The Best Time to Visit Joshua Tree

A month-by-month guide to crowds, weather, and the desert's sweet spots.

Joshua trees silhouetted against a pink and purple sunset sky in the open desert
Quail Springs area at sunset. Photo: NPS / Emily Hassell

Joshua Tree is where the Mojave and Colorado deserts meet, and the desert sets the rules. The difference between a great trip and a miserable one usually comes down to the calendar, not the itinerary. Here's when to go, when to think twice, and what each month actually feels like on the ground.

The short answer: spring and fall

If you only remember one thing, remember this: aim for mid-October through November, or March through April. The park itself says it best: visitation peaks during spring wildflower season and the heat of summer thins the crowds. Spring and fall give you average highs near 85°F and lows around 50°F, which is about as pleasant as the desert gets.

Those same shoulder seasons are also when everyone else shows up. You trade perfect weather for full campgrounds and a line at the West Entrance. It's a fair trade, but plan for it.

Month by month

The Best Time to Visit Joshua Tree
Photo: NPS/Brad Sutton

Closures and things that catch people off guard

Joshua Tree is open every day of the year, all day. There's no seasonal road shutdown to plan around. The real constraints are subtler:

Don't sleep on the night sky

Whatever month you choose, build in at least one night. Joshua Tree has some of the darkest skies in Southern California, and stargazing here is a headline event, not an afterthought. Winter brings the crispest, clearest views; summer nights are warm enough that kids will happily stay up. Check the moon phase. A new moon weekend turns the Milky Way into the main attraction.

So when should you go?

For most families, late October or early November is the pick: warm days, cool nights, and crowds that haven't fully landed. If you want wildflowers and don't mind the company, go in late March. Want the park nearly to yourself? Bundle up and come in January. The only window to approach with real caution is July and August. It's possible, but only if you're disciplined about heat and willing to flip your day upside down.

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