Death Valley for Non-Hikers

The big sights without the big hikes.

Badlands at Zabriskie Point glowing pink and orange at sunset
Sunset on the badlands at Zabriskie Point, a 200-foot walk from the parking lot. Photo: Ronald Gaddis

Here's the good news: Death Valley is one of the most car-friendly national parks in the country. The headline sights line up along the road, and the best of them are a short walk or no walk at all. You can have a full, jaw-dropping day here without ever lacing up boots for a real trail.

Why this park rewards non-hikers

Death Valley is the largest national park in the lower 48, and almost everything you've seen on a postcard is roadside. The park describes itself as "a land of extremes" (a below-sea-level basin ringed by peaks that get frosted with winter snow), and the wild part is that you experience most of those extremes from pullouts and overlooks, not summits. The entrance fee is $30 per vehicle, good for seven days, and the park is open all day, every day, year-round.

The catch: distances are big and there's almost no shade. Keep the gas tank above half, carry far more water than feels reasonable, and treat the car's air conditioning as part of the itinerary.

The drives that do the work for you

Death Valley for Non-Hikers
Photo: Ronald Gaddis

Viewpoints and short walks worth the stop

If you're traveling with kids

The non-hiker playbook is also the kid playbook here. The Badwater boardwalk, the salt crunching underfoot, the painted hills of Artists Drive, and the old mule wagons at Harmony Borax Works all land well with short legs and short attention spans. Grab a Junior Ranger booklet at Furnace Creek and let them collect stamps as you drive between stops. Pack snacks, sun hats, and roughly double the water you think you need. The heat sneaks up on small bodies fast.

Don't skip the night sky

Death Valley is a certified International Dark Sky Park, and stargazing here ranks among the best in the country. You don't need to hike anywhere. Pull over at any wide spot away from the lodge lights, let your eyes adjust for fifteen minutes, and look up. In spring, the same easy roadside stops can also deliver wildflowers; the park calls spring its most popular season for exactly that reason, though big bloom years are unpredictable.

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