Is Sequoia & Kings Canyon Dog-Friendly?
A clear look at where your dog can and can't go in these California parks.
Short answer: yes, your dog is welcome, but only in a narrow set of places, and almost none of them are the trails or the famous big trees. Sequoia & Kings Canyon follows the same rule as most national parks: dogs stick to paved and developed areas. If you arrive expecting to hike to a sequoia grove with the dog, you'll be turned around. Here's exactly where dogs can and can't go, so you can plan around it.
Where dogs ARE allowed
Leashed dogs (six-foot leash, no longer) are permitted in the developed parts of the parks:
- Campgrounds and picnic areas
- Paved roads and parking lots, including the Generals Highway corridor
- Inside your vehicle and your tent or RV
- A few paved spots near developed areas where you can at least stretch their legs
That's genuinely it. Dogs must be leashed at all times and never left unattended. Bears are active here, and a tied-up dog is both a target and a liability. Pick up after them; rangers do enforce it.
Where dogs are NOT allowed
This is the part that surprises people. Dogs are banned from:
- All trails, paved or dirt, short or long
- The sequoia groves, including the Giant Forest and the General Grant Tree
- Wilderness and backcountry, the vast majority of both parks
- Public buildings like the Giant Forest Museum
- Park shuttles
So the headline destinations (Moro Rock's stairway, Zumwalt Meadow, Mist Falls, Roaring River Falls, the Big Stump trail, Crescent Meadow, Crystal Cave) are all off-limits with a dog. Even short, paved nature walks like the Cold Springs Nature Trail count as trails. The reasoning is consistent across the park system: wildlife stress, scent that lingers and disturbs native animals, and visitor safety on narrow paths.
What a visit with a dog actually looks like
You can drive the scenic routes with the dog along for the ride. The Generals Highway and the Kings Canyon Scenic Byway down to Cedar Grove and Road's End are both beautiful from the car, with paved pullouts where you can park, leash up, and take in the view together. Panoramic Point near Grant Grove is a short paved walk from its parking area to a big overlook. Confirm current dog rules at the entrance station, since paved-access spots are the gray area.
But you'll be doing the trails in shifts. One adult stays with the dog, the other hikes, then you swap. It works, but it's not a relaxing dog vacation. If the whole point of the trip is hiking with your dog, this isn't the park for it.
Better options for the dog
The national forest land surrounding the parks is far more dog-friendly. The Hume Lake area in Sequoia National Forest / Giant Sequoia National Monument (which your park entrance fee already covers) has trails that allow leashed dogs, unlike the national park trails. Sequoia National Forest generally permits dogs on its trails, which is a useful distinction to remember: forest, mostly yes; park, mostly no.
In the gateway town of Three Rivers, just outside the Highway 198 entrance, you'll find dog-friendly lodging and places to walk along the Kaweah River. Many people base there, leave the dog with one person or at the lodging, and tackle the in-park sights without it.
Quick logistics
- Entrance fee: $35 per private vehicle, valid 1–7 days, and it also covers the more dog-friendly Hume Lake forest district.
- Getting there: Highway 198 from Visalia through Three Rivers, or Highway 180 from Fresno. The Generals Highway between the two parks often closes in winter.
- Never leave a dog in the car: foothill temperatures get hot fast, and elevations swing wildly across the park.
- Service animals are not pets and are allowed where pets aren't. Confirm specifics with the park.
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