Head to head
Grand Teton vs Rocky Mountain: How to Choose
The short answer
Pick Grand Teton if you can only do one. The peaks rise straight off the valley floor for an instantly iconic skyline, and the mix of mountains, lakes, and wildlife in a compact area is hard to beat. The exception is the traveler prioritizing easy access from a major city and a classic high-altitude road trip: that person may prefer Rocky Mountain, which sits a short drive from Denver and centers on the spectacular Trail Ridge Road.
Pick Grand Teton National Park if
- You want the most dramatic mountain skyline of the two
- You want a compact park with peaks, lakes, and wildlife together
- You are pairing it with a Yellowstone trip to the north
Pick Rocky Mountain National Park if
- You want easy access, with Denver only a couple of hours away
- Driving the high-altitude Trail Ridge Road is a highlight for you
- You like alpine tundra, elk, and accessible high-country scenery
Side by side
| Grand Teton National Park | Rocky Mountain National Park | |
|---|---|---|
| Best time | July through August | July through September |
| Entrance fee | $35 per vehicle for 7 days, or $70 for a park annual pass. No timed-entry reservation is required. Entrance stations are cashless (card only). | $30 per vehicle for 1 day, $35 per vehicle for 7 days, $70 park annual pass. Late May to mid-October a timed-entry reservation (separate $2 Recreation.gov fee) is also required to enter during peak hours. |
| Size | 310k acres | 266k acres |
| Visitors | 3.6M / year | 4.2M / year |
| Nearest airport | JAC (Jackson Hole Airport), located inside the park, about a 20-minute drive to most trailheads | DEN (Denver International), about 2 hours to the Estes Park entrance |
Who wins on what
| Decision | Winner | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Best mountain scenery | Grand Teton National Park | The Tetons rise abruptly with no foothills, giving a sharper, more iconic skyline. |
| Easiest access | Rocky Mountain National Park | It sits a short drive from Denver, a major hub with cheap flights. |
| Best scenic drive | Rocky Mountain National Park | Trail Ridge Road climbs above 12,000 feet through alpine tundra. |
| Best wildlife | Grand Teton National Park | Moose, bears, and elk against the peaks; Yellowstone is right next door. |
| Fewer crowds | Either | Both are busy in summer; each rewards early starts and shoulder-season visits. |
| Best for a short visit | Grand Teton National Park | The headliners cluster in one valley, so a day or two captures them. |
| Best for first-timers | Grand Teton National Park | The skyline and compact layout make for a more striking introduction. |
Can you do both?
These parks are in different states and not close together, so most people pick one rather than combining them on a single trip. Grand Teton pairs naturally with Yellowstone to the north, while Rocky Mountain pairs with a Denver city visit.
Frequently asked questions
- Is Grand Teton or Rocky Mountain better?
- Grand Teton wins for the more dramatic mountain skyline and compact layout. Rocky Mountain wins for easy access from Denver and its high-altitude Trail Ridge Road.
- Which park is easier to get to?
- Rocky Mountain is easier to reach, sitting only a couple of hours from Denver's major airport. Grand Teton is more remote, usually accessed via Jackson Hole.
- Which is better for a first national park trip?
- Grand Teton makes a more striking first impression thanks to its abrupt skyline and compact mix of peaks, lakes, and wildlife. Both are excellent choices.
- Can I combine either with another park?
- Grand Teton pairs perfectly with Yellowstone to the north. Rocky Mountain pairs well with a Denver city trip rather than another major park.
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.