11 U.S. National Parks That Offer Rare Solitude, From Alaska to Texas, With No Roads, Few Visitors and Remote Access

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Remote national park landscape with mountains, water and open wilderness

WASHINGTON, DC — For travelers hoping to find quiet, some U.S. national parks still deliver the classic wilderness experience: open space, limited access and very few people. The tradeoff is simple — the more remote the park, the less likely it is to feel crowded.

Many of the least-visited parks are in Alaska, but there are also low-key options in the lower 48, including forested, desert and water-based parks that require extra effort to reach.

Alaska parks lead the list with vast territory and few visitors

Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve is routinely among the least-visited parks in the country. It has no roads or trails, sits entirely north of the Arctic Circle and spans a huge wilderness where seeing another person is unlikely.

Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve, the largest national park in the U.S., covers 13.2 million acres and includes glaciers, tall peaks and only a small number of annual visitors. Denali National Park also stays relatively uncrowded thanks to a single road and a landscape best explored on foot.

Remote access keeps visitors down in island and coastal parks

National Park of American Samoa is the only U.S. national park in the Southern Hemisphere and spreads across three volcanic islands. Its distance from the mainland and island setting keep visitation low, even as reefs and rainforest draw snorkelers and hikers.

Dry Tortugas National Park, about 70 miles west of Key West, can only be reached by boat or seaplane. Isle Royale National Park in Michigan is also hard to reach, with access by ferry or seaplane across Lake Superior.

Lower 48 parks can still feel quiet away from major routes

North Cascades National Park in Washington has dramatic peaks and glaciers but few roads, which limits casual traffic. In South Carolina, Congaree National Park protects old-growth bottomland forest and is better known for boardwalk walks and paddling than crowds.

Great Basin National Park in Nevada, Voyageurs National Park in Minnesota and Guadalupe Mountains National Park in Texas also rank as quieter choices, thanks to their distance from major urban centers and access that often depends on hiking, boating or simply going out of the way.

Why these parks stay under the radar

Across the list, the same pattern appears: limited roads, longer travel times, weather, water crossings or the need for backcountry travel. Those barriers reduce the day-trip traffic that fills more famous parks.

For visitors willing to plan ahead, the payoff is a better chance at solitude, wildlife encounters and landscapes that feel close to the original national park ideal.

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