Monument Valley

admin

Monument Valley is a surreal exploration through fantastical architecture and impossible geometry. Guide the silent princess Ida through mysterious monuments, uncovering hidden paths, unfolding optical illusions and outsmarting the enigmatic Crow People. Monument Valley Tourism: Tripadvisor has 33,607 reviews of Monument Valley Hotels, Attractions, and Restaurants making it your best Monument Valley resource.

Home Parks Hotels Plants
MAPS PARKS TRAILS PHOTOS HOTELS

Monument Valley, Utah, an iconic symbol of the American West, is the sacred heart of the Navajo Nation and the ideal setting for your next adventure in the warm, high desert climate of southeastern Utah. In some ways, Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park is the definitive West. Monument Valley, Utah, an iconic symbol of the American West, is the sacred heart of the Navajo Nation and the ideal setting for your next adventure in the warm, high desert climate of southeastern Utah. In some ways, Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park is the definitive West.

×
Utah Pages
INDEX
MAPS
INTRODUCTION
PARKS
TRAILS
WEATHER
PHOTOS
HOTELS
All Sections
Arizona
California
Colorado
Idaho
Nevada
New Mexico
Oregon
Texas
Utah
Wyoming
Slot Canyons
MENU


World famous red rock buttes surrounded by sandy plains; the epitome of a Western landscape, featured in many movies and commercials. Some can be seen from overlooks along US 163 but most is part of a Navajo Tribal Park, viewed by a 17 mile dirt road
Kayenta, 23 miles
Navajo Reservation
36.982, -110.112 (Tribal Park)
All year
★★★★★

Weather Forecast

Game
17 mile dirt road past the best formations, within the Navajo Tribal Park, with 11 major overlooks. Usually accessible to regular vehicles, including small RVs
Access to a rarely-visited region on the north side of the valley, where the land slopes down gently towards Lake Powell
Hiking opportunities in the valley, including around Monument Pass, on the west side of US 163
Wildcat Trail
★★★★The only official trail in the valley; a loop all around West Mitten Butte, across sand dunes and along dry washes
The only chain hotel in Kayenta, 20 miles south of Monument Valley; a three floor, adobe-style property with outdoor pool and gardens
Check Rates

Hotels in Kayenta - Affiliate disclosure
Monument Valley provides perhaps the most enduring and definitive images of the American West. The isolated red mesas and buttes surrounded by empty, sandy desert have been filmed and photographed countless times over the years for movies, adverts and holiday brochures. Because of this, the area may seem quite familiar, even on a first visit, but it is soon evident that the natural colors really are as bright and deep as those in all the pictures. The valley is not a valley in the conventional sense, but rather a wide flat, sometimes desolate landscape, interrupted by the crumbling formations rising hundreds of feet into the air, the last remnants of the sandstone layers that once covered the entire region.

Location


Monument Valley Maps: Overview, Valley Drive.

Goulding


The area lies entirely within the Navajo Indian Reservation on the Utah/Arizona border; the state line passes through the most famous landmarks, which are concentrated around the border near the small settlement of Goulding - this was established in 1923 as a trading post, and provides basic visitor services. A paved side road heads past the village to the northwest beneath Oljeto Mesa and has views of other less-visited parts of the valley, then another route (the unpaved Piute Farms Road) continues all the way to the shores of the San Juan branch of Lake Powell.

Approach

Monument Valley Wiki


There is only one main road through Monument Valley, US 163, which links Kayenta, AZ with US 191 in Utah. The stretch approaching the AZ/UT border from the north gives the most famous image of the valley, and possibly of the whole Southwest - a long straight empty road leads across flat desert towards the 1,000 foot high stark red cliffs on the horizon, curving away just in front. The highway cuts through the mesas at MonumentMonument Pass, near which several dirt tracks leave both east and west and criss-cross the red sandy landscape, offering a more close up appreciation of the rock formations, although these roads lead to Navajo residences so some discretion is necessary when visiting. This is also a good area for hiking, though there are no official trails. One possible route is around the group of formations on the southeast side of Monument Pass - a cross country trip of about 4 miles that involves traversing various small washes, cliffs and mesas.

The Navajo Tribal Park


Although much can be appreciated from the main road, a lot more of the landscape is hidden from view behind long straight cliffs (the Mitchell and Wetherill Mesas), east of the road on the Arizona side (see overview map). This is contained within the Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park (entrance fees increased to $20 per vehicle in 2014), reached along a short side road directly opposite the turn-off to Goulding. From the visitor center at Lookout PointMonument Valley there are good views across three of the valley's most photographed peaks - East and West Mitten Buttes, and Merrick Butte. The park has only one hiking path, the 3.2 mile Wildcat Trail which starts just south of the visitor center and loops around West Mitten Butte. Away from the park are other scenic backcountry areas, including Mystery Valley, on the opposite (west) side of Wetherill Mesa. This may be visited on half-day tours starting at Gouldings Lodge; highlighs are arches (Skull, Honeymoon and Pine Tree), pictographs, petroglyphs and Anasazi ruins.

Horsemen riding along the side track to North Window

Valley Drive


Monument Valley Map

The view from Lookout Point is spectacular enough, but most of the Navajo Tribal Park can only be seen from the Valley Drive, a 17 mile dirt road which starts at the visitor center and heads southeast amongst the towering cliffs and mesas, one of the most famous being Totem Pole, an oft-photographed spire of rock 450 feet high but only a few meters wide. The road is dusty, steep in a couple of places and rather uneven, but does not need 4WD - unless after recent heavy rain, the journey is suitable for the majority of family cars, and small to medium sized RVs, though the surface is perhaps not improved too much in order to increase business for the many Navajo guides and 4WD jeep rental outfits, which wait expectantly by the visitor center - typical prices are around $75 for a 2 hour trip (though cheaper tours are available from Gouldings Lodge). As well as eroded rocks, this area also has ancient cave and cliff dwellings, natural arches and petroglyphs, all generally away from the Valley Drive at more isolated locations and viewable only as part of guided tours.
Photos The Valley Drive passes 11 numbered stops at the most scenic places, and a typical journey around the loop takes at least 2 hours. Tourists are not allowed to hike away from the road closer towards any of the formations, but even so the trip is very enjoyable.

Monument Valley Hotels


Accommodation in the center of Monument Valley is limited to Gouldings Lodge and the View Hotel in the tribal park - both rather expensive - so most people prefer to stay 23 miles south in Kayenta, a town with only one chain hotel, Hampton Inn, following the closure of Holiday Inn Kayenta and Best Western Wetherill Inn.
Photographs: Monument Valley, Valley Drive

Monument Valley Closed


Yei Bi Chei and Totem Pole


Spearhead Mesa

Canyon de Chelly National Monument (116 miles) - deep canyon containing many ancient cliff dwellings
Mexican Hat (21 miles) - small town near many spectacular landscapes
Similar places

Island in the Sky, Canyonlands National Park - buttes and mesas around a high plateau
Valley of the Gods, near Mexican Hat - similar landscape of stark red rock formations
Valley
Monument Valley is part of the Colorado River, Grand Circle and Indian Lands itineraries




Affiliate disclosure

Arizona California Colorado Idaho Nevada New Mexico Oregon Texas Utah Wyoming Slot Canyons Travelogue SOUTHWEST

Monument Park Utah


All Contents © Copyright The American Southwest Comments and Questions Contribute Affiliate Marketing Disclosure Site Map

Ya’at’eeh, my name is Armanda Ortega and I am of the Kiy`anníí (Towering House) Clan. I am privileged to welcome you to a sacred place for my people, the Diné. In the Navajo, we believe that our people journeyed through three worlds in various forms of being before emerging from Mother Earth into this world, the Sparkling World.

Our private, fully-furnished valley rim cabins offer a unique way to experience Monument Valley. Many have said the view from the cabins is actually better than the view from the hotel rooms.

Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park

The View Campground offers a new way to enjoy the park. You can choose from RV sites, or wilderness camp sites. Each offers their own unique view of Monument Valley.

Offering a wide selection of contemporary and traditional Native American Art as well as memorabilia of Monument Valley.