Trail. Las Vegas (LAS) anchors most southern Nevada NPS visits; Reno (RNO) is closer to Great Basin. Lake Mead is the country's largest NRA by reservoir surface area and consistently one of the most-visited NPS units overall, with hot desert summers and milder shoulders. Great Basin sits at the Utah border and includes Wheeler Peak (13,065 ft) plus Lehman Caves; the high country is accessible roughly late May through October depending on snowpack, and the Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive closes when winter snow arrives. Lake Mead's water levels have dropped meaningfully over the last decade; check the official NPS page for current launch-ramp status.

Every NPS unit in Nevada.

Nevada's 7 NPS units: 3 National Historic Trails · 2 National Parks · 1 National Recreation Area · 1 National Monument. Combined 5-year-average annual visits: 7,728,007 (multi-state units count their full visits in every state they touch, see methodology). The most-visited unit is Lake Mead National Recreation Area at about 6.31M annual visits.

Every National Park Service site in Nevada, mapped. Each glowing marker is one site, placed at its real coordinates and colored by type. Select a marker for its yearly visits and a link, or use the filters to show or hide a group. 4 of 7 units are mapped here; long-distance trails and units centered in another state are in the table below.
National Park Service sites in Nevada, mapped Interactive map of Nevada showing the location of 4 National Park Service sites, colored by type: national parks, monuments and memorials, historic sites, recreation areas and seashores, rivers, trails and parkways, and other sites. It includes the National Parks Great Basin National Park and Death Valley National Park. Each site is also listed with its yearly visits in the table below the map.

Marker positions are each unit's official NPS coordinates. State outline: U.S. Census cartographic boundary (public domain). Independent site, not affiliated with the National Park Service.

UnitDesignation5-yr avg visitsBusiest month
Lake Mead National Recreation Area National Recreation AreaLAKE 6,305,736 June
Death Valley National Park National ParkDEVA 1,227,133 March
Great Basin National Park National ParkGRBA 148,707 July
Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument National MonumentTUSK 46,431 February
California National Historic Trail National Historic TrailCALI
Old Spanish National Historic Trail National Historic TrailOLSP
Pony Express National Historic Trail National Historic TrailPOEX

Methodology

Unit list and per-unit visit counts come from the official NPS Visitor Use Statistics Data Package, 2025. The "5-year average visits" column is the mean of 2021-2025 Recreation Visits. Multi-state NPS units (Yellowstone, Death Valley, Great Smoky Mountains and others) are listed under every state they touch; the per-unit visit count is the unit's total, not a per-state share. Independent site, not affiliated with the National Park Service.

Independence

Independent site. Not affiliated with or endorsed by the National Park Service. Data comes from the official NPS Visitor Use Statistics Data Package, 2025; editorial analysis is ours. The NPS Arrowhead and other NPS marks are not used.

Last updated · 2026-05-19