Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping

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There is no specific street address for the park.
Top 2% in CAFall
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Quick Facts

-194 ft

Price

$10/night

Booking

Reservable

Sites

Varies

Season

Year-round

Cell

Unknown

Pets

Check Policy

Get Directions

Campground Map

There is no specific street address for the park.

Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping

There is no specific street address for the park.

Nearby places
Death Valley Junction, CA
Beatty, NV
Shoshone, CA
Olancha, CA
Lone Pine, CA
Trona, CA

Weather at Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping



About Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping





Planning your trip?Check out our camping packing checklist



Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping
$10.00 - $10.00 / night
Campsite Fees
Roadside Primitive Camping: $10.00. Plus Recreation.gov reservation transaction fee ($8 online / $9 phone / $3 in person).
No paid fee categories listed.

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Recreation Dot Gov
Provider
(760) 786-3200DEVA_backcountry_permits@nps.gov

Go if

High-clearance rigs (4WD strongly advised) in October or November get the full payoff here: passable roads, temps that allow actual hiking, thin crowds, and night skies that are genuinely hard to find this close to Southern California.

Skip if

No potable water anywhere on-site, and help can be hours away. If you're not prepared to carry everything in and out, including all water for your stay, this place will punish you fast.


Campgrounds
Death Valley National Park
Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping
C+

Camper Report Card

How campers graded it

Rated higher than 35% of graded campgrounds

Graded on what 74 campers actually wrote - graded on 14 things that make or break a trip. Each topic is graded against every other campground on it - A is among the best, C about average. No star ratings.

Strengths

  • Grade A-.Crowds & noise
  • Grade A-.Getting there
  • Grade A-.Belonging

Watch-outs

  • Grade D.Safety
  • Grade D.Booking
  • Grade C-.Things to do

Every grade - tap to see what campers said

Each topic is graded against every other campground on it; a topic campers liked never grades below C−. ± shows the 95% confidence range from the sample size.

From Recreation.gov

Official information for Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping from the federal Recreation.gov facility record. View official page →

Overview

PLEASE BE AWARE:

  • These are primitive sites that do not offer water, electricity, toilet access, or any amenities. 

  • Most primitive roadside campsites require a high clearance vehicle, and 4-wheel drive is highly encouraged. Road conditions can change quickly. High clearance vehicles are defined as a SUV or truck with at least 15 inch tire rims AND at least 8 inches of ground clearance from the lowest point of the frame, body, or suspension. 

Despite its morbid name, a great diversity of life survives in Death Valley! In this below-sea-level basin, steady drought and record summer heat make Death Valley a land of extremes. Yet, each extreme has a striking contrast. Towering peaks are frosted with winter snow. Rare rainstorms bring vast fields of wildflowers. Lush oases harbor tiny fish and refuge for wildlife and humans. Death Valley has sunk below sea level through geologic processes over time. It lies within the Mojave Desert and is the hottest, driest and lowest location in North America. Despite its extreme climate, the park boasts a diversity of ecosystems, including colorful badlands, snow-covered peaks, desolate sand dunes, rugged canyons and flat, dry basins called playas.  

Backcountry Roadside camping in Death Valley provides a primitive backcountry experience in the park's premier wilderness. All of these designated sites are located in remote locations and campers must be self-sufficient. Visit the park's Backcountry Camping page for more information.  

Recreation

There are over 3.4 million acres of Death Valley to explore. The popular main attractions are accessible by paved roads and more remote areas of the park will require high clearance, 4-wheel drive. Please visit the park's website for helpful tips when planning your trip.

Facilities

Backcountry Roadside Campsites: Primitive roadside camping with your vehicle in designated campsites along rugged backcountry dirt roads.

  • These are primitive, roadside campsites which require extra trip planning. Please take the time to plan and carefully prepare your itinerary.
  • Roadside campsites are intended for high clearance vehicles only. Trailers, RVs and passenger vehicles will not be able to access most of these campsites. High clearance vehicles are defined as a SUV or truck, with at least 15 inch tire rims, and at least 8 inches of ground clearance, as measured from the lowest point of the vehicle (frame, suspension, body, differential). 

Natural Features

Death Valley National Park contains the largest wilderness in the contiguous United States (over 3,190,400 acres or roughly 93% of the entire National Park!). Nearly a thousand miles of paved and dirt roads intersect the wilderness, providing ready access to all but the most remote locations. 

Backcountry travel in Death Valley National Park can be challenging, but the opportunities for experiencing solitude, sweeping vistas, dark night skies, and awesome geology abound within the three million acres of designated wilderness in the park. There are few established trails in the park, but hikers can follow canyon bottoms, open desert washes, alluvial fans, and abandoned dirt roads to get around. 

Contact Info

This location is unstaffed. To speak with our main office for general information, please call: (760) 786-3200.

Nearby Attractions

Charges & Cancellations

Changes/Modifications

  • Changes may be made prior to the day the reservation begins.
  • If a customer wants to switch dates that are entirely outside of the original reservation dates, there is a $10 change fee.
  • There is no change fee if a customer extends or shortens a reservation, as long as the change includes dates from the original reservation. 
  • If a reservation is made that includes dates beyond the maximum booking window, that reservation cannot be changed until 18 days have passed from the original booking date.

Cancellations

  • Customers may cancel their reservation prior to day of arrival both on-line and through the call center. A $10 cancellation fee will be withheld from any refund due back the customer. Depending on when you cancel in relation to your arrival day, it may be considered a late cancellation (see below).

Late Cancellations or Cancellations within the Cut-off Window

  • A customer who cancels a reservation the day before or on the day of arrival will have a $10.00 cancellation fee withheld from their refund AND will forfeit the first night's use fee (not to exceed the total paid for the original reservation). Cancellations for a one-night reservation will forfeit the entire amount paid and will not be subject to an additional service fee.

Review Rules and Reservation Policies for additional details about changes and cancellations. 

Directions

<p><strong>Note:</strong> Do not exclusively rely on GPS navigation while travelling in Death Valley National Park. Travelers should always carry up-to-date road maps and be aware that there is no cell phone service along most park roads. Always travel prepared to self-rescue as help may be hours away. </p> <p>There is no specific street address for the park. </p> <ul> <li>Furnace Creek Visitor Center coordinates: 36.46171, -116.86682</li> <li>Stovepipe Wells Ranger Station coordinates: 36.608048, -117.144504 </li> </ul> <p><strong>Paved Entrances</strong></p> <p><strong>East Side:</strong></p> <ul> <li>CA 190 from Death Valley Junction, CA</li> <li>SR 374 from Beatty, NV</li> <li>CA 178 from Shoshone, CA</li> </ul> <p><strong>West Side:</strong></p> <ul> <li>CA 190 from Olancha, CA (SR 136 from Lone Pine, CA)</li> <li>SR 178 (Panamint Valley Rd) from Trona, CA</li> </ul> <p><strong>Cottonwood – Marble Canyon Rd</strong></p> <p>From CA-190 enter Stovepipe Wells Campground. Turn left on the Cottonwood Marble Road marked by a sign for the airport. Check conditions prior to travel.</p>

About Death Valley National Park

Context for the broader area surrounding Death Valley Backcountry Roadside Camping, sourced from the federal Recreation.gov rec-area record.

In this below-sea-level basin, steady drought and record summer heat make Death Valley a land of extremes. Yet, each extreme has a striking contrast. Towering peaks are frosted with winter snow. Rare rainstorms bring vast fields of wildflowers. Lush oases harbor tiny fish and refuge for wildlife and humans. Despite its morbid name, a great diversity of life thrives in Death Valley.

Directions

There are multiple entrances to the park. Click below to learn the best ways to travel to Death Valley.