Big Bend With Kids
A family guide to one of the wildest parks in the lower 48.
Big Bend sits at the end of the road in Far West Texas, where the night skies are dark as coal and the Rio Grande carves canyons into ancient limestone. It is gorgeous, remote, and genuinely demanding with kids. The reward is a place most families never reach and never forget. The trick is respecting the heat, the driving distances, and small legs.
Know what you're getting into
Big Bend is big. It is roughly the size of Rhode Island, and the park reminds you constantly: "Distances between towns and services are considerable. Be sure you have plenty of gas, food, water, and supplies." That is not a brochure flourish. There are stretches where the next gas pump is an hour off, and the closest EV charging station is 130 miles away in Fort Stockton.
This is the Chihuahuan Desert, and it is hot. From May through August the desert floor is usually well above 100°F by late morning. The Chisos Mountains run 10 to 15 degrees cooler, which is exactly why families gravitate there in summer. Plan your trip around the temperature, not the trail map.
The best hikes for kids
You do not need a backcountry permit to give kids a great day here. A few standouts, all from the park's own list of things to do:
- Santa Elena Canyon Trail: the postcard hike. You walk right into a canyon where 1,500-foot walls close in around the Rio Grande. It is short and mostly flat, with one set of switchbacks near the start. Kids love wading at the river crossing (water levels permitting). Go early; the canyon faces the morning sun and there's little shade by midday.
- Hot Springs Trail: a gentle riverside walk that ends at a 105°F historic soaking pool right on the Rio Grande. It is part nature, part history (old ranch and bathhouse ruins along the way). A genuine kid-pleaser that doubles as a reward.
- Lost Mine Trail: up in the cooler Chisos. The full round trip is about 4.8 miles with real elevation gain, but you can turn around at the saddle around the one-mile mark for a huge view and call it a win. One note: this is too much for most little ones in full, so set expectations early.
- Mule Ears Trail and the short walk to Balanced Rock are good desert options when the Chisos lot is full.
For birdwatchers in the family, the Rio Grande Village Nature Trail is flat, short, and one of the best spots in a park that hosts over 450 bird species.
Junior Rangers, stamps, and a trip into Mexico
The Big Bend Junior Rangers program is the easiest way to keep kids engaged between hikes. Pick up a booklet at a visitor center, work through the activities, and they get sworn in with a badge. Don't forget to Get a Big Bend Passport Stamp for the national parks passport book while you're there.
One of Big Bend's most memorable family outings is a visit to Boquillas, Mexico, a tiny village reached by a short rowboat across the Rio Grande, then a walk or burro ride into town. It runs as an official border crossing with limited hours and days, so check the schedule first and bring passports for everyone, including kids. It is a real international border, not a re-creation, which is exactly what makes it stick with them.
The night sky is the headliner
Big Bend has some of the darkest skies in the continental United States. Viewing the night sky here means the Milky Way stretched bank to bank with the naked eye. If your kids can stay up (or nap in the afternoon), this is worth structuring the whole evening around. Bring a red flashlight to keep everyone's eyes adjusted, and a jacket. Desert nights cool off fast, even after a scorching day.
Realistic pacing notes
- Don't overschedule. Drive times inside the park are long. Two short hikes plus a scenic drive is a full, good day for a family.
- Hike early, rest midday. Be back at the car or lodge by 11 a.m. in the warm months. Save canyons and exposed desert trails for first light.
- Water is non-negotiable. Pack far more than feels reasonable, and refill at every visitor center.
- Base in the Chisos in summer for the cooler air, or near the western entrances in winter when the desert is mild and pleasant (November through February rarely freezes hard).
- Spring is peak season. March is warm, lovely, and the busiest time of year; Chisos lodging and campsites book out far in advance.
Planning the trip? Nestward builds a day-by-day plan in minutes, free, no subscription. See how it works →
Nestward