Where to Stay Near Arches

Picking a basecamp for the red-rock wonderland of southeast Utah.

A crowd of visitors sits and watches the sunset at Delicate Arch in Arches National Park
Sunset at Delicate Arch. Photo: NPS/Veronica Verdin

Here is the thing about Arches: there are no hotels inside it. The park has over 2,000 natural stone arches, but exactly one developed campground and zero lodges. So "where to stay near Arches" really means one question: how close to Moab do you want to be? Below is the breakdown.

Moab: the obvious basecamp (and it's a good one)

Arches sits five miles north of Moab on US 191, which makes Moab the default, and for most families, the right call. It is a real town with grocery stores, gear shops, restaurants, urgent care, and a couple hundred places to sleep, from budget motels to mid-range chains to vacation rentals with kitchens.

If you want zero logistical friction, stay in Moab. The drive to the trailheads is short enough that you can do an early Delicate Arch hike, come back for a midday break, and head out again for stargazing at Panorama Point after dark.

Devils Garden Campground: the only beds inside the park

The park's single developed campground sits at the end of the scenic road, deep in the Devils Garden area where the longer arch trails begin. Fifty-some sites, no hookups, no showers, but flush toilets and drinking water. Waking up inside Arches is genuinely special, and you are steps from the trailhead for Double O Arch and the Devils Garden loop.

Book it the day the window opens or not at all. If you miss it, don't despair. The gateway options below are nearly as good for the actual park experience.

Where to Stay Near Arches
Photo: NPS Photo

Camping and RVs outside the park

Because Devils Garden is so hard to get, most camping families end up just outside. There are BLM campgrounds along the Colorado River on UT-128 (gorgeous, primitive, first-come or limited reservations) and several full-service private RV parks and campgrounds in and around Moab with pools, showers, and shade structures.

How to choose, by trip style

Whatever you pick, build your days around the heat and the crowds. The park recommends entering before 8 a.m. or after 3 p.m. to dodge the worst traffic, so staying close enough to make that early start actually possible is the real win.

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