Photo: NPS/J.GrayBest For
Campers seeking cooler temperatures and a more remote mountain feel. At 4,100 feet in the Panamint Mountains, this is a meaningful escape from the extreme valley floor heat — and it's free.
No
Hookups
Vault
Toilets
Wildrose sits at 4,100 feet in the Panamint Mountains, offering a temperature refuge that the valley floor campgrounds simply cannot match. It's free, first-come, first-served, with no hookups and dirt-and-gravel sites surrounded by mesquite. The elevation means this campground may see snow or be subject to high winds — the park explicitly warns of wind exposure here. Generators are permitted 7am to 7pm. No reservation data is available for Wildrose, which means arrivals are entirely dependent on timing and luck during peak season. This campground suits rugged campers who want cooler nights, aren't deterred by wind, and don't need electrical access. It's a solid fallback if the valley campgrounds are packed, and the access road is passable for most vehicles.
Content from Death Valley National Park park guide
November through March is peak season for Death Valley camping, with March alone generating 2,783 reservations in our dataset — the busiest single month. February drives early bookings from wildflower hunters, with 15.1% of February reservations placed 6+ months in advance. Summer months (May through August) see dramatically lower demand — May and August each hit 87.5% last-minute booking rates — but temperatures regularly exceed 110°F, and only heat-prepared campers should attempt the valley floor.
Death Valley covers more than 3,000 square miles and has no internal shuttle system — a private vehicle is essential for accessing any campground. Many of the more remote campgrounds (Eureka Dunes, Thorndike, Mahogany Flat, Saline Valley, Homestake) require high-clearance 4WD vehicles, and some roads close seasonally due to snow or flash flood damage. Plan driving distances carefully: Mesquite Spring in the north and Saline Valley to the west are each well over an hour from Furnace Creek.
The park entrance fee is $35 per vehicle and is valid for 7 days. The America the Beautiful annual pass ($80) covers the entrance fee for the pass holder's vehicle and is valid at all federal fee sites — a strong value for anyone visiting multiple parks in a year. Furnace Creek Campground charges a nightly fee (varies by site type); first-come campgrounds including Emigrant, Thorndike, Mahogany Flat, and Wildrose are free. Fee-based first-come campgrounds like Texas Springs, Stovepipe Wells, Sunset, and Mesquite Spring use self-pay stations on-site.
The 14-day maximum stay applies at Furnace Creek and most other campgrounds; Backcountry Roadside Camping has a 7-day limit. Cell service is extremely limited throughout the park — download offline maps before arrival and do not rely on navigation apps in the field. The nearest significant supply towns are Beatty, Nevada (approximately 40 miles from Furnace Creek) and Ridgecrest, California to the south; the Stovepipe Wells general store and Furnace Creek Ranch store offer limited supplies within the park. Generator hours and pet rules vary by campground — Texas Springs prohibits generators entirely, while Wildrose allows them 7am to 7pm.
Address
Death Valley, California
Coordinates
36.2658, -117.1885
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Death Valley National Park
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Death Valley National Park

Death Valley National Park

Death Valley National Park

Death Valley National Park

Death Valley National Park






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