National Park ServiceU.S. Department of the Interior
Big Bend National Park

Panther Junction Visitor Center
Open All Year 8:00 - 6:00

Chisos Basin Visitor Center
Open All Year
November to March 8am - 3:30pm
April to November 9am - 4:30pm

Persimmon Gap Visitor Center
Open All Year 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
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Fee Information
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Looking for Answers?  Learn more about Big Bend on the Expanded Website
Expanded Website »
Official Big Bend website with detailed information about the park.
The Sierra del Carmen mountains can often be obscured by haze - Learn More!
How Far Can You See? »
Final Report of the recent BRAVO study
United States and Mexico Flags
Border Situation »
Current status of border crossings in Big Bend NP.
Big Bend is one of the largest and least visited of America’s national parks. Over 801,000 acres await your exploration and enjoyment. From an elevation of less than 2,000 feet along the Rio Grande to nearly 8,000 feet in the Chisos Mountains, Big Bend includes massive canyons, vast desert expanses, and the entire Chisos Mountain range. Here, you can explore one of the last remaining wild corners of the United States, and experience unmatched sights, sounds, and solitude.

In Big Bend National Park all roads end at the Rio Grande, the boundary between the United States and Mexico. But far more than two nations meets here. Three states come together at Big Bend: Texas in the United States and Coahuila and Chihuahua in Mexico. Many of the park’s famous, expansive vistas mix scenes belonging to both nations.

Big Bend National Park also marks the northernmost range of many plants and animals, such as the Mexican long-nosed bat. Ranges of typically eastern and typically western species of plants and animals come together or overlap here. Here many species are at the extreme limits of their ranges. Latin American species, many from the tropics, range this far north, while northern-nesting species often travel this far south in winter. Contrasting elevations create additional, varied micro-climates that further enhance the diversity of plant and animal life and the park’s wealth of natural boundaries.

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Designations

Globally Important Bird Area - September 2001
UNESCO Biosphere Reserve - October 26, 1976
National Park (established) - June 12, 1944
National Park (authorized) - June 20, 1935
Texas Canyons State Park - May 27, 1933

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