Arizona
Cancellation alerts

Saguaro National Park Wilderness Permits

We watch every site at Saguaro National Park Wilderness Permits 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

5% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak May–Jul·21 sites
Set up an alert for Saguaro National Park Wilderness Permits

Pick your dates, pick the sites you want, we do the watching.

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at Saguaro National Park Wilderness Permits

Ranked by how often each site reserves on weekends in peak season (May–Jul). Set up an alert and we'll email you on cancellations.

Site Happy Valley 3

Best here
Ranked #1 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Manning Camp 4

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 21
Sleeps 2

Site Manning Camp 1

Top pick
Ranked #3 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Happy Valley 2

Standout
Ranked #4 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Happy Valley 1

Standout
Ranked #4 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Douglas Springs 2

Standout
Ranked #4 of 21
Sleeps 4

Site Juniper Basin 2

Decent
Ranked #7 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Manning Camp 3

Decent
Ranked #7 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Douglas Springs 3

Wait for better
Ranked #9 of 21
Sleeps 6

Site Manning Camp 6

Wait for better
Ranked #10 of 21
Sleeps 6

These sites rebook within minutes of being cancelled. Set an alert at Saguaro National Park Wilderness Permits and we’ll email you the moment one opens up.

Set up an alert →

About this park

The 70,000 square mile (18,1299 sq. km) Sky Island region of southeastern Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, and northwestern Mexico is globally important because of its rich diversity of species and habitats. These mountain "islands"--which include the Rincon Mountains—are --forested ranges separated by vast expanses of desert and grassland plans and , are among the most diverse ecosystems in the world. The Rincon Mountains of Saguaro National Park are the largest roadless sky island in the region. Are you constantly checking out cool flowers, bugs, and mushrooms along the trail? Saguaro National Park biologists would love to know what you're seeing! The park is revamping a project to document rare plants in the remote Rincon Mountain backcountry. If you make a free iNaturalist account (at inaturalist.org or the iNaturalist app), you can submit photo observations of plants and other living things you notice while hiking. Our staff and other specialists will help with IDs! For more information, check out our iNaturalist project Plants of the Saguaro NP High Country. Join the project if you’d like occasional updates on target species, seasonal trends, and exciting findings. Visitor-submitted observations help us learn more about mountain plant communities including distributions, flowering times, and leaf emergence. Rare sightings are always a possibility too! This project complements focused survey efforts conducted by botanists, park staff, and trained volunteers.