Cathedral Valley Campground — Capitol Reef National Park

  • $0.00 /night
  • (4.8)5 reviews

Contact Info

(435- (click-to-reveal)

Camping Style

Backpacker
Cabin
Other Camping
RV Camping
Tent Camping
Trailer Camping

About Campground

The Cathedral Valley Campground is located approximately halfway on the Cathedral Valley Loop Road which traverses Capitol Reef's Cathedral District. To access this campground, high clearance four-wheel drive is usually necessary. Check current road conditions by calling 435-425-3791. Press #1 for information, and then #4 for road conditions.

About 36 miles (57.9 km) from the visitor center, this primitive, no-fee campground has six (6) sites, each with a picnic table and fire grate. There is a pit toilet, but no water available. The campground is open year-round, but could be inaccessible due to weather. Visitors should check road conditions with the Capitol Reef Visitor Center (or call the information line) prior to planning an overnight stay. The campground is at approximately 7,000 feet (2,133 m) in elevation, in the Pinyon/Juniper-clad foothills of Thousand Lake Mountain. No reservations; first-come, first-served.

Directions

The campground is located approximately halfway on the Cathedral Valley Loop Road. About 36 miles (57.9 km) from the visitor center. The roads to access the campground are unpaved and typically high clearance two wheel drive. Four wheel drive can be needed depending on conditions. Call 435-425-3791 and follow the prompts for current road conditions.

Access

Drive-in
Walk-in

Accommodations

RV Sites
Standard
Tent Sites

Features

Free
Picnic Table
Toilets

Essentials

ADA Access
Alcohol Allowed
Fires Allowed
Pets Allowed

Location Map

More Details

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Reviews Ratings

Average ratings

4.8

5 Reviews
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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 Reviews
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ling Chang

1 year ago
5/5

The Cathedral Valley road is rugged. It is best to drive a four-wheel drive. The scenery along the way is beautiful and natural. There is only silence in the wilderness. You will feel far away from the hustle and bustle and find yourself.

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deathraydave

4 years ago
5/5

Love this campsite. Gets very cold since it’s 7400 feet up. Pit toilet also. Need a 4x4 to get there. Switchbacks one way or river crossing the other way

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Celeste Perrin

3 years ago
4/5

So secluded and amazing. We spent two nights here at the end of April, definitely got into the 20s/30s at night so be prepared. We took the Hartnet road north from hwy 24 and crossed the river Ford. Our Subaru Forester did fine but a 4wd vehicle is definitely needed. The dirt road is long so be prepared for about an hour to get there from 24. The Polk road access is closed during winter so call the park hotline ahead of time for road conditions.

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Parker

5 years ago
5/5

You need good clearance and preferably 4 wheel drive to get here, but wow it's worth it. Beautiful views, quiet, clean campsite, and great hikes nearby. There are places for hammocks, but you may need to wander further to find one depending on the site. Plenty of space for tents.

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Utahtravels

3 years ago
5/5

Make sure you take the Hartnett road ( if you have high clearance, you have to cross the Fremont River on that route and need 4x4. Water very high this weekend..) The Cathedral Valley road was easy and most cars can get you there without AWD or 4x4.

I made some mistakes of not checking all my plan details before resulted in wasting a day or so, so hopefully I can help you avoid that!

I trusted Google maps too much and it took me to the route on the far west side ( by Fremont and loa) which altered my route and ended up making me drive 2-3 hours more than needed. The access route it takes you to from Salt Lake is the hardest route to get up and is closed currently. It's quickest from salt lake to go through price then get off the hanksville exit , drive through hanksville and in about 15-20 minutes while driving east towards Torrey get off the cainville wash road and connect to the cathedral road.

Camping is available all over the outside boundaries of the park which is definitely better to stay before the sun tower and moon tower (if those are your main goals of places to see which is for most.)

I made the mistake of getting their after dark and going all the way past the towers to the camping area to the only designated "campground" that only held 8 people and was 60-90 minutes to drive through rough washboard dirt roads and climbing a rocky hill.

There was Nothing more special about the campground that is any different than finding your own site before the park. It's a good place if you intend to visit the overlook area on the far west side of cathedral Valley but if not find your own spot.

No water sources, or trash bins.

PACK IT IN, PACK IT OUT, PUT OUT YOUR FIRE 110% AND LEAVE NO TRACE!

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