White Rim
100-mile loop around Island in the Sky. A bucket-list 4x4 or bike adventure....
View White Rim Road Permit permit details and availabilityPermitSnag checks Recreation.gov every 2-3 minutes. When a cancellation posts, we send an alert so you can book before the spot is gone.

One permit covers every overnight trip in Canyonlands: backpacking, 4WD, and mountain bike camping across Island in the Sky, The Needles, and The Maze.
“Two rivers cut Canyonlands into three separate worlds of rock, and one permit gets you a night in any of them.”
Track a specific zone— not the whole wilderness
Spring (March to May) and fall (September to November) have the best temperatures. Summer is dangerously hot and winter can bring snow and impassable roads.
Sign up at Recreation.gov if you don't have an account. Have your payment info ready.
Permits typically release on a rolling basis. Check the specific release time for your desired dates.
Log in a few minutes early. Have your dates, group size, and payment ready to go.
If your dates are sold out, people cancel all the time. Set up PermitSnag alerts to catch openings instantly.
Summer offers the most reliable conditions for most wilderness areas.
Fitness and endurance required
Climbing, scrambling, or specialized skills
Steep dropoffs and fall potential
Route finding and trail clarity
Difficulty of bailing out mid-route
Desert backpackers, 4WD drivers, and bikepackers who can carry their own water and handle remote, primitive conditions.
Backcountry navigation and desert travel skills. For White Rim and the Maze, real 4WD experience on primitive roads.
First-time desert campers, anyone without a water plan, and travelers expecting services or cell coverage in the backcountry.
A Canyonlands overnight backcountry permit is required for every night you spend in the backcountry, whether you are backpacking, driving a 4WD road, or bikepacking. The park covers 337,598 acres split by the Green and Colorado Rivers into three districts (Island in the Sky, The Needles, and The Maze/Orange Cliffs) that each have their own campsites and access roads.
All permits are booked on Recreation.gov as permit 4675315. There is no lottery. Availability is released in seasonal blocks (spring, summer, fall, and winter), and the most popular sites sell out fast when a block opens.
Canyonlands is Utah's largest national park at 337,598 acres, and the Colorado and Green Rivers split it into three districts that barely connect by road. The overnight backcountry permit is the single door into all of it, whether you are backpacking below the Island in the Sky mesa, driving the 100-mile White Rim Road, or navigating The Maze, one of the most remote places in the Lower 48.
The permit spans three districts, each a different trip. Island in the Sky sits on a high mesa between the rivers, home to the White Rim Road loop and steep backpacking routes down to the benches below. The Needles, in the southeast, has 60-plus miles of trail winding through banded sandstone spires and hidden canyons. The Maze, west of the rivers, is the least visited district in the park and rewards only self-sufficient parties who can handle rough roads, route-finding, and no quick way out.
Sites are grouped by district and by activity. There are 4WD and mountain bike vehicle camps along White Rim, in the Needles, and in the Maze/Orange Cliffs, plus backpacking zones in each district and a small number of packraft and river-linked sites.
After the trailhead crowds thin out, the silence is total. Red rock towers throw long shadows at sunset, the rivers murmur far below the rim, and the night sky here holds some of the darkest, most star-filled views in the country.
Required and recommended gear for Canyonlands Backcountry
Trailhead transportation options
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12,453 permits and 8,294 campsites secured by PermitSnag users
Reserve it on Recreation.gov as permit 4675315. Pick your district and site, choose your dates, and pay the $36 reservation fee plus $5 per person per night. There is no lottery. Availability opens in seasonal blocks, and popular sites go quickly.
A non-refundable $36 reservation fee plus a $5 per person per night permit fee. The per-night fee is refundable if you cancel 3 or more days before your trip. The park entrance fee is separate.
No. Canyonlands overnight backcountry permits are first-come, first-served reservations on Recreation.gov, not a lottery. Sites are released in seasonal blocks and can sell out within minutes of opening.
Every overnight backcountry trip in the park: backpacking, 4WD, and mountain bike camping across Island in the Sky (including White Rim Road), The Needles, and The Maze/Orange Cliffs. Each district has its own sites, so choose your district before you book.
As soon as the seasonal block for your trip dates opens on Recreation.gov. White Rim Road and the popular Needles sites are the hardest to get and often sell out the day they release. Advance reservations close 3 days before the trip start date.
Golden hour at Canyonlands Backcountry offers the best photography conditions with warm, directional light.
Early morning typically provides the clearest conditions and best light quality.
Weekdays and early mornings see fewer visitors for cleaner compositions.
Consider these alternatives if your preferred dates aren't available.
The 100-mile 4WD and mountain bike loop below the Island in the Sky mesa, booked on this same permit.
Vehicle or bikepacking trip rather than backpacking, and the reservable sites go the day they open.
Backpacking sites among the banded sandstone spires of the Needles district.
A single Needles zone rather than the whole park, and it is one of the harder sites to land.
Remote camping in the least visited district in the park, reached by long dirt roads.
True remoteness with no quick way out, for self-reliant parties only.
Nearby campgrounds to complete your Canyonlands Backcountry trip
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