Tallulah Gorge State Park is designated one of the Seven Natural Wonders of Georgia and is a great place for camping near Atlanta. Tallulah Gorge is a 2-mile-long, 1000-foot-deep canyon of metamorphic rock, where the Tallulah River tumbles over six dramatic waterfalls. This unique ecosystem is also the home to several endangered plant species, including the persistent trillium. These natural features have drawn visitors to the gorge since the early 1800s, and with the construction of the Tallulah Falls Railway in 1882, it became Georgia’s first official tourist attraction. Now the gorge is a hotspot for outdoor activity, ranging from hiking, fishing and swimming, to more adventurous pursuits, such as rock climbing and whitewater paddling.
The best way to explore Tallulah Gorge is to camp at Tallulah Gorge State Park. Located 100 miles northeast of Atlanta, this 2700-acre park provides 50 tent and RV sites (two are ADA-accessible) on the rim of the raging river gorge. The park also has one group site, and three hike-in backcountry sites. Campsites in the park are fairly compact and close together, so don’t expect a lot of seclusion. Campground amenities include flush toilets, showers, laundry facilities and a dump station. There are also two playgrounds for the kids, picnic areas, an interpretive center, and access to a sandy beach on Tallulah Falls Lake.
The main draw to Tallulah Gorge is hiking down to Sliding Rock at the bottom of the gorge. The park only issues 100 permits per day for this hike in order to minimize impact and maintain the canyon’s natural character. These permits are given on a first-come, first-serve basis, and cannot be reserved in advance—so get yours early! Without a permit, there are many more trails to hike along the rim of the gorge, with each offering stunning viewpoints. Don’t miss the suspension bridge on the Hurricane Falls Trail, which provides a spectacular river view from 80 feet directly above the churning waterfall.
FUN FACT: Tallulah Gorge was used as a filming location for Marvel’s Infinity War. Eagle-eyed fans may recognize Hurricane Falls in the final battle in Wakanda.
Tips:
1-) Park to the interpretive center and take a map.
2-) You start from 1A on the map. Turn left and go to 1 if you can go to the inspiration point but it's a little bit hard. The highest point of the park is that maybe you can see the eagles.
3-)Turn back and go to 2 and 3 after that go down to the hurricane bridge. It's amazing. Go through the bridge
4-) After the bridge, turn left and down to the Hurricane waterfall. See the waterfall and turn back. Don't go through back to the bridge! Climb to the other side. To the south rim trail.
5-) After steps turn left and go to 8-9-10. Point 9 is the best view. You should go there.
6-) Turn back to 9-8-7-6 and go through the highway bridge and then 5-4-3-2-1A Finished.😊
Notes:
1-)For the best view there shouldn't be sunlight directly. The best times are cloudy days, beginning of the daylights or last period of the daylights.
2-) Take enough water, the North and the South rim are pretty easy but down and up to the bridge and the Hurricane waterfall is very hard.
3-)Before or after the tour go to the lakeside picnic area on the map and have a picnic on the tables.
4-)You can take a coffee and sit to rest in the 1882 Coffee shop which is close to the park. Very cozy place.
5-)Check water release days on the website. Hurricane waterfall will be closed these days but The bridge, the North and South rims will be open. If there is a water release you can see crazy kayaking and boating people.
This campsite was amazing! The trails were exhilirating. Only complaint was we were excited to see all these waterfall, but apparently you have to schedule this trip around their " water release dates " to view the waterfalls. We hikes all the strenuous trails to see waterfalls but we didn't see any. Only dry rocks where the waterfalls should have been. Other than that it was a wonderful place to camp for 3 days.
This place is amazing! There are quite a few walking trails that lead to overlooks to see different views of the gorge. There's also a massive set of stairs that go down to the bottom by the river. So if you plan on going down, be prepared to go back up over 1000 steps haha. But it's for sure worth the hike
The entrance fee to the park is $5 cash💰 as parking fee, no credit card is accepted. Tourists usually walk from the north rim of the interpretive center to the bottom of the valley, cross the suspension bridge, and then climb up from the south rim to take a loop, so-called Rim to Rim. The difficulty is that you have to go up and down 620 steps. I've seen people have difficult halfway, so there is a warning sign at the starting point marked it as strenuous . It’s actually not that hard as it sounds, for those who exercise regularly won’t have a problem.
Something unexpected happened today. Since I have been to this place many times, so I went down to the suspension bridge at the bottom of the valley directly. However, someone blocked the walk up stairs to the south rim. When I asked, I found out that now is the 10-day white water rafting season. The stairs at the southern rim are opened only to white water rafters, allowing them to carry their kayaks down the stairs to the starting point of the rapids. I was told that more than 290 people were rafting yesterday, so tourists could only go back the same way. After going back up, I still insisted on walking to the south rim to see these rafters. It looks like these enthusiasts is so happy that it feels like a rafters festival, some one even did it twice or three times today. According to some of them, the rapids level here is 3 to 4, and may reach level 5. Outlook 9 is best spot to look, I could clearly see how they entered the rapids, it is fun just watching them.
Tallulah Gorge was absolutely beautiful. We chose to come on a Sunday morning and had most of the park and trails to ourselves. It rained most of the weekend we visited so the falls were absolutely roaring. It took us about 2 hours (with an almost 3 year old) to hike the north rim trail down to the suspension bridge, back up to the south rim and then around the dam back up the north rim. Beautiful views but VERY many steps. Roughly 35 floor levels according to my fit bit. Wish we had the time and energy for the Hurricane Falls loop which was another 250 or so steps.
The interactive center was one of the most impressive I've seen for a state park, with a nice little gift shop we picked up a few items for memories.
10/10 experience, great state park.