List of trails in Grand Canyon National Park
The following is a list of hiking trails that are, in whole or part, within the established boundaries of Grand Canyon National Park, located in Coconino and Mohave counties in the U.S. state of Arizona.
Management
All pack and foot trails in Grand Canyon National Park fall under the jurisdiction of the Grand Canyon Backcountry Office , located in the Backcountry Information Center in Grand Canyon Village. This building previously housed a railway depot. The BCO administers trail maintenance, patrol, and search and rescue operations in the Grand Canyon's backcountry areas.The Grand Canyon Backcountry Office manages undeveloped areas of the canyon by following the 1988 Backcountry Management Plan , as amended. The goal of the plan is to mitigate human impacts to ecologically sensitive areas within the park. In those areas, the BMP provides management guidelines for:
- Establishment of management zones
- Permit system and fee structure for overnight use
- Establishment of visitor use limits
- Enforcement of the plan's provisions
- Interpretive programs to educate canyon visitors
- Research to determine if the plan's goals are being met
Fees are required to obtain backcountry-use permits. Information can be obtained from the parks Backcountry Information Center.
The Park Service asks that travelers abide by Leave No Trace principles.
Backcountry trail designations
Established trails within backcountry areas of the park are assigned one of the following designations by the National Park Service:- Corridor Trails
- Threshold Trails
- Primitive Trails
- Routes/Wild
Corridor trails
A corridor trail receives the highest hiking and stock use by visitors to the park and mule use by park concessionaires. To accommodate this, the National Park Service regularly patrols and maintains corridor trails. Backcountry rangers recommend that hikers taking their first trip into the inner canyon use one of the park's corridor trails. These areas include three campgrounds: Havasupai Gardens, Bright Angel, and Cottonwood, each of which have ranger stations, water, and emergency phones.The following are designated as corridor trails:
- Bright Angel Trail
- North Kaibab Trail
- Plateau Point Trail
- River Trail
- South Kaibab Trail
Threshold trails
A threshold trail receives lower visitation than corridor trails, but will receive more than primitive trails. The National Park Service does not regularly maintain threshold trails, but reconstructs sections damaged by environmental forces, or to prevent further trail erosion. Maintenance will also be done to protect historical features along a threshold trail. Cairns are permitted, but are to be placed discriminately.The following are designated as threshold trails:
- Clear Creek Trail
- Dripping Springs Trail
- Grandview Trail
- Hermit Trail
- Thunder River Trail
- Waldron Trail
Primitive trails
The following are designated as primitive trails:
- Beamer Trail
- Bill Hall Trail
- Boucher Trail
- Deer Creek Trail
- Havasu Canyon Route.
- Kanab Creek Trail
- Lava Falls Trail
- Nankoweap Trail
- North Bass Trail
- New Hance Trail
- South Bass Trail
- South Canyon Trail
- Tanner Trail
- Tonto Trail
- Tuckup Trail
Routes
Due to their difficulty, routes receive the lowest visitation of all footpaths within the park. The National Park Service only maintains routes to minimize damage to nearby natural resources.
The following do not fall into any of the above trail designations, and are classified as routes:
- Escalante Route
- Esplanade Route
- Royal Arch Route
Above-rim trails
- Bright Angel Point Trail
- Cape Final Trail
- Cape Royal Trail
- Cliff Spring Trail
- Fire Point Trail
- Francois Matthes Trail
- Ken Patrick Trail
- Komo Point Trail
- Rim Trail
- Tiyo Point Trail
- Transept Trail
- Uncle Jim Trail
- Walhalla Glades Trail
- Walhalla Spur Trail
- Widforss Trail