The Best Easy Hikes in Zion National Park

Short trails, big sandstone, no death-march required.

The Watchman, a triangular sandstone peak rising above green foliage in Zion Canyon
The Watchman in Zion Canyon. Photo: NPS/Shane Carte

Zion is famous for the scary stuff (Angels Landing chains, wading The Narrows), but the truth is you can stand under 2,000-foot sandstone cliffs without earning it. The cream, pink, and red walls that soar over Zion Canyon look just as enormous from a flat paved path as they do from a cliff edge. Here are the short, genuinely easy hikes worth your time, with real distances so you can plan around tired legs and small kids.

The flattest wins: Riverside Walk and Pa'rus

If you only do one easy hike, make it the Riverside Walk. It's a paved 2.2-mile round trip that follows the Virgin River into the mouth of the canyon, with the walls closing in as you go. It ends where The Narrows begins, so you get the dramatic slot-canyon payoff with none of the wading (turn around when the pavement ends unless you came dressed to get wet).

The Pa'rus Trail is the other no-stress pick: paved, mostly flat, and the only trail in the canyon where bikes, strollers, and leashed dogs are all allowed. It runs along the river near the visitor center and is a good early-morning leg-stretcher before the shuttle lines build.

Short hikes with a real payoff

The Best Easy Hikes in Zion National Park
Photo: NPS/Jesse Nelson

Easy hikes away from the crowds

Most visitors never leave the main canyon, which means the Kolob Canyons section in the park's northwest corner stays quiet. The Timber Creek Overlook trail there is a short, easy walk to a big view, and a good option if the main shuttle scene feels like a theme park. The longer Taylor Creek Trail (toward the Double Arch Alcove) is more of a half-day outing but stays moderate, with stream crossings kids tend to love.

Logistics that make or break an easy day

A quick word on dogs

Bring the dog only if you're planning around it. Zion, like most national parks, bans pets from nearly every trail, including all of the canyon hikes above. The one exception is the Pa'rus Trail, where leashed dogs are welcome. Otherwise dogs are limited to roads, parking areas, and campgrounds. If hiking with your dog is the point of the trip, this isn't the park for it.

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