The Best Time to Visit Death Valley
A month-by-month guide for families: heat, crowds, closures, and when to actually go.
Death Valley is a land of extremes, and the date on your calendar matters more here than almost anywhere else in the park system. Get the timing right and you'll have warm, sunny days and a desert that's genuinely comfortable to explore. Get it wrong and you'll be the family hiding in an air-conditioned car at 120°F. Here's how to land in the sweet spot.
The short answer: November through March
If you only remember one thing, remember this: visit between late October and early April. The Park Service is blunt about it: summer heat in Death Valley is record-breaking, and it starts early. By May the valley can already be scorching. The cool season is when low places like Badwater Basin (the lowest point in North America at 282 feet below sea level) and the dunes become walkable instead of dangerous.
The trade-off is that everyone else knows this too. Spring is the most popular time to visit, so the sweet-spot months are also the busiest.
Month by month
- November–December: Cool days, chilly nights, and thin crowds outside the holidays. Snow caps the high peaks while the valley floor stays mild, great for sunrise at Zabriskie Point and the drive up to Dantes View, a mile above the salt flats. One of the most underrated windows.
- January–February: The coolest stretch, with crisp days and the occasional rare rainstorm. Low-elevation wildflowers can start as early as mid-February in a good year. Quiet, beautiful, and bring a jacket for the mornings.
- March–April: Peak season. Warm, sunny, and the best odds of a wildflower display. Lower elevations bloom mid-February to mid-April, with higher elevations following into spring. Expect full parking lots at Badwater Basin and Furnace Creek, and book lodging well ahead.
- May: The shoulder that turns fast. Early May can still be pleasant; by late May the valley is often brutally hot. Plan any hiking for dawn and treat afternoons as car-and-AC time.
- June–August: Extreme heat, regularly among the hottest temperatures on Earth. Not recommended for families. Rangers warn against canyon and low-elevation hiking, and even short walks can be hazardous. If you must come, stay in your car for sightseeing and never hike after mid-morning.
- September: Still very hot, but the back half of the month begins to ease. Crowds are minimal.
- October: Autumn arrives in late October with warm-but-pleasant temperatures and clear skies. The heat breaks, the crowds haven't fully returned, and it's an excellent, often overlooked time to go.
Crowds, closures, and what's open when
The park itself is open every day, all year. What changes seasonally is which areas are safe and pleasant to use:
- Summer access: Many of the best low-elevation experiences (Twenty Mule Team Canyon, the Harmony Borax Works walk, Artists Drive, and the salt flats at Badwater Basin) are technically open in summer but miserable or unsafe in the heat. The cool season is when they shine.
- High-elevation spots: Places like the Wildrose area and the high peaks can hold snow into spring, so a winter visit may mean some upper roads are icy or closed. Check current conditions at the Furnace Creek Visitor Center on arrival.
- Holidays: Thanksgiving, Christmas week, and Presidents' Day weekend pack the campgrounds and lodges even in the otherwise-quiet cool months. If you want solitude, aim for a mid-week non-holiday date.
The kid factor
Death Valley is surprisingly great for families in the right season, but heat is the whole game with kids. In the cool months, the short, flat highlights do most of the work: walking out onto the salt at Badwater Basin, the easy loop at Harmony Borax Works, and the sunrise glow at Zabriskie Point. The Junior Ranger program gives kids a mission, and because this is one of the darkest skies in the country, an after-dinner stargazing session is an easy win.
What to skip with young kids: any summer hiking, and long canyon walks once afternoon temperatures climb. Carry far more water than feels reasonable (there's almost no shade out there) and treat the car as your reset button.
So when should you book?
For the best balance of weather and lighter crowds, target November, early December, or late October. For the wildflower gamble and the warmest sunny days, go in March and reserve lodging early. Avoid June through August with kids entirely. Whatever month you pick, plan the active stuff for the cool of the morning and let the desert run the schedule.
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