Our site contains complete information on national parks and monuments in Wyoming, including national historic sites, recreation areas, memorials, and more.
You'll find complete details for each national park, as well as nearby trails, attractions, hotels, and guides. Explore national monument photo galleries, tourist information and plan your visit.
Additional Information
Be sure to check out our additional coverage of the following national parks, monuments, national recreation areas, historic sites, and more.


Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area is treasure waiting to be discovered. It boasts breathtaking scenery, countless varieties of wildlife, and abundant recreational opportunities, such as boating, fishing, camping, and hiking.
Devils Tower National Monument, located in top northeastern corner of Wyoming, is a strikingly unusual, cylindrical plug of basalt, which rises 1,267 feet above the meandering Belle Fourche River and surrounding prairie. Its massive rock facade draws thousands of climbers from around the globe on an annual basis.
Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area consists of big, beautiful Flaming Gorge Lake, enclosed by brightly colored canyon walls and set amidst hundreds of thousands of acres of forested hills. It is a wonderful setting in which to boat, fish, hike, mountain bike or just soak in the beauty.
Grand Teton National Park is one of the most iconic natural places in the entire United States, its peaks inspiring countless works of art and drawing over a million visitors per year. The Teton Range of Wyoming, the youngest and perhaps the most dramatic stand of mountains in the entire Rocky Mountains, juts straight out of the Jackson Hole Valley, rises over 7000 feet and tops out at an impressive 13772 atop the Grand Teton itself.
Yellowstone National Park, a region once rumored to be "the place where hell bubbles up", is one of the Earth's greatest natural wonders, a mountainous land parked atop one of the world's largest active volcanoes. Yellowstone is best known for its bubbling calderas and other geothermal wonders, peculiarly framed by thickly forested mountains and high alpine lakes.