Is Death Valley Dog-Friendly?
The short answer for travelers bringing a dog to the desert.
Short, short answer: Death Valley is technically dog-friendly, but only in the most limited sense. Leashed dogs are welcome on paved roads, in campgrounds, and in developed areas, and that's it. No trails, no backcountry, no canyons. And in a park where summer heat is the whole point, "dog-friendly" comes with a serious asterisk.
Where dogs ARE allowed
Death Valley follows the standard National Park Service pet rule, and it's strict here. Your leashed dog can go:
- On paved and developed roads, and within 100 feet of any road
- In campgrounds (Furnace Creek, Sunset, Texas Springs, Stovepipe Wells, and the others)
- In picnic areas and parking lots
- Around the Furnace Creek Visitor Center grounds (not inside the building)
The NPS even lists "Hiking/Visiting with Pets" as a thing to do here, but read the fine print and it really means walking your dog along the pavement, not the trails. Dogs must be leashed (six feet or shorter) at all times and never left unattended, including in a parked car.
Where dogs are NOT allowed
This is the part that disappoints most visitors, so here it is plainly. Dogs are banned from:
- All hiking trails and dirt paths
- Badwater Basin's salt-flat boardwalk and beyond (the lowest point in North America, at 282 feet below sea level)
- The boardwalk and dunes at Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes
- Canyons like Golden Canyon, Mosaic Canyon, and the Twenty Mule Team Canyon walking areas
- Wilderness and backcountry
- Park buildings, including the visitor center
You can still drive the scenic stuff. Artists Drive, Twenty Mule Team Canyon, and the road up to Dantes View are paved, so your dog can ride along and hop out for a quick leashed stretch at pullouts. But the famous walks (down into Golden Canyon, out onto the salt at Badwater) are off-limits with a dog.
The heat is the real problem
Even if the rules were looser, Death Valley's climate makes it one of the worst national parks to bring a dog. The NPS describes this as "a land of extremes" with "steady drought and record summer heat." Summer starts early. By May the valley can be scorching, with regular highs above 110°F and pavement hot enough to burn paws in seconds.
Never leave a dog in a parked car here. Interior temperatures climb to lethal levels almost instantly. If you visit in summer, your dog will be stuck in an air-conditioned vehicle or room for most of the day, which isn't much of a trip for anyone.
If you're set on bringing a dog, go in winter (cool days, chilly nights) or early spring, when wildflowers bloom and temperatures are tolerable. Even then, carry far more water than you think you'll need, and walk on pavement in the early morning before it heats up.
So should you bring your dog?
The verdict: probably not, unless your dog is simply riding along on a longer road trip and you've planned around it. Death Valley rewards getting out on foot (the badlands at Zabriskie Point, the salt flats at Badwater, the sand dunes), and your dog can't join you for any of it. You'll spend the trip rotating who stays back with the dog.
If your dog must come, the workable plan looks like this: visit in the cool months, base yourself near Furnace Creek where there's shade and water, use the paved scenic drives, and budget for one person to dog-sit while others hike. Boarding your dog before the trip is genuinely the kinder option for most pets and most itineraries.
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