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The first time I drove through the Zion-Mount Carmel Tunnel, my kids were half asleep in the backseat. Then we came out the other side, and my eight-year-old literally gasped. Red canyon walls towering a thousand feet straight up, the road dropping down in switchbacks toward the valley floor. Nobody was sleeping after that.
Zion National Park is one of those places that hits differently when you bring kids. They don’t care about the geology or the fact that these sandstone layers are 170 million years old. They care that the rocks are red, the river is cold, and there are lizards everywhere. And honestly? That’s enough.
I’ve taken my kids to Zion twice now — once in late September, once in April — and I have opinions about what’s worth doing and what to skip entirely. If you’re planning Zion National Park with kids, here’s everything I wish someone had told me before that first trip.

Not every trail in Zion works with kids. Some are flat and paved and perfect for strollers. Others involve chains bolted into cliff faces. Knowing which is which before you go saves a lot of frustration — and potentially a very bad day.
This is the one trail every family should do, full stop. It’s paved, it’s flat, it’s 2.2 miles round trip, and it ends at the mouth of the Narrows where you can wade right into the Virgin River. My kids spent 45 minutes throwing rocks into the water at the end and would have stayed longer if I’d let them.
Stroller-friendly the whole way. The path follows the river with canyon walls closing in around you, and by the time you reach the end, it genuinely feels like you’ve walked into another world. The pavement stops and the river begins — that’s the start of the Narrows hike, but you don’t need to go further. Just getting your feet wet at the trailhead is plenty for younger kids.
Take the shuttle to the Temple of Sinawava stop (the last stop on the route). On a busy day, the shuttle line can be 30-40 minutes by mid-morning, so aim for the first or second shuttle if you can.

If you have a toddler or a kid on a bike, this is your trail. It’s paved, completely flat, 3.5 miles round trip, and follows the Virgin River from the Visitor Center toward Canyon Junction. Bikes are actually allowed here, which is rare in Zion. Dogs too, if you’re traveling with one.
It’s not the most dramatic trail in the park — you won’t be hemmed in by canyon walls — but the views of the Watchman and other formations are gorgeous, and it’s the kind of walk where nobody complains. My youngest was three the first time and did the whole thing on a balance bike without a single meltdown. I call that a win.
Three pools, three difficulty levels. The Lower Emerald Pool is an easy 1.2-mile round trip — mostly paved, some steps, doable for kids 3 and up. You walk behind a small waterfall, which is the kind of thing that makes a four-year-old feel like an explorer.
The Middle Pool adds another half mile and some steeper terrain. Upper Emerald Pool is a proper hike — rocky, steep in places, and not great for little legs. I’d say the Lower Pool alone is worth it. If your kids are 6+ and reasonably good hikers, try for the Middle. Skip the Upper unless you’ve got teenagers.
Fair warning: the pools can be underwhelming in late summer when water levels drop. In spring or after rain, they’re actually impressive. Timing matters.

This one is a personal favorite. It’s only 1 mile round trip, but the payoff is ridiculous — you end up on a ledge overlooking the entire canyon with a view that stretches for miles. My kids thought it was the coolest thing in the park.
The trailhead is right at the east end of the Zion-Mount Carmel Tunnel, so you don’t need the shuttle. Parking is limited to maybe 15 spots, so get there early or late. The trail has some uneven surfaces, a few spots where kids need to watch their footing, and one section with a drop-off that made me hold my five-year-old’s hand tighter than usual. But it’s manageable for ages 4 and up if you stay close.
Shortest hike on this list — 0.4 miles round trip, paved, and you end up standing under a rock overhang where water seeps through the sandstone and literally drips on you. Kids absolutely love this. It’s like standing under the world’s most gentle shower.
The hike takes maybe 15 minutes each way, so it’s perfect for breaking up a shuttle ride or filling a gap between bigger hikes. Don’t skip it just because it’s short.

The Narrows is Zion’s signature hike — walking upstream through the Virgin River with thousand-foot canyon walls on either side. It’s jaw-dropping. But it’s also a real commitment with kids.
I’d say ages 8 and up for the bottom-up version, and only if your kid is a confident walker. You’re wading through knee-to-waist-deep water over slippery rocks for hours. The current can be strong, the water is cold (even in summer it’s around 55-65 degrees), and there’s no trail — the river IS the trail.
If you go, rent water shoes, neoprene socks, and a hiking stick from one of the outfitters in Springdale. Don’t try this in regular hiking boots. And check flash flood conditions before you head in — the park posts daily updates, and they close the Narrows when storms are in the forecast. This isn’t optional safety advice. Flash floods in slot canyons kill people.
Spring is usually a no-go. Snowmelt from the higher elevations makes the water too high and too cold. Late June through October is your window, but always check conditions the morning of.

I’m just going to say it plainly: do not take your kids on Angels Landing.
The last half mile involves holding onto chains bolted into a narrow rock spine with drop-offs of 1,000+ feet on both sides. Adults have died on this trail. It’s an incredible hike — I’ve done it without the kids and it was one of the most exhilarating things I’ve ever done — but it’s not a family activity. Period.
You also need a permit now (they started a lottery system), so it’s not something you can just spontaneously decide to do anyway. If you and your partner want to take turns doing it while the other stays with the kids, that’s a solid plan. But bringing children on the chains section is genuinely reckless, no matter how “adventurous” your family is.
From April through October (roughly — dates shift slightly each year), you can’t drive your own car into Zion Canyon. You have to take the free park shuttle. This sounds annoying, and honestly, the first morning it kind of is. But it actually works well once you understand it.
The shuttles run from the Visitor Center and stop at nine points along the canyon floor. Each major trailhead has a stop. During peak season, buses come every 7-10 minutes in the morning, less frequently in the afternoon.
Here’s what matters: The first shuttle leaves at 6am in summer, 7am in spring/fall. If you’re on that first or second bus, you’ll have the trails practically to yourself for an hour or two. By 9am, the Visitor Center parking lot is full and the shuttle line is long. I learned this the hard way on our first trip — showed up at 10am and waited 40 minutes just to board.
In winter (November through March), you can drive your own car in. Way fewer crowds, and you can park at trailheads directly. The trade-off is shorter days and some trails may be icy.

This is where most families stay, and for good reason. The town sits right at the south entrance of the park — some hotels are literally a 5-minute walk from the gate. There are restaurants, gear shops, grocery stores, and the town shuttle that drops you at the park entrance.
Prices aren’t cheap. Budget around $180-250/night for a decent family room in shoulder season, more in summer. The Cable Mountain Lodge and Cliffrose Springdale both have pools, which is a massive bonus when your kids have been hiking all day and you need them to burn off whatever energy is left.
The only lodging inside the park. Beautiful location, right in the canyon. But it books up months in advance — sometimes six months or more. If you can get a reservation, do it. Waking up inside the canyon, walking out your door to a trailhead — that’s hard to beat. But realistically, most families end up in Springdale, and that’s perfectly fine.
Watchman Campground takes reservations (book early — popular sites fill 6 months out). South Campground is first-come, first-served. Both are inside the park along the Virgin River, and both are great for families. Sites run about $30/night. Bring shade — the canyon gets hot and there’s not always tree cover.
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Park entrance (per vehicle, 7-day pass) | $35 |
| America the Beautiful annual pass | $80 |
| Narrows gear rental (shoes, socks, stick) | $25-50/person |
| Watchman Campground | ~$30/night |
| Springdale hotel (family room) | $180-300/night |
If you’re doing multiple national parks on one trip (and you should — Utah has five), the $80 annual pass pays for itself fast.
Two full days is the sweet spot. That gives you time for four or five trails, some river time, and a leisurely afternoon in Springdale getting ice cream. One day feels rushed. Three days is great if you’re combining with Bryce Canyon (more on that below) or if you want a rest day built in — which, with kids, is always smart.
March through May and September through November. That’s when you get comfortable hiking temperatures, smaller crowds, and wildflowers (spring) or changing cottonwoods (fall).
Summer — specifically June through August — is brutal. Temperatures regularly hit 100+ degrees in the canyon, which is miserable for adults and potentially dangerous for kids. If summer is your only option, start every hike at dawn, carry twice the water you think you need, and plan to be done by noon. Afternoons are for the hotel pool, not the trails.

Bryce Canyon National Park is about 90 minutes northeast of Zion, and it’s a completely different landscape. Instead of deep river canyons, you get thousands of orange and red rock spires called hoodoos rising up from the canyon floor. Kids go absolutely wild for them — they look like something out of a fantasy movie.
The Rim Trail at Bryce is paved and mostly flat, with viewpoints every few hundred yards. Sunset Point to Sunrise Point is about a mile and totally doable with younger kids. If your kids are 5+ and decent hikers, drop into the canyon on the Navajo Loop Trail — 1.3 miles, steep switchbacks, and you walk right between the hoodoos. It’s one of my favorite short hikes in any national park.
You can easily do Bryce as a day trip from Springdale. Leave by 7am, spend 4-5 hours at Bryce, and be back for a late lunch. Or break up the drive with a stop at Red Canyon on Highway 12 — there’s a short tunnel cut through red rock that kids love, and a few easy trails right off the road.

6:30am — Catch an early shuttle from Springdale (or drive in if it’s off-season). Head to the last stop: Temple of Sinawava.
7:00-9:00am — Hike Riverside Walk to the Gateway to the Narrows. Let the kids splash in the river. Take your time.
9:30am — Shuttle back to the Weeping Rock stop. Do the short hike up. Kids get dripped on. Everyone’s happy.
10:30am — Head to the Emerald Pools trailhead. Do the Lower Pool, maybe the Middle if everyone’s still moving.
12:30pm — Shuttle back to Springdale for lunch. Afternoon at the pool or exploring the town. There’s a decent pizza place and a few Mexican restaurants that kids won’t complain about.
7:00am — Drive the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway toward the east entrance. Stop at the Canyon Overlook trailhead right after the tunnel.
7:30-8:30am — Hike Canyon Overlook. Best views in the park for the least effort.
9:00am — Continue east out of the park and head north to Bryce Canyon (about 90 minutes).
10:30am-2:00pm — Explore Bryce. Rim Trail, Navajo Loop, lunch at the lodge or a packed picnic.
3:30pm — Back to Springdale. Done.
I already covered Angels Landing (just don’t), but a few other things to know:
The Narrows in spring — too cold, water too high, often closed entirely. Don’t plan your trip around it in March or April.
Observation Point via the East Mesa Trail — technically a good hike, but it’s 8 miles round trip and mostly exposed with no shade. That’s a long day for most kids and the payoff, while nice, isn’t dramatically better than Canyon Overlook.
Kolob Canyons — the northwest section of the park. Gorgeous, but out of the way and the trails are long. If you only have two days, spend them in the main canyon.
Zion-specific stuff beyond your normal travel gear:

The closest major airport is Las Vegas (LAS), about 2.5 hours southwest. The drive through the desert is flat and boring until suddenly it isn’t — the landscape shifts dramatically in the last 30 minutes as you approach the park.
Salt Lake City (SLC) is about 4.5 hours north. Better if you’re doing a Utah parks road trip hitting Bryce, Capitol Reef, Arches, and Canyonlands too.
St. George, Utah has a small regional airport (SGU) that’s only 45 minutes from the park, but flights are limited and often pricey. Worth checking though.
If you’re building a bigger Southwest trip, Zion pairs perfectly with the Grand Canyon (about 4.5 hours south). Both are jaw-dropping in totally different ways. And if you’re thinking about where Zion fits into a broader family vacation itinerary, it honestly works as a stop on almost any western US road trip.
Zion doesn’t need to be complicated. Pick two or three trails that match your kids’ ages, catch an early shuttle, bring way too many snacks, and let the canyon do the rest. My kids still talk about throwing rocks into the Virgin River, standing under the dripping water at Weeping Rock, and that first view coming out of the tunnel. Those are the things that stick.
It’s also one of the more affordable family vacations you can do — $35 gets you in, the trails are free, and if you camp, you’re looking at under $100 a day for the whole family. Not many places give you scenery like this at that price.
