Laura S.
Yelp
Saguaro National Park. Dec 1, 2025. My husband and I are frequent visitors to National Parks, and consider them to be one of our country's greatest resources. We're visiting the Tucson area this week specifically so we could visit Saguaro NP, a part of the Sonoran Desert. This park has two districts -- both in the Tucson area and separated by about a one-hour drive -- the Tucson Mountain District (West) and the Rincon Mountain District (East). This review refers to our visit today to the Tucson Mountain District.
We started our day at the Red Hills Visitor Center, where our first activity was to check-in with a ranger regarding admission fees. Entry fees are $25 per private vehicle, $20 per motorcycle, and $15 per person entering on foot or bicycle, with passes valid for seven days for both park districts. We have an America the Beautiful Lifetime Pass, so admission was free. After showing our pass credentials to a ranger, she gave us the park brochure and then directed us to a colleague who gave us hiking maps for both parks and walked us through our options. Both were very friendly and helpful. The Visitor Center offers information, exhibits, films (4 today, but we were off-schedule), a NP cancellation station,a gift shop offering t-shirts and other souvenirs (had to buy some cacti candies, Native-made soaps, and a requisite refrigerator magnet!), the Cactus Garden Trail, a wheelchair-accessible walkway through a variety of desert plants, a clean restroom, and, importantly, the park's only potable water. It's important to stay hydrated in the desert!
After the Visitors Center, our next activity was to begin to drive the Bajada Loop Drive, which is a 5-mile loop drive on an unpaved road. While unpaved, the road is in good condition and does not require 4WD. No oversized vehicles are allowed. (Note that there's a 1.2 mile offshoot from the main loop, along Golden Gate Rd, to the Ez-Kim-In-Zin picnic area that we found to be rougher in our small rental car. We turned around). What's particularly fun about the loop road is that you can enjoy the desert surroundings from the comfort of your car, or get out to explore the desert on well-marked trails or stop at one of the picnic areas. We ate our lunch at the Sus picnic area, under a shade ramada. It has picnic tables, grills, and a clean pit toilet and hand sanitizer but no water. We parked up the road to hike the Valley View Overlook Trail, which was only 0.8-mile roundtrip, family-friendly, and rated easy, but had it all - views of the mountains, desert, saguaro forests, and the valley. There were two benches at the turn-around point, with views of the valleys. The elevation change was only 52'. In the words of the Hiking Guide, most "trails are natural soil with some rock steps. ... Many trails have low lines of rock angled across the trail, These are called "water bars" and are installed to slow and divert rain runoff to reduce the formation of gullies." Also on the loop road was the Signal Hill roundtrip (0.3 mile) trail which leads to dozens of drawings etched into rock that date to the Hohokam period, 450-1450 CE.
We also returned to walk the Desert Discovery Nature Trail, a flat, paved, and accessible 0.5 mile loop through a stand of large saguaros that begins at a parking area about one mile north of the Visitors Center. (The small parking lot was full earlier in the day).
We touched only a small fraction of the 175 miles of trails in the two districts of the park. We'll have to return again someday.