
Yellowstone National Park in September
Great time to visit
September offers the best of both worlds - summer's accessibility with fall's crisp beauty and smaller crowds. The elk bugling season alone makes this month special.
Weather
September brings autumn's first breath with cooler 19°C days and chilly 2°C nights. Rain decreases significantly, and crisp, clear days become the norm. First frost hits higher elevations.
19°C high2°C low7 rain days
Crowds & Cost
high crowds
~$260/day average
Events & Festivals
- •Elk bugling season peaks
- •Fall foliage begins in higher elevations
September Tips
- •Pack warm layers - nights get seriously cold
- •Elk bugling is best heard at dawn and dusk in Mammoth area
- •Crowds thin after Labor Day but weekends stay busy
All Months
Summer means crowds, but it also means all roads are open and wildlife is active. July and August see the heaviest visitation — expect traffic jams around Old Faithful and full parking lots at popular trailheads by 9 AM.
September is the sweet spot. Crowds thin out after Labor Day, elk are bugling, and aspen trees turn golden in the high country. You'll still have warm days but crisp nights that require a jacket.
Early summer brings wildflowers and baby animals, but also unpredictable weather. I've seen snowstorms in June that close mountain passes. Late summer offers the most stable weather and the best hiking conditions.
Winter transforms Yellowstone into a different planet. Only the road from the North Entrance to Cooke City stays open to regular vehicles. Everything else requires snowcoaches or snowmobiles. But winter wildlife viewing can be spectacular — bison create their own trails through deep snow, and the geysers look even more dramatic surrounded by ice and snow.
Yellowstone National Park Scores
Solo
8/10
Couples
7/10
Families
9/10
Adventure
9/10
Budget
6/10
Luxury
6/10
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