
Best For
Experienced Joshua Tree regulars and spontaneous campers who want a first-come, first-served site surrounded by the park's most photogenic formations — with the understanding that no water is available.
44
Sites
No
Hookups
Vault
Toilets
Hidden Valley is arguably the most scenically positioned first-come, first-served campground in the park — 44 sites set within the famous Hidden Valley rock ring, surrounded by some of Joshua Tree's most photographed boulders and climbing routes. There is no reservation system, no rating data in our analytics, and critically, no water on-site. You locate a site, occupy it, and pay at an entrance station within one hour of setup. This simplicity comes with a serious catch: Hidden Valley fills extremely early on spring and fall weekends — sometimes before 9 AM on Saturdays in March. Arriving Friday evening or very early Saturday morning is the only reliable strategy for a weekend stay. Mid-week visits in winter months remain feasible for self-sufficient campers.
Content from Joshua Tree National Park park guide
October through April is the core visitor season at Joshua Tree, with November representing the single most competitive booking month in the park — 17.7% of November reservations are made 6+ months in advance across 8,472 total bookings. March and April see the highest raw reservation volume (11,352 and 10,250 respectively), driven by spring wildflowers and ideal 70–90°F daytime temperatures. August is the easiest month to find a site with 40.8% of bookings made last-minute, but summer temperatures regularly exceed 100°F in the lower elevations.
Joshua Tree has two main entrances — the West Entrance near Joshua Tree town and the North Entrance near Twentynine Palms — plus the South Entrance at Cottonwood off Interstate 10, which accesses only the southern campgrounds. There is no park shuttle; a private vehicle is required to move between campgrounds, trailheads, and visitor centers. Note that Belle, Hidden Valley, and White Tank campgrounds are first-come, first-served and must be paid for at an entrance station within one hour of occupying a site.
The park entrance fee is $35 per vehicle, valid for 7 days. Nightly camping fees vary by campground and are charged separately through Recreation.gov for reservation campgrounds, or paid at entrance stations for first-come, first-served sites. The America the Beautiful Annual Pass ($80) covers the $35 entrance fee but does not reduce nightly camping fees — it is still worth the investment for anyone visiting multiple federal lands in the same year.
The maximum stay at every campground is 14 days within any 28-day period. Pets are permitted in campgrounds and on paved roads but are not allowed on trails or in the backcountry. No water is available at Belle, Hidden Valley, or White Tank campgrounds, and water is limited even at campgrounds that do have it — bring at least one gallon per person per day. Cell service is unreliable throughout most of the park; download the NPS app and offline maps before arrival. The nearest full-service town is Twentynine Palms, which has grocery stores, gas, and medical facilities.
Address
Riverside County, California
Coordinates
34.0172, -116.1627

Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua Tree National Park






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