Warning
GeneralThe following campsite are released on a one-week rolling booking window to provide options for short-term trip planners.Rainy Lake (west end): Mio Beach R64 and Nuthatch R21Rainy Lake (east end): Jack Pine Bench R55 and Hitchcock R105Kabetogama Lake: Fox Farm K50 and Round Bear K29Namakan Lake: Johnson Bay N13 and Hammer Bay South N59Sand Point Lake: South Island S17 and Feldt Channel S5
About Voyageurs National Park Camping Permits
Number of accommodations: 159
Seasonal information
2026 Season availability
Sites & Availability
159 Sites Available
No sites found matching your criteria.
No available sites
All sites are booked for your selected dates. Try showing all sites to see booked options, create an alert to be notified when something opens up, or adjust your dates.
Site Details
Select a site to view details
159 Sites Available
No available sites
All sites are booked for your selected dates. Try showing all sites to see booked options, create an alert to be notified when something opens up, or adjust your dates.
Reviews (523)
What Guests Are Saying
Voyageurs National Park offers stunning scenery, spacious and well-maintained campsites, and a variety of wildlife sightings, making it a fantastic destination for camping. The reservation system is convenient, though some users find it cumbersome and prefer the old method of finding campsites. Despite minor inconveniences like overgrown trails and occasional maintenance issues, visitors report enjoyable experiences and express eagerness to return.
What Guests Are Saying
Voyageurs National Park offers stunning scenery, spacious and well-maintained campsites, and a variety of wildlife sightings, making it a fantastic destination for camping. The reservation system is convenient, though some users find it cumbersome and prefer the old method of finding campsites. Despite minor inconveniences like overgrown trails and occasional maintenance issues, visitors report enjoyable experiences and express eagerness to return.
Review Summary
Matthew N
VerifiedMay 16, 2024 • Stayed at: Pine Point K45, Loop: Kabetogama Lake
Beautiful campsite close to Kabetogama and Wooden Frog launch! It was clean and exactly as described. There was good cell phone service. However, the water was extremely low this year(2024). The dock is essentially useless. The small sand beach works for landing the boat.
Emilie C
VerifiedOctober 25, 2023 • Stayed at: Stones Point R67, Loop: Rainy Lake
Stayed here for three nights. Great island - not much exploring to do on the actual island, but plenty to see around it. Kayaked out to the island around 6:30pm after a storm came through and the water was not choppy at all. Took me about 45mins-1hour to get there from the Rainy Lake Visitor Center kayak launch. A black bear appeared about 45 mins after coming to shore. He was on the other side of the boat landing and only hung out for a while after I first saw him. I didn't see him again for the rest of my stay however. Plenty of bald eagles, deer, and other small critters around. Heard some wolves nearby on another island too. Mosquitos ate me up near the toilet and tree line, however the rest of the site seemed pretty clear. It was extremely windy the first night on the lower tent pad, however the upper one was great (save for the thicker mosquitos). I feel asleep before the sky got too dark, but I assume the sky and angle of the site would be great for viewing the Aurora. Very calm waters around the island if you stay out of the main channel area. It was a great Northern MN experience over all and highly recommend it.
Justin T
VerifiedOctober 21, 2023 • Stayed at: Red Pine H1, Loop: Primitive
Blueberry Ridge: great spot with sweeping views overlooking lots of fall colors. Mostly rocky ground with no tent pad and minimal canopy - much better suited to a freestanding tent rather than one that uses trekking poles or hanging a hammock. Plenty of downed wood for the fire ring nearby. Difficult to find since the site is off-trail and there are no signs or markers. Location is south of the lower loop that starts ~1 mile east of the entrance off of Meadowood Rd near the beaver pond overlook. With GPS next to the fire ring coordinates were 48.415740, -92.869930
Red Pine: typical forested backcountry site - a fire ring in a clearing. Soft soil and plenty of trees to accommodate most tents and hammocks. No problem collecting downed wood nearby for a fire. Didn’t have as much trouble finding this one as Blueberry Ridge so didn’t think to capture GPS coordinates, but the location on the NPS map seems accurate.
CK P
VerifiedOctober 10, 2023 • Stayed at: Wood Duck Island K36, Loop: Kabetogama Lake
Great primitive campsite, with several nice amenities including a picnic table, fire pit, and bear lockers. Tent pads were hard as a rock so so we recommend bringing a sleeping pad!
Jennifer M
VerifiedOctober 9, 2023 • Stayed at: Williams Island North N61, Loop: Namakan Lake
Beautiful campsite. Clean and open. The dock could use some TLC repairs. It slants and is very elevated. Both of my dogs slipped off of it
Paul O
VerifiedOctober 9, 2023 • Stayed at: Rock Shelf R72, Loop: Rainy Lake
Voyagers is a beautiful place to stay and camp. We enjoyed our last stay. The only thing that I didn’t like was they already removed our dock when I rented that spot mainly because it has a dock.
Barry T
VerifiedSeptember 28, 2023 • Stayed at: War Club Lake B17, Loop: Backcountry
The trail to Locator Lake was good, and the channel from there to War Club lake was passible. However, going on to Quill lake is more than difficult as the beaver dam near War Club Lake was broken, and the water level so low, that it was necessary to walk about a half mile through chest high swamp grass , pulling the canoe, to get to the Quill Lake Portage. The portage itself was fine, it was getting to the portage that was the problem. We did not attempt to go to Loiten Lake. The campsites on Locator and War Club Lake are very nice. The tent pads are a little small if you have a four person tent or larger. Fishing for bass and northern pike was very good and fun.
Michael D
VerifiedSeptember 28, 2023 • Stayed at: Nuthatch R21, Loop: Rainy Lake
The best national park in the country!
Aidan W
VerifiedSeptember 25, 2023 • Stayed at: Hanson R14, Loop: Rainy Lake
Voyagers is the best national park in the country. A Minnesotan must!
Jordan R
VerifiedSeptember 24, 2023 • Stayed at: C. Vic Linsten K5, Loop: Kabetogama Lake
Great site, a few stairs to get up from the beach but nothing terrible. Site was very clean and it looked like the common area and steps had recently been updated. Up off the water 10 feet or so and there was a great breeze the whole trip. Easy ride in from Woodenfrog launch and pretty centralized on the lake to switch up fishing spots.
Location Voyageurs National Park Camping Permits
Address:
Voyageurs National Park Headquarters
International Falls, MN, 56649
United States
VEHICLE:
Voyageurs National Park is approximately 5 hours north of Minneapolis-St. Paul on I-35 and Hwy 53, 3 hours north of Duluth on Hwy 53, and 4 hours south from Winnipeg, Manitoba.
PLANE:
Falls International Airport is located in International Falls, Minnesota. Taxi service and rental cars are available here. Most flights entering the area will pass through the larger Minneapolis-St. Paul airport located around 5 hours south of Voyageurs National Park.
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION:
There is no public transportation to Voyageurs National Park. No bus lines or passenger trains serve this area.
Latitude & Longitude: 48.6028 / -93.3768
Elevation: 340 feet
Policies & Rules
| Category | About |
|---|---|
| General |
It is required to view the Voyageurs National Park Camping Video in its entirety prior to payment. |
| General |
You are responsible for ensuring all information contained within the Voyageurs National Park Camping Video is acknowledged and followed by all members of your group. |
| General |
Permits: You must log into your recreation.gov account to print your permit and bring it with you to your site. Five days prior to your trip, the Print Permit button will be enabled in the Reservations section of your recreation.gov account. Chrome or Edge are the recommended browser for recreation.gov. NOTE: permits currently cannot be printed via the rec.gov app - please print directly from www.recreation.gov. |
| General |
Display your permit in the waterproof box provided on the bear locker at your frontcountry site. In the backcountry, keep your permit with you. |
| General |
Access: All frontcountry and backcountry sites require travel by boat. You must use your own private watercraft, or arrange for boat rental or water taxi from these options to reach frontcountry campsites or backcountry trailheads. |
| General |
Check-in / Check-out Times: Frontcountry: You may arrive at your site any time after 3:00 p.m. on your first day, and depart no later than 12:00 noon on your day of departure.
|
| General |
SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS IN THE BACKCOUNTRY: These sites first require travel by private watercraft or water taxi to a trailhead, and then hiking up to several miles to the campsite. Private watercrafts must be left at the trailhead and not portaged into backcountry lakes. Once in the backcounty, a combination code is needed to unlock and use the park's canoes. Be certain that you have made a reservation and and bring your permit as it will include this information.
|
| General |
Campfires: Fires are allowed in designated metal fire rings only. Do not burn trash, pack everything out - there are trash and recycling receptacles at the boat landings.Lighting or maintaining a fire with flammable liquids, garbage, fireworks, plastics, aerosol canisters, batteries, or other manufactured materials not designed for fire lighting or maintenance is prohibited. See 36 CFR § 2.13(a)(1) for full details. |
| General |
Bear Safety: Use the provided bear lockers (in frontcountry) and bear poles (in backcountry) to prevent bear interactions. Report animal encounters to a visitor center. |
| General |
Wood gathering: Chainsaws are not allowed at campsites. Bring DNR-approved firewood with you in frontcountry. Do not cut or damage standing vegetation, living or dead. Only dead and downed wood may be collected for fires. |
| General |
Water: it is suggested to haul in water to your campsite. Potable water is available at all park visitor centers. |
| General |
Maximum group size: small campsite - 9; large campsite - 18; group campsite - 30; backcountry & primitive sites - 6; canoe permit - 3 |
| General |
Cell phone coverage varies throughout the park. Marine band radios are suggested, as rangers and local law enforcement monitor marine channel 16. |
| General |
Keep the next camper in mind and leave the campsite in the condition you would like to find it in. |
Warnings & Advisories
Warning
GeneralThe following campsite are released on a one-week rolling booking window to provide options for short-term trip planners.Rainy Lake (west end): Mio Beach R64 and Nuthatch R21Rainy Lake (east end): Jack Pine Bench R55 and Hitchcock R105Kabetogama Lake: Fox Farm K50 and Round Bear K29Namakan Lake: Johnson Bay N13 and Hammer Bay South N59Sand Point Lake: South Island S17 and Feldt Channel S5