Is Arches National Park Dog-Friendly?

A clear look at where dogs can and can't go at Arches.

A crowd of people sit and watch the sunset at Delicate Arch in Arches National Park
The view from Delicate Arch, a trail your dog can't join you on. Photo: NPS/Veronica Verdin

Short version: Arches is one of the least dog-friendly national parks you'll visit. Dogs are welcome in the park, but only on paved roads, in parking lots, and at the campground. Every trail, every arch, and every viewpoint that requires walking on dirt is off-limits to pets. If your trip is built around hiking with your dog, this is the wrong park, and it's better to know that now.

Where dogs ARE allowed

Arches sits in red-rock desert just five miles north of Moab, Utah. With over 2,000 natural stone arches, soaring pinnacles, and balanced rocks, it's a stunning place, but the rules for pets are narrow. Leashed dogs (leash six feet or shorter) are allowed only in these spots:

That's the full list. There is no dog-friendly trail at Arches.

Where dogs are NOT allowed

This is the part that surprises people. Dogs are banned from all trails and all backcountry, which means the park's signature spots are out of reach with a pet:

You can drive the scenic road and see a surprising amount from the car and paved pullouts. But you will not be hiking to an arch with your dog.

Is Arches National Park Dog-Friendly?
Photo: NPS Photo

Why the rules are this strict

It isn't bureaucracy for its own sake. The desert here is fragile and harsh: biological soil crust takes decades to form and dies under paws, wildlife is easily stressed, and the ground gets dangerously hot. Summer temperatures often top 100°F, and slickrock radiates heat well above the air temperature, enough to burn paw pads fast. The park's own guidance leans hard on keeping pets out of these areas for both their safety and the landscape's.

How to actually make it work

If you're traveling with a dog and still want to see Arches, a few workable options:

Timing helps too. The pleasant seasons are spring (April–May) and fall (mid-September–October), when highs run 60–80°F. The park is busiest March through October; entering before 8 a.m. or after 3 p.m. avoids the worst lines at the entrance. Entrance is $30 per vehicle for seven days.

The bottom line

Arches is worth seeing, but with a dog, treat it as a scenic drive, not a hiking trip. If hiking with your pet is the whole point of the vacation, point the car at the dog-friendly public lands around Moab instead and save Arches for a day you can hike it on foot.

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