Discover Which States Hide the Nation’s Biggest National Park Secrets—and Which Barely Make the Map

Discover Which States Hide the Nation’s Biggest National Park Secrets—and Which Barely Make the Map

National parks are stealing the spotlight like never before! In 2024, the National Park Service recorded a jaw-dropping 331 million visits—its biggest year on record. But here’s the kicker: while some states are practically swimming in protected wilderness, others are barely dipping their toes in. Ever wondered which states are national park junkies and which ones are playing it cool with just a sliver of land set aside? Buckle up—because the upcoming map and data reveal some surprising (and perhaps downright hilarious) contrasts in how America’s natural treasures are spread out. Ready to find out if your state is a national park heavyweight or a lightweight? Let’s dive in! LEARN MORE.

National parks are more popular than ever: in 2024, the National Park Service tallied more than 331 million visits, its biggest year on record. But some states have much more of their land dedicated to national parks than others. To see which states are at the top and bottom of that list, check out the map and data below.

  1. Public Lands by the Numbers
  2. National Park Lands in Each State
  3. States With the Least National Park Land
  4. Parks with Benefits

Public Lands by the Numbers

A beautiful photo of Glacier National Park in Montana.

A beautiful photo of Glacier National Park in Montana. | Jordan Siemens/Stone/Getty Images

In August 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Organic Act, giving management of the country’s growing system of national parks and other public lands to the newly created National Park Service. According to data collected by the Congressional Research Service and last updated in 2020 [PDF], this government agency oversees more than 85 million acres of land across all 50 states, roughly 3.5 percent of the country’s total area. Those lands include 19 kinds of parks:

Park Type

Number (as of 2025)

National Monuments

87

National Historic Sites

75

National Historical Parks

64

National Parks

63

National Memorials

31

National Preserves

19

National Recreation Areas

18

National Battlefields

11

Other Designations

11

National Seashores

10

National Wild and Scenic Rivers

10

National Military Parks

9

National Scenic Trails

6

National Battlefield Parks

4

National Parkways

4

National Rivers

4

National Lakeshores

3

National Reserves

2

National Battlefield Site

1

International Historic Site

1

National Park Lands in Each State

Maps shows how much land each state is managed by the National Park Service.

Maps shows how much land each state is managed by the National Park Service. | Map by Mental Floss via MapChart // CC by SA 4.0

More than half of those 85 million acres are located inside a single state: Alaska. With a population of less than 750,000, plenty of space is available for federal designation in the Last Frontier, including the five biggest national parks in the entire system:

  • Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve: 13.2 million acres
  • Gates of the Arctic National Park & Preserve: 8.5 million acres
  • Denali National Park & Preserve: 6.1 million acres
  • Katmai National Park & Preserve: 4.1 million acres
  • Lake Clark National Park & Preserve: 4 million acres

While Alaska’s public lands encompass glaciers, rainforests, mountains, volcanoes, and frozen tundra, much of California’s national park territory is a lot hotter and drier. With 7.6 million acres, it has the largest area managed by the National Park Service in the lower 48 and its biggest NPS-managed unit is Death Valley National Park—3.3 million acres of scorching Mojave Desert populated mostly by sheep, foxes, kangaroo rats, and the skeletons of prospectors who failed to find their fortunes during the 19th century gold rush. 

The states next in line in terms of national park acreage are Florida (2.4 million), Wyoming (2.3 million) and Utah (2 million): home of the Everglades National Park (1.5 million acres), Yellowstone National Park (2.2 million acres), and Canyonlands National Park (337,000 acres), respectively. 


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Here’s the complete list:

State/District

Total Acres

Alabama

17,540

Alaska

52,455,308

Arizona

2,658,112

Arkansas

98,346

California

7,612,898

Colorado

665,260

Connecticut

5846

Delaware

890

District of Columbia

8476

Florida

2,469,173

Georgia

39,935

Hawaii

358,160

Idaho

511,963

Illinois

12

Indiana

10,769

Iowa

2708

Kansas

462

Kentucky

94,103

Louisiana

17,690

Maine

156,205

Maryland

41,532

Massachusetts

33,336

Michigan

632,280

Minnesota

139,789

Mississippi

104,369

Missouri

54,569

Montana

1,214,193

Nebraska

5899

Nevada

797,613

New Hampshire

13,696

New Jersey

35,683

New Mexico

468,968

New York

34,106

North Carolina

366,889

North Dakota

71,192

Ohio

20,290

Oklahoma

10,011

Oregon

196,197

Pennsylvania

53,460

Rhode Island

5

South Carolina

32,339

South Dakota

148,010

Tennessee

359,197

Texas

1,206,489

Utah

2,097,860

Vermont

9836

Virginia

306,393

Washington

1,834,616

West Virginia

65,554

Wisconsin

61,835

Wyoming

2,345,619

States With the Least National Park Land

A white great egret wades in a lush tropical swamp within Everglades National Park.

A great egret wades in Everglades National Park. | Mark Newman/The Image Bank/Getty Images

On the flipside, there’s Kansas. Though it has roughly the same total area as Florida or Wyoming, only 462 acres of its land is owned by the National Parks Service. In Kansas’s defense, this comparatively small number is due to the fact that the state’s largest park, the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, which covers nearly 11,000 acres of land, is privately owned by the Nature Conservancy and is co-managed with the National Park Service. 

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