Joshua Tree National Park With Kids
Short hikes, giant boulders, and a desert that doubles as a playground.
Joshua Tree is one of the easiest national parks to do with kids, mostly because the best thing here is climbing on rocks, and kids are already experts at that. Two deserts meet inside the park, the Mojave and the Colorado, and a fascinating variety of plants and animals make their homes in a land sculpted by strong winds and occasional torrents of rain. The one thing to take seriously: it gets brutally hot, and there's almost no shade.
Why it works for families
Most of the park's payoff comes from short, flat-ish trails with massive boulders kids can scramble on, so you don't need a hardcore hiker to have a great day. The signature trees themselves are pure Dr. Seuss, and the whole landscape feels like another planet, which keeps younger kids engaged. Park entry is $30 per vehicle for a 7-day permit, and the park is open 24 hours a day, year-round.
- Hidden Valley: a roughly one-mile loop ringed by huge rock walls. It's the quintessential first hike here: short, scenic, and full of boulders to scramble up for a view.
- Barker Dam: another easy loop, about 1.3 miles, with a small historic dam (sometimes holding water, often not) and Native American petroglyphs near the end. Good for spotting birds and bighorn sheep.
- Skull Rock: a roadside boulder shaped like a skull, right off Park Boulevard. The short nature trail loop around it is easy, and kids love finding the "face."
- Cholla Cactus Garden: a flat quarter-mile loop through a dense field of fuzzy-looking cholla. Beautiful, especially near sunset. Hard rule for kids: do not touch. The "teddy bear" cholla spines hurt and cling.
Realistic kid-pacing notes
You can see the headline sights in a single day if you enter early and drive Park Boulevard, the main scenic road that connects most of the stops above. Realistically, plan for two shorter outings rather than one long death march, especially with kids under eight.
- Pair one "real" hike (Hidden Valley or Barker Dam) with one drive-up stop (Skull Rock, Cholla Garden) per outing. That's plenty.
- Build in unstructured boulder time. The Jumbo Rocks area and the rocks around Hidden Valley are basically a natural playground, and kids will happily burn an hour there.
- Skip the longer trails with young kids. Fortynine Palms Oasis (about 3 miles round trip) and the Boy Scout Trail are rewarding but exposed and tiring; save those for older kids or a cooler day.
- There are very few services inside the park, no gas, limited water. Fill up, fuel up, and use the restroom in Twentynine Palms or Joshua Tree town before you enter.
Heat is the real challenge
This is the part to respect. Summer days run over 100°F and don't cool much below 75°F at night, which makes midday hiking genuinely unsafe for little kids. Spring and fall are the sweet spot, with highs around 85°F and 60°F respectively, and far more comfortable for families.
- Go early. Be on the trail at or near sunrise in warm months, then retreat to shade or the car by late morning.
- Carry more water than you think you need, and pack salty snacks. There's almost no shade on the trails.
- Hats and sunscreen are non-negotiable. The desert sun is relentless even on cool days.
- Winter is underrated for families, cooler days around 60°F, occasional snow at higher elevations, and far fewer crowds than spring wildflower season.
Stargazing and the Junior Ranger program
Joshua Tree has some of the darkest night skies in Southern California, and stargazing is genuinely one of the best things you can do here with kids, no hiking required. Drive to a pullout along Park Boulevard after dark, let your eyes adjust, and look up at the Milky Way. Bring a red flashlight to preserve everyone's night vision, and layers, because desert nights get cold fast.
During the day, grab a free Junior Ranger booklet at a visitor center. Kids work through activities as you explore and earn a badge, which is a surprisingly effective way to keep them invested between stops. Rangers also run strolls and evening programs worth checking the schedule for. One more rainy-day-proof stop: the Universal Threads exhibit at the visitor center, a quick indoor break from the sun.
A quick word on dogs
If you're hoping to bring the family dog on the trails, Joshua Tree will disappoint you, like most national parks. Pets are allowed in campgrounds, picnic areas, and within 100 feet of roads and parking lots, but they are not allowed on any trails or in the backcountry. With desert heat and ground that bakes hot enough to burn paws, leaving the dog at home (or at a sitter) is usually the kinder call here.
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