Great Sand Dunes With Kids: Sledding, Creek Days, and How to Time It Right

A family-first guide to the tallest dunes in North America

Children sand sledding down a tall dune with snow-capped mountains in the background at Great Sand Dunes National Park
Rented sand sleds are the whole trip for most kids. Photo: NPS/Patrick Myers

Great Sand Dunes is one of the best national parks for younger kids, a giant sandbox at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in southern Colorado. But two things make or break a family visit here: midday sand surface temps can hit 160°F in summer, and the park sits at 8,000 feet. Get the timing right and it's magic. Get it wrong and you're carrying a sunburned, altitude-cranky kid back across the dunefield.

The two main events: sledding and Medano Creek

For families, the park really comes down to two activities, and both are right at the main Dunes Parking Lot.

Plan to do both in the same visit. Sled first while energy is high, then let everyone wade and cool off in the creek.

When to go (this is the whole game)

Medano Creek peaks in late May through mid-June in most years, and that window gives you flowing water and sleddable dunes. By July the creek is usually a trickle or gone. That late-spring sweet spot is the best time for a family trip.

Whenever you visit in summer, go early morning or evening. The park's own guidance is blunt about it: explore the dunes in the morning or evening because midday sand temps are dangerous. A realistic family day looks like:

One upside of that schedule: this is an International Dark Sky Park, and it's open 24/7 with no timed entry or reservations. If your kids can stay up, stick around after dark for the stars.

Great Sand Dunes With Kids: Sledding, Creek Days, and How to Time It Right
Photo: NPS/Patrick Myers

Gentler trails when you want off the sand

You don't hike the dunes on a trail. You just walk out onto them as far as your group can manage (the high dune is a serious climb in loose sand, so don't promise the kids you'll reach the top). For actual shaded trails, two near the visitor center work well for families:

The serious stuff (Sand Creek Lakes, Medano Lake and Mount Herard, the Medano Pass 4WD road, the alpine backcountry of the preserve) is real, but it's for older kids and capable hikers, not a stroller crowd.

Practical logistics for parents

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