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(Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto)
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The benefits of a national-park trip in the fall don鈥檛 stop at crisp temperatures and smaller crowds. (Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

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Six National Parks That Are Better in Fall

Some of the most popular national-park sites come alive this season, offering vibrant hikes, cool camping weather, and amazing wildlife spotting

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The benefits of a national-park trip in the fall don鈥檛 stop at crisp temperatures and smaller crowds鈥攆all foliage gives classic landscapes a makeover. Whether you鈥檙e exploring just one park or road-tripping through many, we鈥檝e collected tips on six sites that take on a new look this season, from the country鈥檚 newest national park, in West Virginia, to the ancient forests of the Rockies, Appalachia, and Northeast. Find out where to stay and what to do below, with a link to our comprehensive guide of each.

Shenandoah National Park

Autumn Forest
(exies/iStock)

If Shenandoah is famous for one thing, it鈥檚 fall foliage. The park鈥檚 thick and lush hardwood canopy goes full Technicolor in October, attracting thousands of leaf peepers looking for Instagram gold. Given the short drive from Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Shenandoah is especially busy on weekends, so expect traffic on Skyline Drive, as well as packed campgrounds and lodges.

That鈥檚 not to say you should avoid the park during the fall. The natural show of color is spectacular, and the temperatures are mild (highs in the mid-sixties, lows in the forties), but skip a congested driving tour and instead seek solace in the backcountry. One option is the , a nine-mile loop past waterfalls and rocky outcroppings that gets you deep into that vibrant canopy. And check the park鈥檚 before you go, so you know when peak foliage hits. 鈥Graham Averill

Find our full guide here.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Man running under fall foliage
(Photo: Harrison Shull/Cavan)

When cooler temperatures arrive, you鈥檒l spot more elk and bears in the valleys (and usually don鈥檛 have to leave the car to see them). Head to the remote for likely sightings of elk and out to for the bears, though be aware that a trip to the former can be an hours-long, bumper-to-bumper 11-mile drive. The park is also known for its foliage, so opt for a trail that cuts through old-growth, hardwood forest, like the off the eight-mile Maddron Bald Trail and the six-mile Low Gap Trail up to and back.

The park and its backcountry sites are open year-round, although the off-season, which runs from late October through May, closes seven of the park鈥檚 ten developed campgrounds; on the Tennessee side and in North Carolina stay open. After the tail end of a typically humid August, this season is the driest聽with the least rainfall. 鈥Neil Norman

Find our full guide here.

Rocky Mountain National Park

(Photo: antonyspencer/iStock)

You could argue that the months of September and October are the best time to visit this park, especially if you can swing a midweek trip when the majority of potential visitors are working or in school. Temperatures are mild during the day, reaching the high fifties, and the aspens begin changing in the middle of September. That magical show is only matched by the elk rut鈥攚hen large males start fighting and bugling for the affection of females鈥攚hich commences in September and carries on into October at the Horseshoe Park area at dawn and dusk.

There are five frontcountry campgrounds (from $30): , , and fill up well in advance (make reservations up to six months prior to your date), while the and 聽campgrounds are first come, first served. If fall鈥檚 colder temperatures make you yearn for a bed and electricity (no shame in that), you鈥檒l need to look outside the park. On the Grand Lake side, has a handful of log lodgings on the North Fork of the Colorado River (from $160). In Estes Park, there are of stand-alone cabins and cottages for rent, including Solitude Cabins, a collection of 30 properties scattered across nine acres (from $275). 鈥G.A.

Find our full guide here.

Acadia National Park

(Photo: Courtesy Under Canvas)

The first half of September in Acadia is summer without the bugs, humidity, and fog鈥攋ust lots of sun and clear blue skies, with temperatures in the low seventies. The excellent, though cooler, weather continues for several weeks as the foliage turns crimson, gold, and orange, reaching its peak in early to mid-October. The fiery colors are mirrored in the waters of Eagle Lake, Long Pond, and Jordan Pond, and are best experienced by kayak. Maine鈥檚 weekly keeps tabs on the changing colors statewide.

Four , open spring through fall, provide the only overnight accommodations within the park. The and campgrounds feature a total of 483 sites for primitive, drive-up, and group tenting and unserviced RV camping (from $22). Acadia鈥檚 newest campground, , has spiffy amenities like a 100-seat amphitheater and the widest range of camping options, including RV sites with electricity and water (from $22). The on Isle au Haut has five lean-to shelters ($20); advance reservations are a must. 鈥Virginia M. Wright

Find our full guide here.

New River Gorge National Park

(Photo: Sean Pavone/iStock)

Ranging from 70 to 40 degrees,聽the temperatures here come fall聽are perfect for climbing and mountain biking, and a couple of key events punctuate the season. , which takes place in the middle of October as the hardwood canopy鈥檚 foliage peaks, brings hundreds of BASE jumpers to the area, where they can legally jump off the 876-foot-tall New River Gorge Bridge, the world鈥檚 second-longest arch bridge, parachuting into the canyon聽below.

For many paddlers, Gauley Season is the highlight of the year, as water is released from the dam on Summersville Lake for several weekends in a row through October, resulting in Class V rapids along the Gauley River. While there鈥檚 some primitive camping inside the park boundaries, most visitors choose one of the privately owned campgrounds or 鈥渞esorts鈥 that sit adjacent to the park proper. occupies 1,500 acres 12 miles south of the visitor center and has its own trail system for hiking and mountain biking, four lakes, and a private beach where rafting trips launch. Choose from campsites to cliffside chalets (campsites start at $15, chalets start at $399). 鈥G.A.

Find our full guide here.

Grand Teton National Park

Mount Moran view from Oxbow Bend beside Snake River of Grand Teton, Wyoming
(Photo: jack-sooksan/iStock)

Fall is my favorite season in the Tetons. Yes, the wildflowers are gone, but so too are the hordes. Also, have you ever heard an elk bugle? It鈥檚 an otherworldly sound. One of my favorite things to do is to grab a sandwich and a bottle of wine at , a restaurant just outside the park鈥檚 Moose entrance, and head to the historic , which was Jackson Hole鈥檚 second dude ranch when it opened in 1912, for a bugling concert. Bull elk often hang out near the Snake River here.

While it鈥檚 possible there will be new snow at the park鈥檚 higher altitudes, most hikes and backpacking itineraries are doable into October. Expect daytime temperatures between the fifties and seventies, with most nights in the twenties or thirties.聽鈥Dina Mishev

Find our full guide here.

Lead Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto