in the last week
This is an unknown trail just before the park entrance. All the amazing views of bryce without the crowd
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The northernmost rim overlook in Bryce Canyon, with close-up hoodoo views and a fraction of the crowds.
Fairyland Point Road branches off before the entrance fee station. Visitors can physically reach the point without passing through the fee booth, but an entrance pass is technically required for all park areas.
Fairyland Point sits at the northern edge of Bryce Canyon National Park, overlooking a canyon full of hoodoo spires in every stage of formation and decay. The viewpoint perches at 7,760 feet on the rim of the Paunsaugunt Plateau. From the parking area, the overlook is roughly 100 feet away on flat ground, making it one of the quickest stops in the park.
The turnoff to Fairyland Point Road is easy to miss. It branches left off UT-63 just past the park entrance sign, before the fee station. The sign is visible only to northbound traffic. Follow the one-mile spur road to its end, where a small parking lot holds 15 to 20 vehicles.
During peak summer mornings, particularly between June and September, the lot fills early. Plan to arrive before 8:00 AM or park at Sunrise Point and walk the Rim Trail north for about 2.5 miles.
The view from the overlook spans Fairyland Canyon to the south and east, where clusters of red, pink, and white hoodoos rise from the canyon floor. These formations are geologically younger than those in the main Bryce Amphitheater to the south. Erosion is still actively carving new spires here, while older formations crumble into rounded clay mounds in nearby Campbell Canyon. The NPS describes this area as a "hoodoo graveyard."
Key landmarks visible from the overlook:
Boat Mesa dominates the view to the south, its flat summit capped by a resistant conglomerate layer at 8,073 feet
The Sinking Ship formation tilts at roughly 30 degrees along the Paunsaugunt Fault to the east
Paria Valley opens toward the Table Cliff Plateau and Powell Point on the far horizon at 10,000 feet
Ponderosa forests and sage meadows stretch across the plateau to the west
Watch for mule deer and pronghorn in the meadows.
Fairyland Point is the starting point for two trails. The Fairyland Loop Trail drops into the canyon for an 8-mile loop through dense hoodoo formations, Tower Bridge, and the Chinese Wall. The Rim Trail connects Fairyland Point to Sunrise, Sunset, Inspiration, and Bryce Points over 5.5 miles to the south. Neither trail is served by the park shuttle.
Sunrise is the standout time to visit. The overlook faces east, and first light hits the canyon walls with a warm glow. Because most visitors head to Sunrise Point or Bryce Point for dawn, Fairyland Point draws far fewer people in the early morning. Photographers can set up without competing for railing space.
The spur road closes to vehicles each winter for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. During closures, the viewpoint is still reachable on foot via the Rim Trail from Sunrise Point. The park shuttle does not serve this stop in any season. A picnic table and bicycle rack sit near the parking area, and the NPS lists the overlook as wheelchair accessible.
The overlook faces east, which makes it one of the best sunrise spots in the park — first light hits the canyon walls directly, and the area draws far fewer visitors at dawn than Sunrise Point or Bryce Point. Arriving before 8:00 AM in summer is the most reliable way to secure parking, especially June through September when the small lot fills quickly. Spring and fall offer the most comfortable temperatures for the open overlook. Summer afternoons bring a risk of fast-building thunderstorms; the exposed rim is not a safe place to wait one out. In winter and early spring, the approach on foot via the Rim Trail adds significant distance but the uncrowded hoodoo views in snow are worth the effort for those prepared for cold conditions.
The spur road to Fairyland Point branches off before the main park entrance fee station — the turnoff is easy to miss and the sign reads only to northbound traffic. Follow the one-mile road to a small parking lot that holds 15 to 20 vehicles. An entrance pass is required for all park visitors, including those reaching the point via this road. The park shuttle does not serve Fairyland Point in any season, so a vehicle or the Rim Trail on foot from Sunrise Point (about 2.5 miles) are the only options. The spur road closes each winter for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing; during closures the overlook remains reachable on foot via the Rim Trail.
Fairyland Point is a rim overlook, not a trail destination — the viewpoint itself is roughly 100 feet from the parking area on flat, paved ground. From the rim at 7,760 feet, the canyon spreads below in a wide arc filled with hoodoo spires at every stage of formation. The formations here are geologically younger than those in the main Bryce Amphitheater, and active erosion is still carving new spires while older ones collapse into rounded clay mounds — what the NPS describes as a "hoodoo graveyard" in nearby Campbell Canyon. Boat Mesa anchors the view to the south, its flat summit capped by a resistant conglomerate layer at 8,073 feet. The Sinking Ship formation tilts at roughly 30 degrees along the Paunsaugunt Fault to the east, and on clear days Paria Valley opens toward the Table Cliff Plateau and Powell Point on the far horizon. Two trails begin here: the Fairyland Loop, an 8-mile route descending into dense hoodoo formations and past Tower Bridge and the Chinese Wall, and the Rim Trail, which runs 5.5 miles south along the plateau edge to Bryce Point.
419 reviews
in the last week
This is an unknown trail just before the park entrance. All the amazing views of bryce without the crowd
in the last week
Peu fréquenté, magnifique
in the last week
a week ago
The canyon scenery next to the parking lot is accessible without hiking.
2 weeks ago