3 Days in Yosemite With Kids
A doable family itinerary
Yosemite is enormous, the crowds are real, and a tired kid at 2pm can undo a beautiful morning. The good news: you don't need to see everything. Three days is plenty to hit the valley's greatest hits, get up into the high country, and still leave time for the unplanned creek-wading that your kids will actually remember. Here's a plan that's paced for families: early starts, a slow midday, and short walks with a big payoff.
Before you go
- Check the reservation system. In peak season Yosemite often requires a timed-entry reservation to drive in. Confirm the current rules before your dates. It changes year to year.
- Stay in or near the valley. A room inside the park (or just outside in El Portal or Mariposa) saves you hours of driving. Book early; rooms go months ahead for summer.
- Use the free shuttle. Parking in the valley is a headache. Park once, ride the shuttle, save everyone's patience.
Day 1: Yosemite Valley, the easy classics
Start early; the valley is calmest and coolest before 9am.
- Cook's Meadow Loop: a flat one-mile loop with the postcard view of Half Dome and Yosemite Falls. Perfect first walk for little legs.
- Lower Yosemite Fall: a short paved path to the base of the tallest waterfall in North America. In spring and early summer you'll feel the spray; kids love it.
- Sentinel Bridge: five-minute stop, reflection of Half Dome in the Merced River. Great photo, no effort.
- Afternoon: slow down. Find a calm spot on the Merced near Sentinel Beach and let everyone wade. This is the "do nothing" block that makes the trip work.
Day 2: Up high, then a grove of giants
- Glacier Point (open roughly late spring through fall): drive up for one of the best views in the country: Half Dome at eye level, waterfalls across the valley. Almost no walking required, which is exactly what you want with kids.
- Tunnel View on the way: the wide-open valley shot you've seen a hundred times, better in person. A two-minute pull-off.
- Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias: walk among 2,000-year-old trees on the Big Trees Loop, an easy, mostly flat path. Kids feel genuinely small here in the best way.
Day 3: A real hike (the right size)
- Mist Trail to Vernal Fall footbridge: about 1.6 miles round trip to the bridge, with a roaring waterfall view. Go to the bridge and turn around; the steep granite steps beyond it are a lot for young kids. Start early. It gets hot and busy.
- Or, gentler: the Mirror Lake path, flat, shaded, with Half Dome rising straight out of the water. A calm finish if Day 2 wore everyone out.
- Last stop: the Valley Visitor Center and the village for a junior ranger badge, a small ceremony your kid will talk about more than the waterfalls.
A few hard-won tips
- Two big things a day, max. Yosemite tempts you to cram. Don't. The margin is where the trip happens.
- Carry more water and snacks than feels reasonable. Dry air and altitude sneak up on kids.
- Mornings are gold. By mid-afternoon the marquee spots are packed and the kids are done. Front-load the day.
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