Selected states and territories
This tile map is a planning view rather than a turn-by-turn geography layer. Each tile shows how many matching parks belong to that place.
Generate a planning-friendly map view of the current US national parks system. Narrow by state, region, or trip style, then copy a clean park list, save a shareable link, or print a checklist for the road.
All filters work together. The map highlights states and territories that match your current settings, and the checklist is capped by the maximum result count you choose.
Examples: Utah, desert, Glacier.
Useful when you want a Pacific, Alaska, or Southeast-only view.
Multi-state parks appear under every matching place.
Trip style filters use descriptive tags, not official NPS categories.
Sorting affects both the list and the copied checklist output.
Use 1 to 63. The page keeps the full match count even when the visible list is capped.
This tile map is a planning view rather than a turn-by-turn geography layer. Each tile shows how many matching parks belong to that place.
Matching parks appear here.
Park conditions, reservations, seasonal roads, wildfire impacts, ferry service, and timed-entry rules can change quickly. Use this page to narrow options, then confirm the latest official access details before booking travel.
The page keeps a current client-side park dataset and filters it in your browser only. Search matches park names, states and territories, regions, and descriptive tags such as desert, water, or remote.
The map groups results by state or territory and shows a count for each highlighted tile. Multi-state parks, such as Yellowstone and Great Smoky Mountains, count in every matching place so the map reflects where trip planning decisions actually happen.
The checklist output is sorted by your chosen rule and capped by your maximum result count. Share links save your filters in the page URL, and the copy action exports a plain-text planning list that works well in notes apps, email drafts, and printouts.