Head to head
Death Valley vs Grand Canyon: How to Choose
The short answer
Pick the Grand Canyon if you can only do one. It delivers the single most overwhelming view in the park system with no hiking required, making it the easiest bucket-list payoff anywhere. The exception is the traveler chasing extreme, otherworldly scale who is comfortable with remoteness: that person should choose Death Valley, where salt flats, dunes, and below-sea-level basins feel like another planet.
Pick Death Valley National Park if
- You want extreme, otherworldly landscapes at vast scale
- Salt flats, dunes, and below-sea-level basins are the goal
- You are comfortable with a remote park and long drives
Pick Grand Canyon National Park if
- Seeing the most famous overlook on earth is the goal
- You want a world-class view that needs no hiking
- You are building a classic Southwest bucket list
Side by side
| Death Valley National Park | Grand Canyon National Park | |
|---|---|---|
| Best time | Late fall through early spring (November to March), with a March-April wildflower spike in good years | Summer (June through August), plus a strong spring and fall shoulder |
| Entrance fee | $30 per vehicle, valid for 7 days ($25 motorcycle, $15 per person on foot or bike). No timed-entry reservation. Fees are cashless. An America the Beautiful annual pass also covers entry. | $35 per private vehicle for 7 days ($30 motorcycle, $20 per person on foot or bike). No timed-entry reservation required. As of January 1, 2026, non-U.S.-resident visitors pay an added surcharge. Cards only, no cash. |
| Size | 3399k acres | 1218k acres |
| Visitors | 1.4M / year | 4.9M / year |
| Nearest airport | Harry Reid International Airport (LAS) in Las Vegas, about 120 miles and 2 to 2.5 hours by car to Furnace Creek | PHX (Phoenix Sky Harbor), about 3.5 hours by car to the South Rim; Flagstaff (FLG) is closer at about 1.5 hours |
Who wins on what
| Decision | Winner | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Best for first-timers | Grand Canyon National Park | The South Rim view is the most iconic introduction to the park system. |
| Most extreme scenery | Death Valley National Park | Badwater Basin, salt flats, and dunes deliver true otherworldly scale. |
| Best view with no effort | Grand Canyon National Park | World-class overlooks sit steps from the parking areas along the rim. |
| Best night skies | Either | Both are designated dark-sky parks with superb stargazing. |
| Best in winter | Death Valley National Park | Winter is the only comfortable season for its punishing summer heat. |
| Grandest single view | Grand Canyon National Park | Nothing matches the sheer size and depth seen from the rim. |
| Best for solitude | Death Valley National Park | Its vast scale and remoteness make true quiet far easier to find. |
Can you do both?
These parks are several hours apart across the desert Southwest, so combining them means a road trip rather than a quick pairing. Visit Death Valley in the cooler months; it is dangerous in summer, when it records some of the highest temperatures on earth. The Grand Canyon's South Rim is comfortable year round, though winter brings snow.
Frequently asked questions
- Is Death Valley or the Grand Canyon better?
- The Grand Canyon wins for a first visit as the most iconic overlook on earth, viewable with no hiking. Death Valley wins if you want extreme, otherworldly desert and do not mind remoteness.
- When is the best time to visit each park?
- Visit Death Valley in the cooler months from late fall through early spring; it is dangerous in summer. The Grand Canyon's South Rim is comfortable year round, with snow possible in winter.
- Which park is easier to reach?
- The Grand Canyon's South Rim has more developed access and lodging. Death Valley is remote, with long drives to and within the park.
- Which has better stargazing?
- Both are designated dark-sky parks with outstanding night skies, so neither has a clear edge. Death Valley's vast openness makes for especially dramatic stargazing.
Plan your visit
Whichever park wins for you, here is the gear keyed to these conditions, the tools to size your trip, and related guides.
What to pack
Plan with our tools
Planning either trip? Each park guide has when-to-go, what-to-pack, and camping reservation details. Browse the full national parks index.