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WhenToVisitParks

Updated June 2026

Best Time to Visit Navajo

National MonumentArizona

Our recommendation

Visit Navajo in June

June offers best overall balance of crowds, weather and daylight. For comparison, September is the most crowded month (~1.5× the average month) and January is the quietest.

Annual visits

58K

2024

Busiest month

Sep

1.5× avg

Quietest month

Jan

0.3× avg

10-yr trend

falling

-21.8%

How crowded is Navajo by month?

Relative crowd level by month (1.0 = the park's average month), from NPS visitation records 19792025.

0.3×Jan
0.3×Feb
0.8×Mar
1.3×Apr
1.4×May
1.3×Jun
1.4×Jul
1.4×Aug
1.5×Sep
1.2×Oct
0.7×Nov
0.4×Dec

Month-by-month crowd, weather & daylight

MonthCrowd levelBest-time scoreAvg high / lowDaylight
JanuaryVery quiet43 Poor40°F / 22°F9.7 h
FebruaryVery quiet42 Poor44°F / 25°F10.6 h
MarchQuiet38 Poor53°F / 30°F11.7 h
AprilBusy33 Poor61°F / 35°F12.9 h
MayBusy48 Fair71°F / 44°F14.0 h
June★ bestBusy64 Good82°F / 55°F14.5 h
JulyBusy55 Fair86°F / 60°F14.3 h
AugustBusy55 Fair83°F / 58°F13.4 h
SeptemberBusy47 Fair76°F / 52°F12.2 h
OctoberBusy41 Poor64°F / 41°F11.0 h
NovemberQuiet37 Poor51°F / 30°F10.0 h
DecemberVery quiet38 Poor40°F / 22°F9.5 h

Climate normals (1991–2020) from the nearest NOAA station (USC00020750, ~2.8 mi away).

About visiting Navajo

Navajo National Monument is a National Monument in AZ and a relatively quiet park, drawing about 58,000 recreation visits in 2024. Visitation has eased over the past decade, down about 21.8%. Crowds concentrate sharply by season: September is the busiest month at about 1.5× the park's average month, while January is the calmest at roughly 0.3× — a 6-to-1 swing between high and low season. Roughly 34% of the year's visitors arrive in the three summer months of June, July and August alone, so timing a trip outside that window is the single biggest lever on how crowded the park feels. Weather swings from an average high-season warmth near 73°F in July down to about 31°F in January, with the wettest stretch in August and meaningful snowfall around February. About 6 months a year see comfortable average temperatures in the 50–80°F range, which is part of why crowd timing and weather timing don't always line up. The sweet spot is June: best overall balance of crowds, weather and daylight. Visit then and you trade a little peak-season certainty for noticeably shorter lines and easier parking than the September rush. Daylight ranges from about 9.5 hours in midwinter to 14.5 hours near the summer solstice, which shapes how much ground you can cover in a day. These crowd figures are drawn from 1979–2025 of National Park Service visitor-use records, paired with 1991–2020 NOAA climate normals, and are updated as new monthly data is released.

Park overview

For centuries, the Hopi, San Juan Southern Paiute, Zuni, and Navajo people have lived in the canyons. Springs fed farmlands on the canyon floor and homes were built in the natural sandstone alcoves. The cliff dwellings of Betatakin, Keet Seel, and Inscription House were last physically occupied around 1300 AD but the villages have a spiritual presence that can still be felt today.

Weather & conditions

Check weather updates at NOAA.gov and enter city Betatakin, and State, Arizona.

Park overview text courtesy of the National Park Serviceofficial park site.

Frequently Asked Questions

June offers best overall balance of crowds, weather and daylight at Navajo National Monument. The park is busiest in September (about 1.5× the average month) and quietest in January.

September is the busiest month at Navajo National Monument, running roughly 1.5 times the park's average monthly visitation.

January is the quietest month at Navajo National Monument, at about 0.3× the average month — a good choice if you want to avoid crowds.

Navajo National Monument recorded about 58,442 recreation visits in 2024. Visitation has been falling over the past decade (-21.8%).

Based on 1991–2020 climate normals, the warmest month at Navajo National Monument averages about 73°F (July). See the month-by-month table above for the full picture.

Sources: National Park Service Visitor Use Statistics (19792025), NOAA NCEI U.S. Climate Normals 1991–2020. Crowd index = a month's visits ÷ the park's average month.