2 Days in Yellowstone with Kids

A geyser-and-canyon plan that respects the long drives.

The brilliant blue, green, and orange rings of Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone
Grand Prismatic Spring, the park's largest hot spring. Photo: NPS/Jim Peaco

Two days is enough to see the greatest hits of Yellowstone, but only if you make peace with the driving. This is a park nearly 3,500 square miles wide, and the loop roads mean you'll spend real hours in the car between stops. Plan tight, start early, and you'll see geysers, a thousand-foot canyon, and probably a bison traffic jam or two.

Before you go: the real-world logistics

Yellowstone has five entrances spread across Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho, and they're far apart. It takes hours to drive between them. Pick one and stay close. The West Entrance (West Yellowstone, MT) is the most popular and lands you near the geyser basins. The North Entrance (Gardiner, MT) is the only one open to cars year-round and puts you near wildlife country.

Day 1: Geyser country

Spend your first day on the park's lower-left loop, where the hydrothermal features are concentrated. This is the Yellowstone people picture in their heads.

One note: this whole zone gets packed midday in summer. The earlier you arrive, the easier the parking and the better the photos.

2 Days in Yellowstone with Kids
Photo: NPS/Jim Peaco

Day 2: Canyon, wildlife, and terraces

Day two swings to the park's grander landscapes. Get up early again. The morning is when animals move and the lots are still open.

Making it work with kids

Two days means choosing. Don't try to hit every basin and every overlook. You'll spend the trip buckling and unbuckling car seats. Pick two or three anchors a day and let the bison jams be part of the adventure rather than a problem.

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