in the last week
Don’t miss this kitty gem. No one here. Easy to walk the river and just see nature
Gallery photos coming soon
A BLM canyon campground and day-use area cut through the Virgin River Gorge on I-15, with river access, desert wilderness trails, and the northernmost Joshua Tree stands in the American West.
The Virgin River Canyon Recreation Area sits in the floor of the Virgin River Gorge, a deep slash of sandstone and limestone in northwestern Arizona that most people see only through a car window on I-15. The gorge connects the edge of the Colorado Plateau to the Mojave Desert, and the recreation area sits right at that seam, the geology changes noticeably as you walk, and the Joshua trees here represent the northernmost significant population in North America.
Geologically, the gorge mimics a smaller Grand Canyon: many of the same formations appear in both places, cut by a river that drops 70 feet per mile, ten times steeper than the Colorado River through the canyon it carved.
Day use costs $2 per vehicle, making this one of the most affordable canyon stops in the region. America the Beautiful pass holders get in free.
The site is unstaffed, so pay at the self-pay kiosk or via the recreation.gov Scan and Pay app. Download it before you arrive, because cell coverage inside the gorge is thin (spotty Verizon and T-Mobile, no AT&T at all).
From the day-use area, the Canyon Overlook Trail gives a quick read on the gorge. It is paved and ADA-accessible, starts at the fee kiosk, and leads to an interpretive viewpoint with a compass display.
The River Trail, accessed from the lower parking loop, drops down to the Virgin River itself. No technical demands, and the river makes it worth the short walk.
The best hike in the recreation area proper is the Sullivan Canyon Trail. It starts near campsite 92 on the lower loop, requires a river crossing (knee-deep in winter at typical flows of 120–140 CFS, deeper after rain), and reaches the mouth of Sullivan Canyon in about 2 miles. The full canyon runs 15 miles one-way to the Mount Bangs ridgeline in the Paiute Wilderness, but most visitors turn around at the canyon mouth.
Across the interstate, the Cedar Pocket Wash Trailhead accesses the Narrows hike — 1.4 miles down a steep path to a limestone slot canyon punched through a geologic fold, with a Joshua Tree forest on the approach. Greyhaven Pinnacle, at 1.8 miles from the I-15 Trailhead, is an exposed scramble to a limestone summit with full-gorge views.
The campground has 108 sites in two loops:
Upper Loop: 14-night stay limit; 25 reservable sites bookable on recreation.gov; rest are first-come-first-serve, paid by QR scan at the kiosk
Lower Loop: Single-night stays only, all first-come-first-serve
All sites have paved access, picnic tables, grills and fire pits, and potable water. Twelve sites include shade ramadas. Eight sites are ADA-compliant. There are no electrical hookups and no dump station. Flush toilets are available in both loops, with ADA-accessible facilities throughout.
Summer temperatures routinely top 100°F in the gorge, running about 5°F hotter than St. George. Spring and fall are the practical windows for day hiking, especially anything requiring river crossings. Winter is mild and genuinely pleasant, with occasional strong winds that the gorge walls can amplify.
The campground draws regulars making the Las Vegas–Salt Lake City run on I-15, but once you walk away from the road, you notice the highway noise disappear into the canyon. Bighorn sheep have been spotted in the area; the river supports several endemic and sensitive fish species including woundfin, Virgin River chub, and Virgin spinedace.
Virgin River Canyon Recreation Area sits in the floor of the Virgin River Gorge, a deep cut through northwestern Arizona that most travelers see only through a car window on I-15. The gorge marks the seam between the Colorado Plateau and the Mojave Desert, and the Joshua tree stands here represent the northernmost significant population in North America. Geologically, the canyon shares many formations with larger canyons to the northeast, cut by a river that drops roughly ten times more steeply per mile than the Colorado. Day-use trails include a paved, ADA-accessible overlook route starting at the parking area, a River Trail that drops from the lower parking loop to the Virgin River itself, and the Sullivan Canyon Trail — the most substantial hike in the area — which starts near campsite 92, requires a river crossing, and reaches the mouth of Sullivan Canyon in about 2 miles. Across the interstate, the Cedar Pocket Wash Trailhead accesses a limestone slot canyon and Joshua tree terrain.
The recreation area is accessed from I-15 between St. George and Las Vegas, making it convenient for travelers on that corridor. The site is self-service — download the Recreation.gov Scan and Pay app before arriving, as cell coverage inside the gorge is thin. The campground has 108 sites across two loops with different stay limits and reservation rules; upper loop sites can be reserved on Recreation.gov, while lower loop sites are first-come-first-serve single-night stays. All sites have paved access, tables, grills, and potable water; there are no electrical hookups and no dump station, but flush toilets are available throughout. Summer temperatures in the gorge routinely exceed those in St. George — spring and fall are the practical windows for extended hiking, particularly anything requiring the river crossing into Sullivan Canyon.
667 reviews
in the last week
Don’t miss this kitty gem. No one here. Easy to walk the river and just see nature
a week ago
I stopped he on my way to Bryce Canyon. $2 to get in. I hiked down to the river and cooled off my feet. I really want to come back here and camp for a night. It would be an easy way to break up a long drive.
3 weeks ago
4 weeks ago
Bare bones camping. Bathrooms (they were filthy beyond imagination), charcoal grills, and a gazebo. Hike down to the stream. Beautiful view. Bats keep the insects down.
a month ago
Always a great stop for a dog pee break... and weeds legal... 👍