If outdoor recreation opportunities are on your company’s or family’s location matrix, new data released by the National Park Service this week is worth visiting.
Nearly 400 of the Department of the Interior’s 429 National Park Service areas covering more than 85 million acres were worth visiting in 2023, says the new report. A total of 325.5 million visitors — the highest number since 2019 — spent $26.4 billion in communities near national parks, often referred to as gateway economies. This spending supported 415,400 jobs, provided $19.4 billion in labor income and extrapolated to $55.6 in economic output to the U.S. economy, the report stated.
“I’m so proud that our parks and the stories we tell make a lasting impact on more than 300 million visitors a year. And I’m just as proud to see those visitors making positive impacts of their own, by supporting local economies and jobs in every state in the country.”
— National Park Service Director Chuck Sams
As one might expect, the economic output from lodging and restaurants was substantial, combining to account for 57% of total visitor spending), $15.1 billion (27%) of that total economic output and 157,800 (38%) of those total jobs.
The National Park Service (NPS) released data sets for 397 parks, sites, historic sites, recreation areas, seashores, memorials and other properties in its purview. Here’s how things break out by type of site:
The District of Columbia (with more than 41 million), California and Virginia led in visitors. California, North Carolina and Utah led in total visitor spending. Documenting sites in all 50 states and four U.S. territories, the analysis incorporates five parks that began reporting official visitor statistics in 2023: First State National Historical Park in Delaware and Pennsylvania (the first NPS site in Delaware), Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Historical Park in Maryland, Mill Springs Battlefield National Monument in Kentucky, Pullman National Historical Park in Illinois and Tule Lake National Monument in California.
While the report lists top states in those categories and a number of others, it does not rank the 397 places for which it also provides data. So we will. Without further ado, below are the top 20 NPS sites by number of recreational visits. NOTE: Gateway National Recreation Area, not to be confused with Gateway National Arch in St. Louis, spans 27,000 acres from Sandy Hook in New Jersey to Breezy Point in New York City. (Visit the full 68-page report for methodological explanations and caveats.)
Park Unit |
Total Recreation Visits |
|
|
Blue Ridge PKWY |
16,757,635 |
Golden Gate NRA |
14,953,882 |
Great Smoky Mountains NP |
13,297,647 |
Gateway NRA |
8,705,329 |
Gulf Islands NS |
8,277,857 |
Lincoln MEM |
8,099,148 |
George Washington MEM PKWY |
7,391,260 |
Natchez Trace PKWY |
6,784,853 |
Lake Mead NRA |
5,798,541 |
Glen Canyon NRA |
5,206,934 |
World War II Memorial |
5,119,541 |
Vietnam Veterans MEM |
5,039,454 |
Grand Canyon NP |
4,733,705 |
Zion NP |
4,623,238 |
Yellowstone NP |
4,501,382 |
Chesapeake & Ohio Canal NHP |
4,470,592 |
Delaware Water Gap NRA |
4,207,541 |
Korean War Veterans MEM |
4,132,456 |
Rocky Mountain NP |
4,115,837 |
Castle Clinton NM |
3,929,749 |
Here are the top 20 by visitor spending, led by nearly $2.2 billion spent in and around Great Smoky Mountains National Park (thanks, Dolly!):
Park Unit
|
Total Visitor Spending ($000s, $2023)
|
|
|
Great Smoky Mountains NP |
2,198,538 |
Golden Gate NRA |
1,505,100 |
Blue Ridge PKWY |
1,390,803 |
Grand Canyon NP |
768,411 |
Grand Teton NP |
737,983 |
Zion NP |
676,040 |
Cape Hatteras NS |
644,036 |
Yellowstone NP |
623,274 |
Rocky Mountain NP |
568,527 |
Denali NP&PRES |
559,409 |
Glen Canyon NRA |
539,912 |
Cape Cod NS |
533,656 |
Yosemite NP |
526,566 |
Natchez Trace PKWY |
498,534 |
Acadia NP |
475,175 |
Gulf Islands |
417,993 |
Mount Rushmore NMEM |
389,390 |
Glacier NP |
372,129 |
Pearl Harbor NMEM |
327,204 |
Colonial NHP |
299,705 |
Here are the top 20 by jobs:
Park Unit
|
Jobs
|
|
|
Great Smoky Mountains NP |
33,748 |
Blue Ridge PKWY |
19,159 |
Golden Gate NRA |
13,150 |
Zion NP |
10,782 |
Cape Hatteras NS |
10,220 |
Grand Canyon NP |
10,060 |
Grand Teton NP |
9,369 |
Yellowstone NP |
8,561 |
Rocky Mountain NP |
7,833 |
Denali NP&PRES |
7,785 |
Yosemite NP |
6,664 |
Acadia NP |
6,603 |
Cape Cod NS |
6,467 |
Glen Canyon NRA |
6,298 |
Natchez Trace PKWY |
5,917 |
Glacier NP |
5,725 |
Mount Rushmore NMEM |
5,718 |
Gulf Islands NS |
5,367 |
Colonial NHP |
4,433 |
Arches NP |
3,654 |
And here are the top 20 by economic output:
Park Unit |
Economic Output ($000s, $2023) |
|
|
Great Smoky Mountains NP |
3,397,905 |
Golden Gate NRA |
2,012,317 |
Blue Ridge PKWY |
1,810,286 |
Grand Canyon NP |
1,022,191 |
Zion NP |
967,289 |
Grand Teton NP |
936,251 |
Rocky Mountain NP |
888,656 |
Cape Hatteras NS |
863,670 |
Denali NP&PRES |
840,346 |
Yellowstone NP |
828,347 |
Cape Cod NS |
730,144 |
Yosemite NP |
724,563 |
Acadia NP |
685,376 |
Natchez Trace PKWY |
673,377 |
Glen Canyon NRA |
670,369 |
Mount Rushmore NMEM |
556,710 |
Glacier NP |
554,585 |
Gulf Islands |
542,713 |
Glacier Bay NP&PRES |
498,492 |
Pearl Harbor NMEM |
483,092 |
Viewed by a map with economic impact circles corresponding to size of impact, it’s evident by scale of impact and type of site where NPS sites contribute to everyday quality of life for regional residents over and above serving as bucket list destinations.
Visitors to the National Park Service website can travel through scenic vistas of visitor statistics data by year, designation and area, including stats for particular parks. Via another online interactive tool, you can view year-by-year trend data and explore current year visitor spending, jobs, labor income, value added, and economic output effects by sector for national, state, and local economies. The interactive tool is available at https://www.nps.gov/subjects/socialscience/vse.htm. — Adam Bruns
Zion National Park is among NPS leaders in job creation, economic output and jaw-dropping phenomena like this view of the Milky Way.
Photo courtesy of NPS
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