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Recreation Areas and Campground Database

Voyageurs National Park

Voyageurs National Park

With 218,055 acres, Voyageurs National Park is an adventure wonderland all year long full of exposed rock ridges, cliffs, wetlands, forests, streams and lakes. This is a place of transition between land and aquatic ecosystems, between southern boreal and northern hardwood forests, and between wild and developed areas. Whether you are exploring by land, water or ice there is something for everyone.

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Voyageurs National Park is located in Northern Minnesota. The park shares its northern boundary with Canada and lies just west of the Boundary Water Canoe Area Wilderness. The park visitor centers are accessible by car but in order to truly experience the park, one must leave their vehicle behind and access the park by boat. Access to Voyageurs is available from many points lining Rainy Lake, Kabetogama Lake, Ash River, Crane Lake, and Orr/Pelican Lake.

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VOYAGEURS NATIONAL PARK TOURS Ticket Facility

Overview:

Voyageurs National Park is a water-based park where you must park your car and take to the water to fully experience the lakes, islands, and shorelines of the park. Today, motorboats, houseboats, canoes and kayaks are all used here.

Voyageurs National Park is located in northern Minnesota. The park is a mosaic of land and water, an environment of great beauty, exceptional natural and cultural resources and abundant recreational opportunities.

The park's complex system of waterways includes an important segment of the transcontinental highway traversed by French-Canadian voyageurs during the late 1700s and early 1800s. Visitors must park their car and take to the water to fully experience the lakes, islands, and shorelines of the park. Today, motorboats, houseboats, canoes, and kayaks are all used here.

Voyageurs is a place where the southern tip of the Boreal forest meets and mixes with the northern edge of the hardwood forest. The area is comprised of fire-dependent forests, hardwood forests, peat lands, fens, marshes, rocky outcrops and lakeshore environments. Pine, spruce, fir, aspen, and birch trees are the most common types of trees in the park. Throughout the forests, visitors can see Eastern timber wolves, bald eagles, moose and black bears.

Many scenic and naturalist-led tours are offered at Voyageurs. Visitors enjoy learning about the cultural and natural history of the area on tours ranging from a short, 1.5 hours to a full-day, 6.5-hour cruise.

Keep Voyageurs National Park beautiful for future generations
Voyageurs National Park Association (VNPA) is the park's nonprofit partner representing a community of people who care about the ongoing stewardship of Voyageurs National Park. VNPA's mission is to connect people to Voyageurs, enhance the visitor experience, and protect the park for present and future generations. Become a member today, visit their website or Facebook to learn more about projects and upcoming events, or sign up for their e-newsletter.


Voyageurs National Park Camping Permits Campground
List of Campsites

Overview

** All frontcountry and backcountry campsites require travel by private watercraft or water taxi to access. Click on campsite names to view boating distances. ** 

Voyageurs National Park has 147 frontcountry , 14 backcountry, and 2 primitive campsites for visitors wanting an authentic northwoods camping experience.  

PRIMTIVE CAMPSITES: New to Voyageurs in 2022 are two primitive campsites located along the Kab Ash hiking trail. These are the only campsites in the park that are accessible via trailheads on the mainland, and ARE NOT accessible by boat. They are minimally equipped with fire rings and cleared areas for tents. Use Leave No Trace principles in these areas.

FRONTCOUNTRY CAMPSITES are located on the large lakes (Rainy, Kabetogama, Namakan, Sandpoint) and can be boated to directly from any park visitor center boat ramp. They are equipped with fire rings, tent pads, picnic tables, bear lockers for safe food storage, and outdoor privies. Click the Build Itinerary button to plan your frontcountry camping trip. Find more detailed frontcountry camping information and view a campsite map here .
BACKCOUNTRY CAMPSITES are located on the park's interior lakes and offer a more remote and secluded camping experience. They have fewer amenities, consisting of fire rings, an outdoor privy, and some have a bear pole for safe food storage. These sites first require travel by private watercraft or local water taxi service to a trailhead and then hiking up to several miles to the backcountry lakes. Some c ampsites can be hiked to directly while others require a canoe after hiking. Please note that Voyageurs National Park only offers canoes that remain stationed at these remote inland lakes; not on Rainy, Kabetogama, Namakan or Sand Point. Find more backcountry camping information and view a map of all backcountry campsite and canoe locations here .
BACKCOUNTRY CANOE RENTAL PROGRAM: Voyageurs offers the ability to rent canoes with a camping permit or for day use at certain backcountry campsites. These canoes stay stationed at the remote inland lakes and require a combination code to access. This information can be found in your confirmation email. Be certain to print your permit within 5 days of your trip start date; it is required to have this with you and it will also contain the necessary code and instructions. Backcountry canoe rentals are available May 15 - September 30 annually. This means that the campsites in the Chain of Lakes and Shoepack Lakes cannot be reached and are closed outside of those dates. Click the Build Itinerary button to plan your backcountry camping trip.  

  • Chain of Lakes (Locator, War Club, Quill, andLoiten): Reservations at these sites automatically include one canoe because a canoe is required to reach them. Additional canoes are available here on a first come, first served basis. 
  •  Shoepack & Little Shoepack Lakes: These come reserved together and automatically include canoes because the canoe on Little Shoepack is required to reach the campsite on Little Shoepack and/or the portage to the Shoepack canoe. 
  • Ek, Cruiser, Brown and Peary: These backcountry campsites can be hiked to directly after boating to a trailhead and have an optional canoe located at the site which can be added when making a reservation.
  • Agnes, Jorgens, Quarter Line, Oslo, and Ryan: These are campsite-only locations and have no canoes available at them.

DAY USE BACKCOUNTRY CANOE RENTALS: The same canoes available in the backcountry for use with overnight camping can be reserved for day use. This first requires travel by private watercraft or local water taxi service to a trailhead, and then hiking into the backcountry lakes where the rental canoes are stationed. Click on the Reserve Day Use Rentals button or scroll further down on this page to view options.
DAY USE & VISITOR DESTINATION SITES: With 27 Day Use sites and 7 Visitor Destination sites scattered throughout, Voyageurs National Park has plenty of areas to enjoy for visitors who are just out for a day trip on the lakes. Each Day Use site has picnic tables, fire rings and vault privies, while the Visitor Destination sites offer short trails with wayside exhibits, picnic areas and comfort stations. No reservations are required for Day Use or Destination sites. View a map of these sites here .    

Keep Voyageurs National Park Wild for Future Generations: The Voyageurs Conservancy is the park's official nonprofit partner representing a community of people who care about the ongoing stewardship of Voyageurs National Park. VNPA works to fund projects and programs that will help sustain the park's waters, wild character, and visitor experience for generations to come. Become a member today , follow them on Facebook and Instagram , or sign up for their e-newsletter .

Recreation

From spring through fall, explore Voyageurs National Park on land by stopping in at a visitor center or hiking any of our 52 miles of scenic hiking trails. To explore the vastness of the same lakes the Voyageurs and Ojibwe Indians once traversed, leave your car behind and explore park waters by kayak, canoe, sailboat, motorboat, houseboat or tour boat. Public boat launch ramps are available at park visitor centers, the Crane Lake ranger station and the two state forest campgrounds - Woodenfrog and Ash River.

With Voyageurs National Park's scheduled programs and boat tours, you can paddle a canoe on the Voyageurs Highway, watch wildlife by day and stars by night, and explore historic Kettle Falls Hotel, Hoist Bay and Ellsworth Rock Gardens. Check the park website for a current list of these activities and many more, or contact a Voyageurs National Park visitor center and speak with an interpretive park ranger. Reservations in advance are highly recommended for boat tours, and can be made here on recreation.gov. 

Facilities

Voyageurs National Park has three visitor centers, which offer area information, exhibits, a park movie, bookstore, Junior Ranger programs, boat ramps, hiking trials and more. All visitor centers are open daily in the summer, and the Rainy Lake Visitor Center operates year-round.

Raniy Lake Visitor Center (218) 286-5258

Kabetogama Lake Visitor Center (218) 875-2111
Ash River Visitor Center (218) 374-3221

Natural Features

Voyageurs National Park is a land and water environment of great beauty, exceptional natural and cultural resources, and abundant recreational opportunities. Located in the lake-country of northern Minnesota, the park protects 218,054 acres that include roughly 134,000 acres of forest, 84,000 acres of water, 655-miles of undeveloped shoreline, and hundreds of islands. The park's 55-mile northern boundary is the international border between the United States and Canada and includes an important segment of the "transcontinental highway" traversed by French-Canadian voyageurs during the late 1700s and early 1800s.

There are four distinct seasons in Voyageur country. The air is temperate during June, July, and August when periods of fine, warm weather prevail. The frost-free season averages 120 days from June to mid-September. The average ice-out date is May 3 but varies year to year. Annual precipitation (rain and snow) averages 25-28 inches in the park and average snowfall ranges from 55-70 inches, but is highly variable. The first measurable snowfall occurs in late October and the last in late April or early May.

Nearby Attractions

Unique attractions near Voyaguers National Park:

The City of International Falls sits on the U.S.-Canada border, across from Fort Frances, Ontario. You can have a picnic lunch in Smokey Bear Park, and then tour the Bronko Nagurski Museam and Koochiching County Historical Museum, which both sit on site. Don't forget to take a photo with the 26-foot statue of Smokey the Bear himself - a well-known and beloved national symbol of fire prevention and forest conservation. There are many unique businesses and shops along main street, as well as some great coffee shops and restaurants. Heading eastward out of town, you will pass the village of Ranier and numerous resorts where you can find delicious lake-side dining, fishing guides, hotel and cabin accomodations, houseboat rental companies and much more.

The Historic Port Village of Ranier is a quaint little community situated right where Rainy Lake empties into the Rainy River underneath a cantilever-style train bridge that spans from the U.S. into Canada. Here you will find lodging, an RV park, a park and playground, a public beach, public docks, delicous food, an ice cream parlor and a lakeside brewpub, all packed into one small charming town of about 150 residents. Be sure to take a photo with Big Vic, the 25-foot tall statue of a French-Canadian voyageur, who stands at the entrance to this unique little town. 

The entrances to the communites of Kabetogama and Ash River are located about 30 miles south of International Falls, and both serve as gateways to the southern district Voyageurs National Park. Be sure to stop and take a photo of yourself "riding" the walleye statue at the entrance to Kabetogama on Highway 53. 

contact_info

For facility specific information, please call (218) 283-6650.

Charges & Cancellations

CANCELLATION POLICY: Cancellations and/or modifications to an existing reservation can easily be made online via your recreation.gov account. Log in to your account, click on your name in the upper right, and select My Reservations. Click on the "Modify or Cancel" button next to the reservation needing to be changed. The national recreation.gov call center at (877) 444-6777 can also assist. You cannot call a park office to cancel a reservation.   

THE FOLLOWING FEES APPLY:

  • Reservation system fee of $10 charged at time of reservation is non-refundable
  • Any change (i.e. trip dates, campsite) to your reservation more than 3 days prior to your trip: No charge
  • Any change (i.e. trip dates, campsite) to your reservation less than 3 days prior to your trip: $10 service fee per 
  • Cancel reservation more than 3 days prior to arrival date: additional $10 cancellation fee; receive refund of remaining amenity fees
  • Cancel reservation less than 3 days prior to arrival date: additional $10 cancellation fee + forfeit first night’s fee; receive refund of remaining amenity fees
  • Once permit has been printed: No refund; printing your permit confirms your reservation and must be done within 5 days of your trip start date from the My Reservations section of your recreation.gov account
  • Once trip dates have started: No refund; if you are unable to make your trip, cancel your reservation in the My Reservations section of your recreation.gov account before your trip start date to be eligible for a refund


Voyageurs National Park Houseboat Permits Permit

Overview:

Voyageurs National Park is a land and water environment of great beauty, exceptional natural and cultural resources, and abundant recreation opportunities. Located in the lake-country of northern Minnesota, the park protects 218,054 acres that include roughly 134,000 acres of forest, 84,000 acres of water, 655-miles of undeveloped shoreline, and hundreds of islands. The park's 55-mile northern boundary is the international border between the United States and Canada and includes an important segment of the "transcontinental highway" traversed by French-Canadian voyageurs during the late 1700s and early 1800s.

The rocks tell the oldest story here. Lying in the southern portion of the Canadian Shield, the bedrock of Voyageurs National Park is 2.8 billion years old, some of the oldest exposed rock in the world. Younger rock formations do not appear here. Perhaps they never existed; but more likely a series of glaciers removed them. Those glaciers, more than a mile high, also scoured out the lake and river beds here and set the stage for vast forests.

Voyageurs is unique among national parks as a place where the southern boreal forest meets and mixes with the northern hardwood forest. Wildlife thrives here. Voyageurs is one of only two national parks in the continental United States with an indigenous population of the Eastern Timber Wolf.

Once visitors arrive at one of the park's four entry points, most of them leave their cars behind and set out by water, much as the Voyageurs did centuries ago. The park includes four major lakes - Rainy, Kabetogama, Namakan, and Sand Point, and twenty-six smaller inland lakes that together make up more than a third of the total park area. The smaller inland lakes are scattered throughout the park, but primarily on the Kabetogama Peninsula. The peninsula is Voyageurs' largest landmass and can be reached by water in summer or over the ice in winter.

There are four distinct seasons in Voyageur country. The air is temperate during June, July, and August when periods of fine, mild weather prevail. The frost-free season averages 120 days from June to mid-September. The average ice-out date is May 3 but varies year to year. Annual precipitation (rain and snow) averages 25-28 inches in the park and average snowfall ranges from 55-70 inches, but is highly variable. The first measurable snowfall occurs in late October and the last in late April or early May.

The park offers more than 52 miles of hiking trails, 110 miles of groomed snowmobile trails, 7 miles of groomed cross-country ski trails, and more than 290 designated campsites, houseboat sites, and day use sites.

Houseboats staying overnight in the park from May 1 through October 31 are required to obtain an overnight permit from Recreation.gov. There is no permit needed for day use within the Park boundaries.


Keep Voyageurs National Park beautiful for future generations
Voyageurs National Park Association (VNPA) is the park's nonprofit partner representing a community of people who care about the ongoing stewardship of Voyageurs National Park. VNPA's mission is to connect people to Voyageurs, enhance the visitor experience, and protect the park for present and future generations. Become a member today, visit their website or Facebook to learn more about projects and upcoming events, or sign up for their e-newsletter.


Rainy Lake Visitor Center Facility

Located on the shore of Black Bay with views across the water to the Kabetogama Peninsula. The Rainy Lake Visitor Center is open year-round, although hours of operation vary with the season. Call ahead, or stop by for the most current information and for help with trip planning (218) 286-5258. The visitor center offers an exhibit area, displays, a bookstore, a staffed information desk, a children's activity table, and a theater for viewing the park film.


Kabetogama Lake Visitor Center Facility

The Kabetogama Lake Visitor Center is open during our summer season from late May to late September. Kabetogama Visitor Center will be closed annually over the winter season. Nestled along the south west shoreline of Kabetogama Lake, within the community of Kabetogama. The Kabetogama Lake Visitor Center is open during the warm, summer months only from late May through late September.


Ash River Visitor Center Facility

The Ash River Visitor Center is open during our summer season from late May to late September. Ash River Visitor Center will be closed annually over the winter season. The Ash River Visitor Center is located in the historic Meadwood Lodge pictured above. Take a moment to explore this historic, rustic building. Watch your head, as some interior doorways were constructed for shorter individuals.


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