Day use is open from sunrise - sunset
Winter Camping is available in the Picnic Area.
Campground is closed for the season. Reservations for next season can be made on Reserve California's Website
(530) 694-2248
Trailer: Up to 24 Feet
Camper/Motorhome: Up to 27 Feet
Day use is open from sunrise - sunset
Winter Camping is available in the Picnic Area.
Campground is closed for the season. Reservations for next season can be made on Reserve California's Website
Yes
On leash only and not left unattended. Dogs are not allowed in the hot springs pool complex
Visitors will be able to reserve campsites and lodging six months in advance from the current date. Bookings may extend from the arrival date to the desired departure date – based on availability and the park’s maximum stay rules.
No events scheduled at this moment.
Winter camping is available in the picnic area starting 10/25/2023.
Campground is Closed for the season starting 10/25/2023.
Here are some helpful guidelines when planning your camping trip:
BEARS ARE ACTIVE so please store your food, drinks, toiletries and anything else with a scent in your campsite's metal food storage locker BOTH DAY & NIGHT.
There are no hook-ups or dump station in the park.
Camping is generally available year-round, conditions permitting. Our summer campground has 76 family sites and is on a reservation system typically from mid-May through mid-September. 2023 resrevation dates are Jun 2nd - Sept 9. Make reservations at ReserveCalifornia.com up to 6 months in advance. After the reservation period is over, camping in the campground is first-come, first-serve until Fall. In October winter camping moves to picnic area near the park entrance, and the max length of RVs and trailers changes to 18 feet.
Metal bear-resistant food lockers are provided in each campsite. All food, beverages, and toiletries are required by law to be stored in the provided food lockers when not being actively used or transported. Violators are subject to confiscation of food and/or citation. Please remember that a fed bear is a dead bear. For more information please read the on-line pamphlet “American Black Bears in California State Parks” at the following link: http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/510/files/cablackbear_web_2010.pdf.
Day Use parking is $8 ($7 for seniors 62 and older) and is availble sunrise to sunset. Dogs must remain on a leash. Popular day use activites include picnicking in our spacious and scenic picnic area along the banks of Hot Springs Creek and hiking. Hikes vary from a flat and easy stroll around the meadow on our newly-constructed, ADA accessible boardwalk; to a moderate hike to a waterfall located on Forest Service land; to longer, more strenuous hikes uphill to Burnside Lake or Charity Valley. Click on the "Brochure" link near the top of this page to see a map of the trails within the park boundaries.
Charcoal fires are PROHIBITED in the day use area: Districtwide Day Use - Charcoal Restrictions
Park interpetive programs have concluded for the 2023 season and will restart in May of 2024.
Hidden in quiet Hot Springs Valley on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada, Grover Hot Springs State Park offers alpine vistas of granite peaks and wildflower meadows. After taking a brisk hike or a scenic stroll, visitors may soak in a mineral pool fed from six hot springs. The park offers both the hot pool and a cool swimming pool, a forested 76-site campground, picnic area, hiking trails, and fishing streams.
A full range of seasons and weather offer the visitor the opportunity to experience a variety of conditions, from major blizzards to dry scorchers, from warm clear nights to intense, blasting thunderstorms. Winds of great speeds are capable of whipping through the park causing damage during any month of the year. Pristine clear, warm days can be followed by cold stormy nights.
Proper preparation for the full range of potential conditions can make a visit to the park not only safe and warm but also dry and comfortable.
Located four miles west of Markleeville, at the end of Hot Springs Road, the park is in an alpine meadow and pine forest at 5,900 feet surrounded by peaks that just top 10,000 feet.
The main reason for the color is the mineral deposits on the bottom of the pool. These mineral deposits are laid down on the surface of the paint by an oxidation reaction between the mineral salts in the water and the sanitizing agent (Bromine) used.
When the pool is viewed from some distance, rather than from directly overhead, the light that is reflected from the bottom loses certain wavelengths that are absorbed by the various color patterns on the bottom. The remaining light waves then pass back up through the water and are reflected at the surface. This reflected light is in the yellow-green wavelengths of the spectrum.
The temperature can vary greatly over the course of a year and even during the course of a month.
Winter months generally fall into three types of weather patterns.
Clear and very cold: -5 to 20 degrees F.
Light to very heavy snow storms: 22 to 34 degrees F.
Sleet and rain at higher temperatures and clear or partly cloudy and rather warm: 35 to 50 degrees F.
There may be one to four feet of snow on the ground.
Late Spring and early Summer are the best weather months with very clear skies and warm to hot days, 66 to 95 degrees F., with cool to cold nights 24 to 45 degrees F.
Later Summer features very warm mornings, 68 to 83 degrees F., with afternoon thunder storms and comfortable to slightly cool evenings, 31 to 45 degrees F.
Fall is progressively cooling with mildly warm days, 45 to 77 degrees F., and freezing nights 20 to 36 degrees F. and increasing storm activity towards winter.
Early Fall storms are can be rain, turning to or snow later in the year.
(Photograph by Mike Fuller)