Theodore Roosevelt National Park
CITY GUIDE

Theodore Roosevelt National Park

Badlands wilderness where bison roam painted canyon landscapes

Theodore Roosevelt National Park isn't your typical national park destination. Most people can't even find North Dakota on a map, let alone know it has one of America's most underrated wilderness areas. But here's what they're missing: 70,000 acres of otherworldly badlands where wild bison thunder across painted canyon floors and prairie dog towns stretch to the horizon.

The park splits into three units scattered across western North Dakota. The South Unit near Medora gets most visitors, while the North Unit stays blissfully quiet. Roosevelt himself ranched here in the 1880s, and you'll understand why he called it "the romance of my life" the moment you see your first sunset paint those layered rock formations gold and crimson.

Don't expect Yellowstone crowds or Instagram hordes. This is raw, honest wilderness where you might drive the entire scenic loop without seeing another car. The kind of place that reminds you what America looked like before we paved it all.

Best Months

MAY – OCT

~24°C · moderate crowds

Culture & Context

ROOSEVELT'S BADLANDS SHAPED HIM

This is the only U.S. national park named after a single person.

Theodore Roosevelt first came to Dakota Territory in 1883 to hunt bison — a skinny, bespectacled 24-year-old from New York who had no idea the badlands would reshape his entire life and eventually his presidency. The park isn't a monument to a statue. It's the actual landscape that formed his conservation instincts.

That context matters when you're standing on a butte watching 600 bison drift across the grasslands below. North Dakota west of the Missouri River is ranching and oil country. Medora itself has just 112 full-time residents, but it's the beating heart of summer tourism here.

The town runs on western nostalgia, live entertainment, and genuine pride in Roosevelt's legacy. Locals in this part of North Dakota trace roots back to Norwegian, German-Russian, and Native American communities, and that mix shows up in the food, the surnames on storefronts, and the phrases people use in daily conversation.

Local Customs

YIELD TO BISON ALWAYS

Bison own the road. Literally. They will stand in the middle of the Scenic Loop Drive and not move, and that's fine.

Turn off your engine and wait. Do not honk, do not exit your vehicle, do not try to walk around them. They can run 35 mph and weigh a ton..

The park went fully cashless on May 1, 2026. Bring a card — cash will not work at entrance stations.. Wildlife feeding is taken seriously.

Rangers will educate you firmly if you're seen feeding prairie dogs, which are everywhere along the loop road and look adorable and helpless.. Supper is a real word here, not a quaint affectation. When someone invites you to supper in western North Dakota, they mean the evening meal.

Dinner is what you eat at noon.. Potluck is just called potluck. Bring a hot dish — that's a casserole to everyone else — and you'll fit right in at any local gathering..

The wind is always the villain. North Dakotans will never complain about the temperature itself. It's always the wind chill that's the problem.

In summer it flips: it's never the heat, it's the humidity (plus the mosquitoes).. Medora is tiny (112 full-time residents) but extremely tourist-aware. Reserve everything in advance during summer, especially for 2026 when the library opening will pull visitors from across the country.

Safety

BISON AND HEAT DEMAND RESPECT

Bison are the main thing to respect here. They look slow and docile until they aren't. Stay at least 25 yards away at all times — more is better.

If one is blocking the road, wait it out from inside your vehicle. The summer heat in western North Dakota is real and dry. Carry more water than you think you need on any trail.

The Wind Canyon trail is short but exposed, and people underestimate the sun at midday. Cell service is minimal to nonexistent throughout the park. Download trail maps and offline content before you enter.

Let someone know your plans if you're heading to the Elkhorn Ranch Unit or doing any backcountry camping. Wild horses roam freely in the park — treat them like bison, give them space, and don't approach them. Flash flooding is a genuine risk during summer storms.

The badlands terrain drains fast and water rushes through canyons quickly. Check the weather before any hike. For the July 4 opening weekend specifically: Medora hotels are already sold out as of spring 2026.

If you're going, have accommodations locked in Belfield (15 min away), Beach (30 min), or Dickinson (35 min). Traffic and crowds will be significantly heavier than a normal July 4 weekend.

Getting Around

CAR ESSENTIAL, NO TRANSIT

You need a car. Full stop. There is no public transit, no shuttle service between units, and no way to meaningfully experience the park on foot from any nearby town.

Fly into Bismarck (BIS), two hours east, for the most flight options — or use Dickinson's smaller airport (DIK) 37 miles away if you can get a direct flight. Rental cars at both airports. A GPS or offline maps app is essential because cell signal disappears quickly once you're west of Dickinson.

The South Unit is right off I-94 at Exit 24 (Medora). The North Unit is off U.S.

85, accessed from the south near Watford City. Driving between the two units takes about 80 minutes. If you're road-tripping from South Dakota's Black Hills, it's about 260 miles north via U.

S. Route 85 — around four hours, and the drive through the open plains is part of the experience. Fill up gas in Medora or Dickinson before heading to the North Unit.

Gas stations thin out considerably on the route north.

Useful Phrases

Uff daOOF-dah
A Norwegian-origin expression used constantly in western North Dakota. Works for surprise, exhaustion, minor disasters, and everything in between. If your bison photo gets blocked by another bison, that's an uff da moment.
You betchaya BET-cha
The North Dakota version of 'absolutely' or 'yes.' Said with genuine warmth by locals. Minnesota stole the credit but North Dakota uses it just as much.
SpendySPEN-dee
Something that's a bit expensive or over-budget. You'll hear it used about Medora hotel prices in July, Rough Riders Hotel rates, and basically any summer tourist-season pricing.
Hot dishHOT dish
Do not call it a casserole. A hot dish is a one-pan meal with ground beef, cream of mushroom soup, vegetables, and tater tots baked together. It's a staple at local gatherings and church basements throughout the region.
SundogSUN-dawg
A real meteorological phenomenon common in North Dakota winters
a bright halo or ring that forms around the sun when ice crystals are in the air. Locals reference it casually like it's nothing. It's spectacular.
Opeohp
The essential Midwestern exclamation uttered when you bump into someone, drop something, or make a small mistake. It's somewhere between 'oops' and 'excuse me.' You'll hear it constantly.
Belowbee-LOW
When a North Dakotan says it's 'ten below,' they mean ten degrees below zero Fahrenheit, not below freezing. This distinction matters a lot in January.

Itineraries coming soon

We're working on adding amazing itineraries for Theodore Roosevelt National Park. In the meantime, try the app to create your own!

Medora is your only real option for staying near the park, and honestly, it's perfect. This tiny town of 112 people sits right at the South Unit entrance and feels like stepping into an Old West movie set. The Rough Riders Hotel on Pacific Avenue puts you walking distance from the park gate – rooms run $180-220 in summer but drop to $90 in shoulder season. For something more rustic, try the Badlands Motel on East River Road. It's nothing fancy, but clean rooms for $85-110 and the owner knows every trail in the park. The AmericInn is your chain hotel option at $160-190, with an indoor pool the kids will appreciate after dusty hikes. Camping beats hotels here. Cottonwood Campground in the South Unit costs just $14 per night and puts you right in the badlands. Sites 35-50 have the best canyon views. Juniper Campground in the North Unit stays even quieter – sometimes you'll be the only tent for miles. Dickinson, 36 miles east, has more hotel options if Medora's booked. But you'll miss those magical sunrise moments when the badlands glow pink outside your window.

Money-Saving Tips

  • 1.Buy the America the Beautiful Annual Pass for $80 if visiting multiple parks – Theodore Roosevelt costs $30 for 7 days
  • 2.Camp instead of staying in hotels – Cottonwood Campground costs $14/night vs $180+ for Medora hotels
  • 3.Visit in shoulder seasons (May or October) when hotel rates drop 40-50% from summer peaks
  • 4.Pack all food and drinks – the nearest grocery store is 36 miles away in Dickinson
  • 5.Fill up your gas tank in Medora or Watford City – no gas stations inside the park
  • 6.Download offline maps before visiting – cell service is spotty and data roaming charges add up

Travel Tips

  • Both park units require separate visits – they're 70 miles apart with no connecting park road
  • Bring binoculars for wildlife viewing – bison herds can be 100+ yards from scenic drive pullouts
  • Wear long pants and closed shoes for hiking – prickly pear cactus and rattlesnakes are common
  • Start scenic drives early morning or late afternoon for best wildlife viewing and photography light
  • Check road conditions in winter – scenic drives can close suddenly due to ice or snow
  • Carry extra water in summer – temperatures reach 100°F+ with little shade on trails

Frequently Asked Questions

Two to three days gives you time to see both units properly. One day for the South Unit scenic drive and short hikes, one day for the North Unit, and an optional third day for longer trails like the Petrified Forest Loop or backcountry camping.

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