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    10 Days You Can Enter Any US National Park for Free in 2026

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    In 2026, the National Park Service offers 10 fee-free entry days exclusively for US citizens and residents. Entrance fees, which normally range from $10 to $35, are fully waived on these dates. The free days include Presidents Day (Feb. 16), Memorial Day (May 25), Flag Day (June 14), the full Independence Day weekend (July 3-5), the NPS 110th birthday (Aug. 25), Constitution Day (Sept. 17), Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday (Oct. 27), and Veterans Day (Nov. 11). Non-US residents still pay regular fees on all days. Camping, parking, and tour fees are never waived.

    Canyons in Yellowstone National Park

    What Are the 2026 Free National Park Days and Why Should You Care?

    If you have been putting off visiting Yosemite, the Grand Canyon, or Yellowstone because of the entry cost, your window is here.

    Entrance fees at US national parks usually range from $10 at smaller sites like Guadalupe Mountains National Park in Texas, up to $35 per vehicle at larger parks like Yellowstone. That adds up fast for a family or anyone planning a multi-park road trip. The good news is that the NPS has confirmed 10 free entrance days in 2026 for US residents, an increase of four additional days compared to 2025.

    This is the most generous free-day calendar in nearly a decade, and if you plan around it, you can visit some of America’s most iconic landscapes without spending a single dollar on admission.

    Yellowstone Grand Canyon National Park

    The Full 2026 Free National Park Days Calendar

    Here is every date you need to save right now:

    • February 16 – Presidents Day
    • May 25 – Memorial Day
    • June 14 – Flag Day
    • July 3, 4, and 5 – Independence Day Weekend
    • August 25 – 110th Birthday of the National Park Service
    • September 17 – Constitution Day
    • October 27 – Theodore Roosevelt’s Birthday
    • November 11 – Veterans Day

    That is a three-day summer stretch over July 4th weekend plus seven additional individual dates spread across the full calendar year, giving you excellent seasonal variety from spring through late autumn.

    Also read – Don’t Book Your Japan Trip Until You Read These New Tax Rules

    Rocky Mountain National Park

    What Changed in 2026 and Who Does This Affect?

    The 2026 free-day calendar is not just a bigger list. It comes with two significant changes that every traveler needs to understand before showing up at a park gate.

    Change 1: Free Entry Is Now US Residents Only

    This is the biggest shift in the history of the NPS free-day program. Starting January 1, 2026, free admission on these days is available only to US citizens and residents. Nonresidents will be charged the standard entrance fee and any applicable nonresident fees. If you are a US resident aged 16 or older, bring a valid ID to verify your status at the gate.

    Change 2: Non-Residents Face a New $100 Surcharge

    The Trump administration announced that nonresidents without an annual pass will pay a $100 per person fee to enter 11 of the most visited national parks, on top of the standard entrance fee. This applies on all days, including the fee-free days that US residents enjoy at no cost.

    Change 3: Different Holidays on the Calendar

    Five holidays that had free entry in 2025 will no longer be free in 2026. Those include Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the first day of National Park Week, Juneteenth, the anniversary of the Great American Outdoors Act, and National Public Lands Day. The new calendar focuses on what officials are calling “patriotic fee-free days” tied to national anniversaries and figures.

    Which Parks Can You Visit for Free on These Days?

    Of the 419 parks, historic sites, monuments, rivers, and more that the National Park Service manages, only 108 charge regular entrance fees ranging from $10 to $35, and those fees are what get waived on free days.

    That means some of the most visited and beloved parks in the country are included: Yosemite in California, the Grand Canyon in Arizona, Olympic in Washington, Zion and Bryce Canyon in Utah, Acadia in Maine, and Yellowstone across Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.

    Of the 63 national parks, 19 are free all year round, including Redwood National Park in California and New River Gorge in West Virginia, so you can visit those any day without needing to time your trip.

    A Family Hiking in the Great Smoky Mountains

    What Is Never Free, Even on Free Days?

    This is where a lot of people get caught off guard. Free admittance does not include amenities and user fees for camping, boat launches, transportation, and special tours. Parking fees at some parks like Arches and Glacier also remain in effect. And critically, some parks require timed-entry permits, and those requirements do not go away on free days.

    If you are planning a July 4th weekend visit to a high-demand park, book your timed-entry permit at recreation.gov well in advance. Free entry days are popular, and capacity limits fill up faster than people expect.

    Should You Just Buy the Annual Pass Instead?

    If you are visiting more than two or three fee-charging parks in a year, the math almost always works in favor of the annual pass. The America the Beautiful annual pass costs $80 for US residents and $250 for international visitors, and it covers entrance to over 2,000 federal recreation areas including all national parks that normally charge a fee.

    Free and discounted passes are also available for older adults, active military members, families of fourth-grade students, and citizens with disabilities. For 2026, the pass for people 62 and older is $20, while the senior lifetime pass costs $80. The annual pass is free for military, veterans, and those with qualifying disabilities.

    Beginning this year, the NPS is also offering the America the Beautiful pass in a fully digital format. You can purchase it online at recreation.gov, use it instantly on mobile devices, and link it to a physical card. No more fumbling for a paper pass at the gate.

    Complete 2026 Free National Park Days at a Glance

    DateHolidayWho Gets Free Entry
    February 16, 2026Presidents DayUS residents only
    May 25, 2026Memorial DayUS residents only
    June 14, 2026Flag DayUS residents only
    July 3-5, 2026Independence Day WeekendUS residents only
    August 25, 2026NPS 110th BirthdayUS residents only
    September 17, 2026Constitution DayUS residents only
    October 27, 2026Theodore Roosevelt’s BirthdayUS residents only
    November 11, 2026Veterans DayUS residents only
    Typical Entry FeeVaries by park$10 to $35 per vehicle
    Annual Pass CostAmerica the Beautiful$80 residents / $250 non-residents

    How many free national park days are there in 2026?

    There are 10 free entry days in 2026 for US citizens and residents, including the three-day Independence Day weekend from July 3 to 5. This is four more free days than were available in 2025, making it the most generous calendar in nearly a decade.

    Can international visitors enter US national parks for free on these days?

    No. Starting January 1, 2026, free admission on NPS fee-free days applies only to US citizens and residents. International visitors pay standard entrance fees on all days, and non-residents visiting the 11 most popular parks also pay an additional $100 per person surcharge.

    What parks are included in the 2026 free national park days?

    All 108 national park units that normally charge an entrance fee participate in fee-free days. This includes Yosemite, the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Zion, Bryce Canyon, Acadia, and Olympic National Park, among many others.

    Do I still need a timed-entry reservation on free national park days?

    Yes. If a park requires timed-entry permits, those requirements remain in place on free days. Popular parks like Arches, Glacier, and Yosemite Valley fill permit slots quickly, especially around July 4th weekend. Book well in advance at recreation.gov.

    Are camping fees waived on free national park days?

    No. The fee waiver applies to entrance fees only. Camping, parking, boat launches, shuttle services, and special tour fees remain fully in effect on all free-entry days.

    Is the America the Beautiful annual pass worth buying instead?

    If you plan to visit two or more fee-charging national parks in a year, the $80 annual pass pays for itself quickly. It covers unlimited entrance to over 2,000 federal recreation areas and is now available in digital format for instant use on your phone.

    What happened to MLK Day and Juneteenth as free park days?

    Both were removed from the 2026 free-day calendar. The 2026 list replaces those civil rights holidays with Flag Day, Constitution Day, Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday, and extra Independence Day weekend days, shifting the calendar toward what the Department of the Interior calls “patriotic fee-free days.”

    Do I need to show ID to get free entry as a US resident?

    Yes. Residents aged 16 or older may be asked to show a valid government-issued ID to verify US residency and qualify for the fee waiver on these days. Bring a driver’s license or passport to avoid issues at the gate.

    Which national park should I visit on the next upcoming free day?

    Great Smoky Mountains, the most-visited national park in the US with over 12 million visitors annually, is free all year and a great starting point. For fee-charging parks, Zion National Park in Utah and Acadia in Maine offer spectacular experiences that are well worth timing around a free entry day.

    Shubham Banyal
    Shubham Banyalhttp://travelohlic.com
    For me, the best stories are found offline, somewhere between a muddy trail and a mountain pass. But in a digital world, those stories need a map to be found. I am Shubham Banyal - a travel writer and SEO specialist with over 7 years of experience turning wanderlust into readable, rankable content. Whether I’m exploring a new city or reading about an AI update, my goal is the same: to create authentic pathways for people to explore the world. I don't just write about travel; I live it, test it, and then optimize it."

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