Frequently Asked Questions on the Timed Entry System

Cars line the roadway at the Devils Garden Parking lot in Arches National Park on a clear, sunny day. In the background, orange and beige sandstone fins are visible.
Before the timed entry pilots, parking lots would overfill with vehicles parked along edges causing congestion and impeding emergency vehicle access to trailheads.

NPS/Veronica Verdin

Why is Arches National Park piloting a temporary timed entry system?

Between 2011 and 2021, visitation to Arches National Park grew over 73 percent, from just over 1 million to over 1.8 million visitors per year. As a result, the park has experienced issues of roadway congestion, facility overuse, and associated safety hazards; reduced quality and predictability of visitor access to the park; overcrowding at sites and along trails that diminishes visitor experience; competition for parking and visitor conflicts; and impacts to natural and cultural resources.

In 2022, after reviewing comments from members of the public, stakeholders, and elected officials, the NPS implemented a pilot timed entry system to proactively pace visitation into the park. Another pilot occured in 2023, with subtle changes based on feedback from visitors, stakeholders, and staff. Preliminary data and visitor survey results from both pilot programs demonstrate that timed entry reservations better distribute vehicles and visitors throughout the day, provide more reliable and enjoyable access to the park, and help protect Arches’ extraordinary landscape.

In 2023, the park solicited public feedback about visitor experiences under the 2022 and 2023 pilot programs. After another pilot program in 2024, the park drafted a Visitor Access and Experience Plan/EA reviewing possible long-term strategies for visitor access. More details on this effort are available on the project website.

What have we learned from past pilots?

The park monitored key data, including visitor experience quality, visitor awareness of the program, total ticket sales, daily and hourly vehicle arrivals, parking lot use, vehicles-at-one-time, entrance line length and vehicle processing times, and the number of temporary entrance gate closures during the pilot programs in 2022, 2023, and 2024. The park discussed three primary findings in its 2022 report, which were also observed in the 2023 and 2024 pilot seasons:

  • Visitor experience quality improved

  • Parking access improved

  • Vehicle processing times increased, but temporary closures were eliminated

 

More Frequently Asked Questions about Timed Entry at Arches

 

 
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Make Your Reservation

Information about when and how to make your reservation on Recreation.gov.

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Purchase Your Park Pass or Entrance Fee

Find a full list of qualifying passes and entrance fees here.

Last updated: December 19, 2024

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435 719-2299

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