
Best For
Large groups who want iconic Cades Cove access — wildlife viewing, the 11-mile loop road, and Abrams Falls — but must plan 6+ months out for any date from June through October.
4
Sites
No
Hookups
Cades Cove Group Camp draws groups who want the full Cades Cove experience — elk and deer sightings on the 11-mile loop road, the 5-mile roundtrip hike to Abrams Falls, and a lush shaded setting. With 4 group tent sites and no vehicle access (0 ft max), it fills fast. September is the hardest month in the data: 70.3% of reservations are booked 6+ months in advance with only 5.4% last-minute. July (51.5% planned 6+ months) and June (48.9%) are nearly as locked. March is the only real opportunity for shorter-notice planning at 30.3% last-minute. This is a calendar-mark-the-release-date situation for any summer or fall date.
Content from Great Smoky Mountains National Park park guide
October is the highest-demand month in the park with 11,800 reservations and 11.2% booked 6+ months in advance — fall foliage is spectacular but requires the most advance planning of any month. June is the hardest month to book by last-minute rate (only 25.4%), while February is the most accessible at 73.2% last-minute with mild crowds and open winter campsites at year-round facilities like Smokemont and Cades Cove. May and September offer the best balance of good weather and moderate (though still competitive) booking windows if you can plan 2–3 months ahead.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park has no entrance gates on the Tennessee side, but the Newfound Gap Road (US-441) connecting Gatlinburg to Cherokee is the main spine of the park and can experience significant congestion from spring through fall. Cades Cove Loop Road alternates between vehicle and bicycle-only days — check the current schedule before planning your campsite-to-trailhead logistics. Many campgrounds, particularly on the North Carolina side (Cataloochee, Big Creek), involve narrow winding roads with strict vehicle length limits; verify your rig's length against the specific campground maximum before booking.
Total reservations in October 2023: 43
Address
Gatlinburg, Tennessee
Coordinates
35.6036, -83.7706
Very high demand - sites typically fill up immediately when the booking window opens. Plan to book the moment reservations open.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Great Smoky Mountains National Park






Get instant notifications when campsites become available at Cades Cove Group. Never miss a cancellation again.
Available on iOS and Android
Great Smoky Mountains National Park charges no entrance fee — it is one of the few major national parks where no vehicle pass is required to enter. Camping fees vary by facility and are paid at the time of reservation through Recreation.gov; nightly rates differ by campground type (frontcountry, group, equestrian, cabin). The America the Beautiful Annual Pass does not cover camping fees at this park but is worth carrying if you plan to visit other fee-charging parks on the same trip. Cabin reservations at the Appalachian Clubhouse and Spence Cabin are priced differently from standard campsites — check Recreation.gov for current rates.
All reservable campgrounds enforce a 14-day maximum stay (3-day maximum for picnic pavilions), and most have no hookups — generators should be used only during designated hours to respect neighboring campers. Cell service is limited to nonexistent throughout much of the park, particularly in remote areas like Cataloochee Valley and Big Creek; download offline maps before arrival. Pets are allowed in campgrounds but must be on a leash (6 ft maximum) at all times and are not permitted on most trails — confirm trail rules before planning a pet-friendly trip. Bryson City, NC and Gatlinburg and Townsend, TN are the nearest towns for groceries and fuel on their respective sides of the park.