Las Vegas to Moab: Twelve Days Through the Desert’s Greatest Hits
This is the ultimate Southwest national parks road trip — a 12-day grand loop that connects the region’s most astonishing landscapes. You’ll stand beneath the sheer sandstone cliffs of Zion, walk among the surreal hoodoos of Bryce Canyon, drive the lonely highways through Capitol Reef, hike beneath the 2,000 natural arches of Arches National Park, feel the immense silence of Canyonlands, and watch the sunset paint Monument Valley red and gold. It ends at the Grand Canyon, the desert’s final, overwhelming statement. This is a trip for people who love the outdoors, don’t mind a few hours behind the wheel, and want to experience the American West at its most spectacular. Estimated budget: $1400–2000.
12-Day Itinerary Overview
Route: Las Vegas (1) → Valley of Fire (1) → Zion (1) → Bryce (1) → Capitol Reef (1) → Moab / Arches (2) → Canyonlands (1) → Monument Valley (1) → Page / Antelope Canyon (1) → Grand Canyon South Rim (1) → Departure (1)
Best for: National park enthusiasts, photographers, road trip veterans
Budget: $1,400–2,000 per person (excluding flights)
Direction: Grand loop — east and north from Las Vegas through Utah, then south through Monument Valley and Arizona back to Las Vegas or Flagstaff
Getting There & Getting Around
Arriving & Departing
Fly into Harry Reid International Airport (LAS) in Las Vegas. Depart from either LAS again (all major connections) or Flagstaff Pulliam Airport (FLG) (limited flights connecting through Phoenix or Denver). The loop covers approximately 1,200 miles — plan for 15-20 hours of total driving time, spread across 12 days.
Visa: Standard US ESTA or B-2 tourist visa required.
Driving the Southwest Loop
A rental car is mandatory — there is no practical public transport connecting these parks. A standard sedan is sufficient for all paved roads. Do not rent an RV — many scenic roads have vehicle length restrictions (Zion-Mount Carmel Tunnel, Capitol Reef’s scenic drive). Book your car well in advance; summer rates in Las Vegas surge. Expect $50-80/day. Warning: Gas stations are sparse between towns in Utah — never pass a gas station below half a tank. Gas is cheapest in Nevada and most expensive at isolated stations near the parks.
Park passes: An America the Beautiful Pass ($80) covers entry to ALL national parks — buy it at the first park entrance.
Day-by-Day Itinerary
Day 1: Las Vegas Arrival & Gear Up
☀️ Full DayArrive in Las Vegas. Pick up your rental car and stock up on supplies — this is your last opportunity to buy cheap gear. Visit an REI or Walmart to stock a road trip box: cases of water (you’ll need them), snacks, sunscreen, a cooler, and a first-aid kit. Check into your Vegas accommodation and enjoy one last Strip evening — you won’t see anything resembling nightlife for the next week. If you have time, visit the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign for the obligatory photo.
Accommodation: Las Vegas ($30-60/night budget).
Day 2: Valley of Fire & St. George
☀️ MorningDrive 1 hour northeast from Las Vegas to Valley of Fire State Park ($15/vehicle). The name says it all — 40,000 acres of fiery red Aztec sandstone, carved by wind into petrified dunes and beehive formations. The Fire Wave Trail (1.5 miles, moderate) leads to a swirling sandstone formation that looks like a frozen ocean. Stop at Mouse’s Tank Trail for ancient petroglyphs etched into the rock by the Paiute people.
🌆 AfternoonContinue east on I-15 to St. George, Utah (1 hour). St. George is the gateway to Zion and a good resupply point. Visit the St. George Temple visitors’ center (beautiful gardens, free) and walk the historic downtown. Early dinner and an early night — tomorrow you hit Zion.
Transport: Rental car (2 hours total driving).
Entry: Valley of Fire ($15/vehicle).
Day 3: Zion National Park
☀️ Full DayDrive 45 minutes east from St. George to Zion National Park. Zion is one of America’s most popular parks — arrive at the visitor center by 7:30 AM to get parking. Take the free Zion Canyon Shuttle into the main canyon. Angels Landing (5.4 miles round trip, strenuous, requires a permit — apply at recreation.gov months in advance) is the most famous hike, with chains bolted into a narrow spine of rock. If you don’t have a permit, hike Observation Point (8 miles, strenuous but no permit needed, views looking DOWN onto Angels Landing).
🌆 AfternoonFor an easier option, walk the Riverside Walk (2.2 miles, paved) along the Virgin River to the entrance of the Narrows. The Zion–Mount Carmel Highway drive through the 1.1-mile tunnel is an experience in itself. Stay in Springdale (just outside the park entrance).
Entry: Zion NP ($35/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass).
Transport: Park shuttle (free, runs March–November).
Day 4: Bryce Canyon National Park
☀️ MorningDrive 2.5 hours northeast from Zion to Bryce Canyon National Park. Bryce is famous for its hoodoos — thousands of spire-shaped rock formations in shades of orange, pink, and white. Stop at Sunrise Point or Sunset Point for your first view — it’s like looking at an amphitheatre of stone giants. Hike the Navajo Loop + Queens Garden Trail (3 miles, moderate) — this combines the two best trails into a loop that descends among the hoodoos and gives you a completely different perspective looking UP.
🌆 AfternoonDrive the full 18-mile scenic road to Rainbow Point at the park’s southern end (8,000 feet elevation). On a clear day, you can see the Vermilion Cliffs 60 miles south. Stop at Natural Bridge (a natural arch, not a bridge, 0.2 mile from the road) and Farview Point for the best panorama. Stay in Bryce Canyon City or Tropic (small towns right outside the park).
Entry: Bryce Canyon ($35/vehicle, America the Beautiful pass).
Day 5: Capitol Reef National Park
☀️ Full DayDrive 2 hours northeast from Bryce to Capitol Reef National Park — the least visited of Utah’s Mighty 5 and in some ways the most spectacular. The park protects the Waterpocket Fold, a 100-mile-long wrinkle in the Earth’s crust. Drive the Scenic Drive (out and back, $20/vehicle, or America the Beautiful pass). The road ends at Capitol Gorge — a narrow canyon with pioneer inscriptions from the 1880s carved into the canyon walls.
🌆 AfternoonVisit the Fruita Historic District — a Mormon pioneer settlement with orchards where you can pick your own fruit (apples, peaches, cherries, depending on season, $3/hour). The Fruita Schoolhouse and Gifford Homestead sell excellent pies ($5/slice, the cherry and apple pies are legendary). Hike the Grand Wash Trail (2.5 miles one way, easy, shuttle back) through a narrow slot canyon. Stay in Torrey, a small town 10 miles east of the park with excellent restaurants for such a remote location.
Entry: Capitol Reef ($20/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass).
Day 6: Scenic Highway 12 to Moab
☀️ MorningDrive Scenic Highway 12 from Torrey to Boulder — one of the most beautiful drives in America. The road climbs over the Boulder Mountain plateau with views of the Aquarius Plateau and the Henry Mountains. Stop at the Hogsback, a narrow ridge with sheer drops on both sides. In Boulder, visit Anasazi State Park Museum ($7) to see an excavated Ancestral Puebloan village.
🌆 AfternoonContinue on Highway 12 through Escalante and Calf Creek Falls Recreation Area ($7) — the 3-mile hike to Lower Calf Creek Falls leads to a 126-foot waterfall in a desert canyon, one of the best hikes in Utah. The water is cold and perfect for a swim. Continue east on Highway 24 to Moab (3 hours from Boulder). Check into your Moab accommodation — you’ll be here for three nights.
Transport: Rental car (5 hours total from Torrey to Moab, but the scenic stops make it a full day).
Day 7: Arches National Park
☀️ Full DayDrive 10 minutes north from Moab to Arches National Park ($35/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass). The park protects over 2,000 natural stone arches, the highest concentration in the world. Start early (before 8 AM) to beat the crowds and heat. Drive the 18-mile scenic road to the end. At each stop, you can walk 0.2-1.5 miles to see dozens of arches.
Must-see arches: Delicate Arch (3 miles round trip, strenuous, no shade — go at sunrise or sunset for the photo and cooler temperatures). Double Arch (0.5 mile, easy, two massive arches sharing a common base). Landscape Arch (1.6 miles round trip, easy, the longest arch in the park at 306 feet — it’s so thin you wonder how it holds). The Windows Section (1 mile loop) has North and South Windows plus Turret Arch in one easy walk. Stay in Moab for a third night.
Entry: Arches ($35/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass).
Accommodation: Moab ($70-120/night for these 3 nights).
Day 8: Canyonlands National Park
☀️ Full DayDrive 30 minutes southwest from Moab to Canyonlands National Park — Island in the Sky District ($35/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass). This is the most accessible section of Canyonlands, perched on a mesa 1,000 feet above the surrounding canyons. The views are jaw-dropping — the Green River and Colorado River have carved a labyrinth of canyons below you.
Drive the Grand View Point Road with stops at every pull-off. Mesa Arch (0.5 mile, easy) is one of the most photographed spots in the Southwest — the arch frames a drop and the distant La Sal Mountains. Grand View Point (2 miles round trip) gives a 360-degree perspective of the entire canyon system. Upheaval Dome (1.8 miles round trip) is a mysterious crater — scientists still debate if it’s a meteor impact or a salt dome collapse. Return to Moab for a third night.
Entry: Canyonlands ($35/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass).
Day 9: Monument Valley
☀️ Full DayFrom Moab, drive 2.5 hours south through Blanding and Bluff on US-191 to Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park ($20 per vehicle, 8 AM–5 PM). The red sandstone buttes of Monument Valley are among the most iconic images of the American West — you’ve seen them in every John Wayne movie. Drive the 17-mile unpaved scenic loop (allow 2 hours with stops). The road is washboard-rough but fine for a standard car if you go slowly.
Key viewpoints: John Ford’s Point (where the director filmed countless Westerns), The Three Sisters, and Artist’s Point for the classic silhouette shot of the mittens. Consider a Navajo-guided tour ($60-80/person, 2-3 hours) which takes you into areas of the valley the self-drive road doesn’t reach — the Anasazi ruins inside the park are spectacular. Stay in Kayenta (10 miles south, the only real town nearby).
Entry: Monument Valley ($20/vehicle, Navajo Tribal Park pass).
Accommodation: Kayenta ($80-130/night) or The View Hotel ($200+, right inside the park with butte views).
Day 10: Page – Antelope Canyon & Horseshoe Bend
☀️ Full DayDrive 2 hours south from Kayenta to Page, Arizona. Page sits on the Colorado River at the Utah-Arizona border and is the base for two of the most photographed places in the Southwest. First: Antelope Canyon. This narrow slot canyon is a Navajo Tribal Park — you must visit with a guided tour ($50-80/person, 1-1.5 hours). Upper Antelope Canyon is wider with famous light beams (best at 11 AM–1 PM May–September). Lower Antelope Canyon is narrower, less crowded, and involves climbing stairs (better for photographers, no light beams). Book online weeks in advance.
🌆 AfternoonDrive 10 minutes south of Page to Horseshoe Bend ($10 parking fee) — a 270-degree meander of the Colorado River, 1,000 feet below. The 0.75-mile walk from the parking lot is across loose sand — it’s harder than it looks. The view at the end is worth it. For sunset, drive to Glen Canyon Dam overlook (free) or Wahweap Overlook on Lake Powell.
Transport: Rental car (2 hours driving).
Entry: Antelope Canyon tour ($50-80), Horseshoe Bend ($10 parking).
Day 11: Grand Canyon South Rim
☀️ Full DayDrive 2.5 hours south from Page to Grand Canyon National Park (South Rim). Enter through the east entrance (Desert View) — the first view as you approach the canyon is spectacular. Stop at Desert View Watchtower (free) for 360-degree views. Drive the 25 miles west along the rim to Grand Canyon Village, stopping at viewpoints along the way: Lipan Point, Moran Point, and Grandview Point.
🌆 AfternoonTake the free Hermit Road shuttle from the Village west to Hopi Point, Pima Point, and Hermits Rest. The canyon looks different at every stop. If you want to hike into the canyon, the South Kaibab Trail to Ooh Aah Point (1.8 miles round trip) gives you a sense of being inside the canyon without a full-day commitment. Watch sunset at Hopi Point or Yaki Point — the canyon layers turn from red to purple to deep blue. Stay in Grand Canyon Village or Tusayan.
Entry: Grand Canyon ($35/vehicle or America the Beautiful pass — if you bought the pass, you’re covered).
Day 12: Grand Canyon Sunrise & Departure
☀️ Early MorningOne final sunrise at the South Rim. Mather Point and Yaki Point are the classic spots. The park shuttle starts at 4:30 AM in summer. Watching the first light hit the canyon walls is the perfect punctuation for this 12-day journey through the American desert.
☀️ MorningAfter sunrise, walk a final section of the Rim Trail between Mather Point and Maricopa Point. Visit the Grand Canyon Visitor Center if you haven’t already. Then begin your drive to either Flagstaff (1.5 hours, limited flights from FLG) or Las Vegas (4.5 hours, major hub). Flagstaff is a lovely mountain town worth a brief stop — the historic downtown has a Route 66 vibe, good coffee shops, and a walkable railroad district.
Departure: Fly out of LAS (most connections) or FLG (limited, via Phoenix/Denver).
Practical Information for the Southwest Grand Loop
Visas & Entry
Standard US entry rules: ESTA or B-2 visa. The America the Beautiful Pass ($80) covers all national parks on this itinerary. Note that Monument Valley and Antelope Canyon are Navajo Tribal Parks, not national parks — separate entry fees apply and the America the Beautiful Pass is not accepted. Both accept credit cards.
SIM Card & Internet
Cell coverage is very sparse across much of this route. Expect coverage in Las Vegas, St. George, Moab, Page, and the Grand Canyon Village. Between these towns — on Highway 12, in Capitol Reef, and on remote stretches — coverage drops to nothing. Download offline maps for the ENTIRE route before leaving Las Vegas. Most hotels have free WiFi. T-Mobile has better rural coverage than Verizon in this region.
Money & ATMs
Credit cards are accepted at all national park entry stations, hotels, and restaurants on this route. Cash is useful for small roadside vendors, Navajo-guided tour tips, and some Monument Valley entrance fees. ATMs are available in St. George, Moab, Page, and Grand Canyon Village. Don’t expect ATMs in Capitol Reef or rural stretches. Carry $100-150 cash for the journey.
Language & Communication
English is the primary language throughout. The Navajo Nation (Monument Valley, Antelope Canyon) has Navajo as the first language — many Navajo guides speak English and provide excellent cultural context. Park visitor centers are English-only. Spanish is spoken in Las Vegas and some Arizona towns. The region is very tourist-friendly — rangers, hotel staff, and tour operators deal with international visitors daily.
Best Time to Visit
April to May and September to October are ideal — mild temperatures (70-85°F days), manageable crowds, and good conditions for hiking. June–August is scorching (95-110°F in the lower parks) — hike by sunrise and seek shade by noon. November–March is cold (30-50°F days, snow possible at Bryce and the Grand Canyon) but offers solitude, lower prices, and snow-dusted hoodoos at Bryce that are magical.
Seasonal note: Many park shuttle services and high-elevation roads (Bryce, Grand Canyon) have limited hours or close in winter. Check NPS sites before going.
Health & Safety
The biggest risk on this route is dehydration and heat exhaustion. You’re driving through high desert — drink 4+ litres of water per day. Carry cases of water in your car. Altitude affects some parks: Bryce (8,000 ft), Grand Canyon South Rim (7,000 ft) — you may feel short of breath. Take it slow the first day at altitude. No special vaccinations needed. Sun protection is essential: SPF 50+, wide hat, sunglasses. Watch for wildlife on the road, especially at dawn and dusk (deer, elk, bighorn sheep). Stay on designated trails at canyon edges — the drop is real and fatal.
Budget Summary: 12-Day Southwest Grand Loop Itinerary
Estimated Total: $1,400–2,000 per person
- Accommodation (11 nights): $500–900
- Car rental (12 days + gas): $700–1,000
- America the Beautiful Pass: $80
- Monument Valley + Antelope Canyon: $120-160
- Meals (all restaurants, road snacks): $250–400
- Souvenirs & miscellaneous: $60–100
Best Season: April–May or September–October
Recommended For: National park enthusiasts, photographers, road trip veterans
Money-Saving Tip: The America the Beautiful Pass ($80) pays for itself by park #3. Camp at national park campgrounds ($20-35/night) instead of hotels. Cook your own meals at campsites. Fill gas in Nevada before entering Utah. Book Moab accommodation 3+ months ahead. Antelope Canyon is expensive but worth it — Lower Antelope is cheaper than Upper and less crowded.
Disclaimer: Prices are estimates and may vary by season. Timed-entry reservations are required for Zion (shuttle) and Arches (peak season) — book on recreation.gov. Antelope Canyon tours must be booked in advance. This itinerary is for general reference only. Always check current visa requirements and travel advisories before booking.


