Yellowstone With Kids

A family guide to the geysers, the wildlife, and the long drives in between.

Brilliant blue and green water of Grand Prismatic Spring ringed by orange and yellow bacterial mats
Grand Prismatic Spring, the kind of thing kids stare at without being told to. Photo: NPS/Jim Peaco

Yellowstone became the first national park in 1872, and it still delivers the goods: geysers, hot springs, bison in the road. The catch for families is the scale. It's nearly 3,500 square miles across Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho, and the drives between highlights are long. Plan around that and kids love it. Ignore it and everyone melts down by 2 p.m.

What actually wows the kids

You don't need big hikes here. Most of Yellowstone's best moments are along the road or a short flat boardwalk, which is ideal for short legs.

If your kids want one actual hike, the Fairy Falls Trail is mostly flat to a tall waterfall, and Cascade Lake is a gentle, meadow-heavy walk good for wildlife spotting. Save Mount Washburn (via Dunraven Pass or Chittenden Road) for older, fit kids. It's a real climb with real altitude.

Wildlife: the best part, and the safety talk

Bison, elk, and sometimes bears and wolves are genuinely the highlight for most kids. They're also the part where you need rules. The park requires staying 25 yards from bison and elk and 100 yards from bears and wolves, and bison injure more visitors here than any other animal, almost always because someone got too close for a photo.

Yellowstone With Kids
Photo: NPS/Jim Peaco

Pacing it so nobody melts down

Yellowstone has five entrances spread hours apart, and the main road is a figure-eight loop. The mistake families make is trying to "see it all" in a day. Don't.

Practical logistics

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