National Parks Go ‘America-First’ in 2026: New Fees, New Free Days, Same Direction

by joeheg

If you’ve ever planned a national park trip around one of the “free entrance days,” you’ll want to take note: the National Park Service is changing how those days work starting in 2026.

The headline change is simple (and significant): beginning January 1, 2026, entrance-fee-free days will apply only to U.S. citizens and permanent residents. Nonresidents will still pay the standard entrance fee, and at some parks, they’ll also pay an additional per-person nonresident fee.

First, a quick reminder: what “free” actually means

On fee-free days, the NPS waives entrance fees at sites that normally charge them. But that doesn’t automatically make the day “no-cost”:

  • Timed entry/reservations may still be required at some parks.
  • Amenity fees like camping, tours, and concession-run activities aren’t necessarily waived.

Visitors posing near Delicate Arch with desert landscape behind them

The parks aren’t just scenery — they’re where a lot of our travel memories get made.

What’s changing in 2026

1) Fee-free days become “U.S. residents only.”

The NPS says that starting in 2026, free entrance on fee-free days will be limited to U.S. citizens and permanent residents. Nonresidents will pay the regular entrance fee and any applicable nonresident fees.

2) The 2026 fee-free calendar is different

In recent years, the fee-free list has included days like Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth. Reporting indicates those days are removed for 2026, while June 14 (Flag Day / President Trump’s birthday) is added.

2026 free entrance days (National Park Service)

According to the NPS, these are the 2026 entrance-fee-free dates:

  • February 16, 2026: Presidents Day (Washington’s Birthday)
  • May 25, 2026: Memorial Day
  • June 14, 2026: Flag Day / President Trump’s birthday
  • July 3–5, 2026: Independence Day weekend
  • August 25, 2026: 110th Birthday of the National Park Service
  • September 17, 2026: Constitution Day
  • October 27, 2026: Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday
  • November 11, 2026: Veterans Day

Important: NPS also notes thatbeginning in 2026, free entrance on these days will be available only to U.S. citizens and residents.

Also new: higher costs for some international visitors

Separate from the fee-free days calendar, the NPS outlines additional changes beginning January 1, 2026, including:

  • A new $250 America the Beautiful pass for nonresidents.
  • A $100 nonresident per-person fee (age 16+) at 11 of the most visited national parks, in addition to the standard entrance fee.

The list of parks includes: Acadia, Bryce Canyon, Everglades, Glacier, Grand Canyon, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia & Kings Canyon, Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Zion.

A person looking out over the Grand Canyon at sunset

Places like the Grand Canyon are why demand (and crowding) doesn’t magically go away when prices change.

What this means if you’re planning a trip

  • If you’re a U.S. visitor: fee-free days still exist in 2026, but expect bigger crowds (as always) and remember reservations may still be required.
  • If you’re an international visitor: don’t count on fee-free days to reduce your costs in 2026—those days won’t waive entrance fees for nonresidents.
  • If you hate crowds: the “free day” can be the worst day to visit. Consider going the day before or after, or arriving early.

Final thought

Fee-free days used to be a simple, feel-good concept. In 2026, they become more targeted — and the new calendar choices make it hard to pretend this is just a routine update.

Helpful official reference: National Park Service – Entrance Passes (includes 2026 changes and fee-free days)

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