Where to Stay Near Sequoia & Kings Canyon
Picking a base camp for two huge parks and a lot of driving.
Here's the thing nobody tells you up front: Sequoia and Kings Canyon are two parks stitched together, and they're huge. The giant trees, the deep canyons, and the foothills are spread across an enormous range of elevation, and no road crosses the parks east to west. Where you sleep shapes how much driving you do, so it's worth getting right.
First, understand the geography
The parks sit in the Sierra Nevada of California, reached by two highways that don't connect to each other across the range. Highway 198 from Visalia climbs through the town of Three Rivers into Sequoia. Highway 180 from Fresno drops you into Kings Canyon. Inside, the winding Generals Highway links the two, but it's slow, and it often closes in winter. Plan on more drive time than the map distances suggest.
Most families want to see the marquee sights: the General Grant Tree, the Giant Forest, the stairway up Moro Rock, and the big trees around Crescent Meadow. Where you base yourself decides how close you wake up to those.
Three Rivers (the gateway town)
Three Rivers is the small foothills town just outside Sequoia's southern entrance on Highway 198. It's the practical pick for most first-time visitors.
- Pros: Real restaurants, gas, groceries, and a wide range of motels, cabins, and vacation rentals at non-park prices. It's the closest "town" to the Sequoia entrance, and it stays open and accessible in winter when in-park roads get dicey.
- Cons: You're still a solid 45–60 minute mountain drive (uphill, twisty) from the Giant Forest, and farther from anything in Kings Canyon. The foothills are hot in summer. You trade morning convenience for cheaper, easier lodging.
Good for: families who want a comfortable bed, want to eat out, and don't mind a daily drive up the mountain.
In-park lodges
Sleeping inside the parks means you wake up among the trees and beat the day-trippers to the trailheads. There are a handful of lodges, generally clustered in two zones.
- Near the Giant Forest (Sequoia side): Wuksachi Lodge is the main year-round hotel, a short drive from the General Sherman Tree, Crescent Meadow, and Moro Rock. It's the most convenient base for Sequoia's headline sights.
- Grant Grove / Kings Canyon side: Cabins and a lodge near the General Grant Tree and the Panoramic Point overlook. This is your best bet if Kings Canyon is the priority, and it puts you closest to the scenic drive down toward Road's End, Zumwalt Meadow, and the trail to Mist Falls.
Pros: Minimal morning driving, easy evening wildlife watching, and stargazing under genuinely dark Sierra skies. Cons: They book up months ahead for summer, cost more, and dining options are limited to what the lodge offers. Cell service is spotty to nonexistent, so plan accordingly.
Campgrounds
Camping is the cheapest way to stay inside the parks, and it's a great fit for families if the kids are up for it. A few worth knowing:
- Lodgepole (Sequoia): The most central campground, near a visitor center, market, and the Giant Forest. It's popular and reservable, and it fills fast in summer.
- Grant Grove area (Kings Canyon): Several campgrounds within walking distance of the General Grant Tree and trailheads.
- Cedar Grove (deep in Kings Canyon): Down on the canyon floor near Road's End, surrounded by granite walls. Stunning, remote, and seasonal, typically open late spring through early fall only.
- Foothills / Potwisha (Sequoia side): Lower elevation, open more of the year, but hot in summer and farther from the big trees.
Reality check: This is bear country. Every campground requires you to store all food and scented items in the metal bear lockers: no exceptions, and rangers enforce it. Reservable sites go quickly through recreation.gov, so book early.
So which should you pick?
If it's your first trip and you want flexibility, base in Three Rivers and accept the daily drive. If you want to maximize trail time and don't mind booking far ahead, stay in-park: Wuksachi or Lodgepole for the Sequoia side, Grant Grove for Kings Canyon. And if you're chasing Kings Canyon specifically, sleep on that side; the drive from Sequoia over the Generals Highway eats a real chunk of your day.
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