Snow-capped mountain peaks rise behind red rock desert terrain and golden cliffs in southern Utah near Zion National Park, showcasing the dramatic landscape of the region.
National Recreation Area

Red Cliffs Recreation Area

A BLM canyon day-hike area 14 miles from St. George, with Jurassic dinosaur tracks, Ancestral Puebloan ruins, a spring-fed slot canyon, and critical Mojave Desert tortoise habitat.

(172)
$$$$Washington, UT

About

Red Cliffs Recreation Area sits in a narrow canyon cut by Quail Creek along the eastern edge of the Red Cliffs National Conservation Area, just off I-15 between St. George and Leeds. The recreation area is the developed, fee-access hub within a much larger 45,600-acre conservation area managed jointly by the BLM, Washington County, and several state and federal agencies. The whole system exists primarily to protect critical habitat for the threatened Mojave Desert tortoise, and the recreation area is the public-facing piece where trails, camping, and day-use converge.

The Landscape

The setting is Navajo Sandstone canyon country at about 3,220 feet elevation, with cottonwood and willow trees lining Quail Creek and red cliffs rising on both sides. Gambel's quail work the creek bottom. Canyon wrens echo off the walls. On a lucky day you might spot a Gila monster moving through the rocky margins.

The terrain changes character dramatically by season: wet and lush in early spring when snowmelt from the Pine Valley Mountains runs down Quail Creek, dry and shadeless by July, and mild again in fall.

Red Reef Trail

The marquee experience is the Red Reef Trail, which follows Quail Creek upstream from the campground into Cottonwood Canyon Wilderness. The first 0.75 miles is accessible to almost everyone and ends at a series of slickrock pools and a small cascade in the canyon. That section draws tens of thousands of visitors each spring.

Beyond the pools, the route climbs a sandstone wall using carved footholds, called Moki steps, with a fixed rope for balance. Past the Moki steps the canyon continues into terrain requiring Class 2 to Class 3 scrambling. The full trail runs 5.74 miles one-way into serious backcountry. Most visitors turn around at the pools or just above the Moki steps. The trail is closed to bikes from the campground upward, as it enters designated Wilderness almost immediately.

Other Trails

Three shorter trails round out the day-use area:

  • Silver Reef Trail and Red Reef East Trail pass over exposures of Jurassic-age Navajo Sandstone where dinosaur tracks are visible and identified with interpretive panels.

  • Anasazi Trail, about half a mile, leads to the Red Cliffs Archaeological Site: the ruins of an Ancestral Puebloan farming village occupied in the 10th century.

  • Orson B. Adams House, on the access road into the recreation area, is the most intact remaining structure from the 1860s pioneer settlement of Harrisburg.

Practical Information

Parking is the practical constraint at Red Cliffs. The day-use lot fills completely on weekends, holidays, and most days from March through May. Arriving before 9AM is the standard advice.

Vehicles over 11 feet 9 inches cannot pass through the two I-15 underpasses on the access road, so large rigs and trailers must use the White Reef Trailhead parking area instead.

Cell reception inside the canyon is essentially nonexistent; download the Recreation.gov app and offline maps before leaving the highway. Flash flooding is a real risk in Quail Creek's canyon sections — check the weather before entering any narrow stretch.

Camping and Fees

The 11-site campground sits under the same red cliffs, shaded by cottonwoods along the creek. All sites require advance reservations through Recreation.gov; no first-come-first-serve slots exist.

Camping fees: $15 per night plus a reservation service fee. Day-use fee: $5 per vehicle. America the Beautiful passes cover day-use.

What to See at Red Cliffs Recreation Area

Red Cliffs Recreation Area is the developed public access hub within the broader Red Cliffs National Conservation Area, situated where Quail Creek cuts through a Navajo Sandstone canyon at roughly 3,220 feet elevation. The marquee experience is the Red Reef Trail, which follows Quail Creek upstream through cottonwood-lined canyon into Cottonwood Canyon Wilderness — the first 0.75 miles reach a series of slickrock pools and a small cascade accessible to almost any visitor. Beyond the pools, carved footholds called Moki steps with a fixed rope allow passage to more technical terrain. Additional trails cover Jurassic-age dinosaur track exposures identified with interpretive panels, and the Anasazi Trail leads to ruins of an Ancestral Puebloan village from the 10th century. The campground sits beneath the red cliffs shaded by cottonwoods along the creek.

Visitor Tips

  • Cell reception in the canyon is essentially absent — download the Recreation.gov app, your reservation confirmation, and offline maps before leaving the highway, as the canyon cuts signal quickly.
  • The slickrock pools in the first 0.75 miles of the Red Reef Trail are the destination for most visitors and are accessible without any scrambling; the Moki steps section above the pools requires more care and is not appropriate for young children or those uncomfortable with exposure.
  • Flash flooding in Quail Creek's narrow sections can originate from storms that are not visible from the trailhead — check the weather forecast and watch for canyon conditions before entering tight passages.
  • Spring (March through May) is the peak visitation window when the creek is running and the cottonwood canopy is leafing; the parking lot fills earliest during this period, making an early arrival most important then.

Planning Your Visit

The recreation area is accessed just off I-15 between St. George and Leeds — the exit puts you onto a short access road with two underpasses that vehicles over 11 feet 9 inches cannot clear; large rigs and trailers must use the White Reef Trailhead instead. The parking lot fills completely on weekends, holidays, and most spring days — arriving before 9 a.m. is standard advice for a reliable spot. The campground has 11 sites, all requiring advance reservations through Recreation.gov. The trail into wilderness is closed to bikes almost immediately from the campground. Flash flooding is a real risk in the canyon sections; check conditions before entering any narrow stretch.

Park Amenities

Pet Friendly
Restrooms at Trailhead
Free Parking

Reviews (172)

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4.7

172 reviews

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Bill E Shears
Bill E Shears

a month ago

To think that I stood right next to where a dinosaur did was pretty cool. I'm glad we weren't there at the same time.

Ryan Hutchins
Ryan Hutchins

2 months ago

One of my all time favorite places to hike and explore!

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