Here are just some of the parks you'll find: Acadia, Arches, Big Bend, Bryce Canyon, Crater Lake, Death Valley, Everglades, Glacier, Golden Gate, Grand Canyon, Grand Teton, Great Smokies, Joshua Tree, Mammoth Cave, Mount Rainier, Mount Rushmore, Olympic, Redwoods, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia and King Canyon, Shenandoah, Statue of Liberty, Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Zion.
Let a park ranger be your guide! The National Park Service App is the brand new official app for all 420+ national parks.
Things to Do: What do you want to do in a park—hike? Take a bus tour or scenic drive? Visit a museum? Join a ranger program? Become a junior ranger? Discover all the fun, entertaining, and educational activities parks have to offer.
Interactive Maps: Each park has a detailed map that includes points of interest, along with roads, trails, and other information to plan your trip.
Unlike other apps, NPS Mobile takes authoritative information from park rangers and combines it with a great suite of features.
Find interactive maps, tours of park places, on-the-ground accessibility information, and more.
With all of these parks and a brand new app, it will take some time to finish creating content for each park.
This one single app includes every one of the 420+ sites in the National Park System, no matter how big or small.
The app was created by National Park Service staff—people who know national parks—to help you make the most of your visit.
Share Your Visit: Tell your friends and family about the fun things you did by creating and sharing virtual postcards with scenes from the park.
It’s like having a ranger by your side to guide your trip, giving you suggestions for places to go, directions to get there, and things to do once you arrive.
If you don’t find what you’re looking for now, check back regularly as our rangers work to complete the experience for each of our parks.
Park Tours: What is there to see? Self-guided tours take you to interesting places in the park.
Accessibility: The app offers a fully accessible experience with tools to benefit visitors with accessibility needs, such as audio descriptions of exhibits along trails and roads and in visitor centers.