The Best Time to Visit Zion
A month-by-month guide to crowds, weather, and the canyon's quiet windows.
Zion is one of those parks where the cliffs of cream, pink, and red genuinely live up to the brochure. The catch is that everyone else knows it too. When you go matters more here than at almost any other national park, because the season decides your crowds, your weather, and whether you can even walk up the river.
The short version
The sweet spots are spring (April to May) and fall (late September to October). The weather is mild, the cottonwoods are doing something pretty, and the brutal summer heat has backed off. The trade-off is that everyone else has the same idea, so you trade scorching afternoons for full parking lots.
If you want elbow room, come in winter. If you want long days and warm water for The Narrows, come in summer and accept the heat and the crowds. There's no perfect month, just different deals.
Spring (March to May): the green-and-busy season
Spring is when Zion wakes up. Temperatures are comfortable for hiking, the Virgin River runs high with snowmelt, and waterfalls along the Lower Emerald Pool Trail and Middle Emerald Pools Trail are actually flowing.
- Weather: Cool mornings, pleasant afternoons. March can still be chilly; by May you're in t-shirt weather.
- Crowds: Building fast. Spring break weeks and weekends are packed. The shuttle system runs, which means you'll ride a bus up Zion Canyon Scenic Drive rather than driving it.
- The Narrows: Often closed or risky through spring. High, cold snowmelt makes the river dangerous, and the park closes the hike when flow is too high. Don't count on it before late spring.
Summer (June to August): hot, long, and crowded
Summer is peak season, and it earns the name in both directions. Days are long, every trail is open, and Riverside Walk leading to The Narrows is the marquee adventure. It's also genuinely hot and busy.
- Weather: Afternoons routinely top 100°F. Start hikes early, carry far more water than feels reasonable, and plan shade or river time for midday.
- Monsoon and flash floods: From mid-July into September, monsoon storms raise the flash-flood risk. This matters most in narrow canyons like The Narrows. Check the daily flash-flood forecast at the visitor center and skip slot canyons when it's elevated. This is the season's real hazard, not the heat.
- Crowds: The shuttle lines at the Zion Canyon Visitor Center can be long. Arrive early or ride from Springdale. Watchman Trail and the Emerald Pools fill up by mid-morning.
- Family note: Kids melt in the heat. The cool, wadeable water of The Narrows is a saving grace, but watch the flood forecast and keep the day front-loaded.
Fall (September to November): the quiet payoff
Late September through October is, for many people, the best window of the year. The monsoon eases, the heat breaks, and the cottonwoods along the river turn gold. Kayenta Trail and the Emerald Pools loops are spectacular in this light.
- Weather: Warm days, cool nights, comfortable hiking. November cools off noticeably and feels like early winter.
- Crowds: Still busy in early-to-mid October, especially weekends, but thinning as November arrives. The shuttle typically winds down its full schedule in late fall.
- The Narrows: Often at its friendliest in early fall, when the water is lower and warmer. Always check conditions before you go in.
Winter (December to February): the empty canyon
Winter is Zion's best-kept secret if you don't mind cold and shorter days. Crowds drop, and you can usually drive Zion Canyon Scenic Drive yourself because the shuttle pauses for much of winter.
- Weather: Generally mild but cold in the mornings, with occasional snow dusting the red cliffs, which is stunning. Higher trails can be icy.
- Trail conditions: Shaded sections and steep routes toward Scout Lookout get icy and slick. Traction devices are smart. The Narrows is cold and often impractical without a drysuit.
- Crowds: The lightest of the year. If solitude is the goal, this is it.
So when should you go?
For a family trip with good weather and open trails, aim for the second half of April, May, or early-to-mid October. You'll fight some crowds but get the canyon at its most forgiving. Want quiet over comfort? December and January deliver an almost-empty park. Set on hiking The Narrows? Plan for summer or early fall, and treat the flash-flood forecast as non-negotiable.
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