Valley of Fire Hiking Trip from Las Vegas
About this activity
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- Your booking is confirmed immediately
- This activity is available in your language
- This option includes FREE cancellation—book now, risk-free!
Experience Highlights
This hiking tour takes place about 90 km from Las Vegas. The Fire Valley Nature Reserve is known for its extreme desert environment and petroglyphs, rock paintings over 7000 years old. This is a hiking activity in small groups of up to 20 participants with different levels that can be selected according to fitness level. The excursion includes both an expert guide and a snack at the end of the route and can last from 4 to about 6 hours depending on the difficulty.
- Explore the red desert with an expert guide
- Enjoy the extreme landscapes of Valley of Fire State Park.
- Finish the tour with a snack
What’s included
- Route adapted to your fitness level
- Transport from the hotel and back
- Entrance to Valley of Fire Park Visitor Center
- Expert guide
Select participants and date
Step by Step
Just an hour's drive from Las Vegas is the Valley of Fire, a natural park famous for the red rocks and trails that criss-cross this lunar landscape. An air-conditioned vehicle will pick you up from your Las Vegas hotel and take you to the desert. An expert guide will be at your disposal at all times during the tour and you will finish the tour with a snack.
Before finalising your booking, you can choose between three routes: easy (4 hours of walking), moderate (between 4.5 and 5 hours) and difficult (between 5.5 and 6 hours). This last option is only recommended for more experienced hikers.
The trails touch different paths and one of the most famous is the Fire Wave. It is located in a secluded area and is recognisable by its characteristic bowl-shaped depression and sandstone rocks decorated with natural veins.
Another must-see is Mouse's Tank, a natural basin that collects rainwater. It' s uniquely named after a Paiute Indian, Little Mouse, who hid in these rock slabs after being accused of killing two gold prospectors.
During your hike, you'll also pass the foot of Elephant Rock, whose silhouette is reminiscent of a pachyderm. Last but not least is the White Domes trail, with its smooth white rock walls.
Although it is a desert, water meanders through the arid landscape. This is the case with Moapa Creek (home to an Indian reservation) and Lake Mead, a large reservoir created after the construction of the Hoover Dam.