Pine Springs Campground — Guadalupe Mountains National Park

  • $15.00 /night
  • (4.0)4 reviews

Contact Info

(915- (click-to-reveal)

Camping Style

Backpacker
Cabin
Other Camping
RV Camping
Tent Camping
Trailer Camping

About Campground

Overview

* **Before booking a reservation: It is your responsibility to review all (Site Details, Allowable Equipment, Allowable Vehicle/Driveway and Need to Know) for the individual campsite. Failing to do so may result in being prohibited from occupying the site upon your arrival. Refunds are not provided by the park.**

* The Pine Springs RV campground is not a traditional campground. Be aware, this is a paved parking lot. The area shares a popular and busy trailhead accessing four major trails. The area is frequently congested with day use hikers searching for available parking and with foot traffic from overflow parking areas.

* Pine Springs Campground is located near the Pine Springs Visitor Center, just off U.S. 62/180 and at an elevation of 5,730 feet.

* The location offers great hiker access to the Guadalupe Mountains National Park trail system.

* The campground is situated at the opening to the Pine Springs Canyon with spectacular views of the world’s best example of a fossil reef and of the vast Permian Basin to the east.

* The campground is open year-round and is busiest, March-May and September-November.

* High winds with over 50 mph gusts are common, especially during winter and spring.

Recreation

* The Pine Springs Trailhead includes access to many different types of hikes. Hikes to Guadalupe Peak or the Bowl are strenuous, 8-9 miles, and have 2500-3000 feet of elevation gain. Another strenuous hike is the Devil’s Hall Trail (4.2 miles round-trip, 500 feet elevation gain, ½ of the trail in a rocky, uneven wash which includes route-finding and boldering skills). For a more moderate hike consider the the Frijole/Foothills Trail. The El Capitan Trail offers excellent open views of the surrounding desert and close approaches to the cliff face of El Capitan. Because of its distance, lack of shade, some primitive route travel, and numerous elevation changes, this trail is best saved for cooler times of year and for people with experience in route-finding.

* The ruins of a Butterfield stage station, called the Pinery are next to the highway, and a short, paved nature trail connects the visitor center and the historic site.

* The Frijole Ranch & History Museum is 1.5 miles away. The grounds are always open, but the museum is staffed intermittently.

* Seven miles to the east on Hwy 62/180 is McKittrick Canyon. This area offers three trails, the McKittrick Canyon Nature Trail (0.9 miles loop), McKittrick Canyon Trail (4.8 miles round-trip to Pratt Cabin or 6.8 miles round-trip to the Grotto) and the Permian Reef Trail (8.4 miles round-trip, for serious geology buffs).

Facilities

* The campground features 35 sites total with 20 tent, 13 RV and 2 group sites available by reservation.

* Campsite occupancy is limited to 6 persons or 2 tents, per site. Group sites allow 10-20 persons per site.

* **No open fires (this includes charcoal) are permitted anywhere in the park.** Only stoves or lanterns using containerized fuel are permitted.

* Tent sites are hike-in only (38’ – 277’ from parking) and cannot accommodate RV parking due to the narrow access road. Each site offers a tent pad and picnic table.

* RV sites are paved but very basic, offering picnic tables at most sites.

* No shower facilities, hookups or dump stations.

* The park is remote. Fuel your vehicle and purchase supplies before heading to the park. The visitor center bookstore carries limited camping and hiking supplies.

Natural Features

* The Pine Springs Campground is in an area with small, scattered trees, shrubs, and grasses. Trees include gray oaks and alligator junipers, which cast partial shade at some sites. Texas madrones, bigtooth maples, chinquapin oaks, and ponderosa pines become more common along the canyon floor. Higher elevations include Douglas fir and hop-hornbeam. Shrubs include whitethorn acacia, Mexican orange, Apache plume, sumacs, and algerita. Desert-adapted plants also occur in this area, and include prickly pear cactus, New Mexico agave, sotols, and soaptree yuccas.

* Hunter Peak and cross-sectional views of the Capitan reef are visible from the campground. Roadside pullouts (one mile and four miles away) provide excellent views of El Capitan. Hiking into Pine Springs canyon or along the foothills reveals Guadalupe Peak. The Guadalupe Peak trail ascends to the highest point in Texas and offers excellent views of the surrounding desert.

* Birds commonly seen and/or heard around the campground can include Canyon towhees, turkey vultures, white-winged doves, common ravens, chipping sparrows, Say’s phoebes, common poorwills, and phainopeplas depending on the season.

* Night sky visibility is excellent and nearly pristine directly overhead, to the south, and the southwest. Nearby high ridges and peaks are situated to the west and north.

Nearby Attractions

**Carlsbad Caverns National Park:** In addition to a variety of cave tours, the national park also offers hiking trails and a scenic drive. Rattlesnake Springs and Slaughter Canyon, part of Carlsbad Caverns are nearer attractions for day use activities. Birding is excellent at Rattlesnake Springs.

**Lincoln National Forest:** The Guadalupe District of the Lincoln National Forest is located just over the state line, north of the national park. Road access is through New Mexico, north of White’s City, via Dark Canyon Road to NM SR 137 through Queen (also the way to the national park’s Dog Canyon). The forest provides for various camping, hiking, caving, hunting, and picnicking opportunities. Sitting Bull Falls is a nice waterfall and picnic area in the Lincoln National Forest. Five Point Vista is a glorious ridge road ride of the area, closer to Dog Canyon.

**Fort Davis National Historic Site and State Park:** Fort Davis is one of the best surviving examples of an Indian Wars' frontier military post in the Southwest. From 1854 to 1891, Fort Davis was strategically located to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the Trans-Pecos portion of the San Antonio-El Paso Road and on the Chihuahua Trail. This is located about 2.5 hours south of the park. A state park is located nearby with camping and a scenic drive. Also located in Fort Davis is McDonald Observatory with several programs available.

**White Sands National Park:** Rising from the heart of the Tularosa Basin is one of the world's great natural wonders - the glistening white sands of New Mexico. Great wave-like dunes of gypsum sand have engulfed 275 square miles of desert, creating the world's largest gypsum dunefield. White Sands National Park preserves a major portion of this unique dunefield, along with the plants and animals that live here.

**Hueco Tanks State Park & Historic Site: **Hueco Tanks State Park is located on the east side of El Paso, about an hour and a half from the Guadalupes. At Hueco Tanks, you can hike, rock climb, bird watch, study nature and history, picnic and stargaze. Visitors can take guided and self-guided tours to view rock imagery.

Charges & Cancellations

* Individual Site: A $10.00 service fee will apply if you modify your reservation or change your stay dates. Cancelling your reservation prior to 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time two nights before your stay will incur a $10.00 cancellation fee. Camping reservations cancelled the day before and day of arrival incur a $10 cancellation fee and forfeit the first night's use fee.

* If you need to cancel or modify your reservation after 12:00 a.m. Eastern Time on the day of arrival you must contact park staff by email at [email protected].

* Group Site: Customers who cancel a group overnight reservation less than 14 days before the arrival date will pay a $10.00 service fee & forfeit the first night's use fee.

Directions

The Pine Springs area of Guadalupe Mountains National Park is located on the north side of US Hwy 62/180 near Mile Post 130. From Interstate 10, take the Van Horn, Texas exit. Follow TX Hwy 54 (56 miles) north to the intersection of US Hwy 62/180. Turn east on 62/180 and travel (9 miles) to the park. From El Paso, TX, follow US Hwy 62/180 east for (110 miles) to the park. From Carlsbad, NM, take US Hwy 62/180 west for (55 miles) to the park.

Fees

Guadalupe Mountains National Park group campsite fees are $60.00 per night. Group site occupancy requires a minimum of 10 persons and is limited to a maximum of 20 persons per site.

Groups larger than 20 persons are required to obtain a Special Use Permit 3 weeks prior to your visit. To begin the SUP process, [click here.](https://www.nps.gov/gumo/planyourvisit/special-use-permits.htm)

Access

Drive-in
Walk-in

Accommodations

Group
RV Sites
Standard
Tent Sites

Features

Big Rig Friendly
Driveway Back-In
Driveway Pull Through
Picnic Table
Reservable
Sanitary Dump
Toilets
Trash

Amenities

Group Sites

Essentials

ADA Access
Alcohol Allowed
Drinking Water
Mobile Service
Pets Allowed

Location Map

More Details

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Reviews Ratings

Average ratings

4.0

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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 Reviews
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Craig Hammer

1 year ago
5/5

Great campground. A couple showers would be nice. Be ready for a ton of wind, and skunks raiding any food left out. The hike to peak is awesome, but you need to be in good shape a lot of elevation change.

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Mark Cline

1 year ago
5/5

Reservations required, great campground with gorgeous views. No loud neighbors on my trip like you get with so many campgrounds these days. Night sky isn't quite big bend, but it's beautiful. Easy access to 4 great trails, and 30 minutes from Carlsbad Caverns. Only drawback is lack of shade. Not an issue in cooler months but for summer there was no escape from the heat at my site, so just be sure to research campsite photos and get one of the sites with trees and shade. I'll definitely return.

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Derrick Perrin

11 months ago
5/5

Backcountry camping process is prohibitive to getting easy access to public land. You can't book it before driving all the way to the park. So if you are only coming to car camp you are fine. Park is beautiful.

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Zachary Roth

8 months ago
1/5

One of the smallest NP service campgrounds in one of the most vast areas. 12 spots were filled and we had to sleep illegally under picnic tables. Huge amount of room for expansion and the only campground for hours around is this one. Been to many NP’s and NM’s and this is the smallest campground relative to the space for expansion and the lack of other viable camping in the area. Either you get one of the 12 little spots here or you must stay in a hotel in El Paso or Carlsbad, or drive an extremely long scenic route to Dog Canyon which is very remote for a small primitive campground. Disappointing the park service or county hasn’t stepped up with expanding or opening additional camping options in the area.

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