Junior Ranger Map

Junior Ranger Map | Every Park With a Junior Ranger Program | WanderLawings
WanderLawings · Junior Ranger Map

Junior Ranger Map.
Find every park.

A free, kid-tested map of every park with a Junior Ranger program.

Real rangers. Real badges. One of the best free things your kids will ever do on a road trip, and we have a drawer full of patches to prove it.

200+
Parks Mapped
50
States & DC
Free
Badges Earned
Ages 4+
Welcome

Find a Junior Ranger Park

Tap any pin for kid-friendly notes, age recommendations, and what your child will earn at each park.

How a Junior Ranger Day Works

Three steps, one badge, no fee.

Show up, complete the booklet, get sworn in. The whole program is free at almost every park.

01

Pick up the booklet

Stop at the visitor center when you arrive. Ask the ranger for a Junior Ranger booklet for your kid’s age group. Free, takes thirty seconds.

02

Explore the park

Wander the park and complete the activities. Most are observation-based: spot wildlife, sketch a tree, listen for a sound, talk to a ranger.

03

Earn the badge

Bring the booklet back. A real ranger reviews it, leads the Junior Ranger pledge, and your kid walks out with a badge or patch to keep.

The Junior Ranger Pledge

What every kid promises before they earn the badge.

“As a Junior Ranger, I promise to teach others about what I learned today, explore other parks and historical sites, and help preserve and protect these places so future Junior Rangers can enjoy them.”
Recited at every park, by every kid
A Family Guide

The Junior Ranger Program, From a Family That Has Done a Lot of Them

If you have never heard of Junior Ranger, here is the short version. Almost every National Park Service site, plus a growing list of state parks, runs a free program for kids. Your child picks up a booklet at the visitor center, completes a few activities while they explore the park, brings the booklet back, and a real ranger swears them in and hands them a badge or patch. It is one of the best free things you can do with kids in this country, and we have a whole drawer in the RV that proves it.

This map exists because we wanted one place to find every park that runs a program. The official NPS site is great, but it can be hard to scan when you are road-tripping with kids in the back seat asking how much longer. So we built a map. Pin by pin. Park by park.

Why Junior Ranger Is Worth Slowing Down For

Plenty of road-trip families pull into a park, snap a photo at the sign, and roll on. We get it. We have done it. But we have also learned that when our kids do a Junior Ranger booklet, they actually see the park. They notice the lichen. They watch the river. They ask the ranger a question they would not have asked otherwise. The booklet is a quiet trick for getting kids fully present in a place, and that turns out to be the whole point.

How Old Should My Kid Be?

Most parks design their booklets for ages 5 through 13, with separate activity tracks for younger and older kids. Younger kids can usually get a sticker or a simplified booklet, and a few parks even have toddler-friendly options. Older kids and teens can absolutely earn one too, and we have watched plenty of teenagers get more out of it than they expected. Adults can do the program at most parks if they ask. Yes, really.

What Counts as a Junior Ranger Park?

The most well-known programs are run by the National Park Service. National parks, monuments, historic sites, lakeshores, seashores, recreation areas, and battlefields all participate. But it does not stop there. Many state park systems run their own version, sometimes with their own state-specific patches. The US Fish & Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management, and the US Forest Service have similar programs at certain locations. Our map covers all of them as we run into them in real life.

What to Expect on Junior Ranger Day

Plan on one to three hours per park, depending on the size of the park and how thorough the booklet is. Some are quick, especially at smaller historic sites. Others, like the bigger national parks, will keep you busy most of the afternoon. The pacing is the activity. Bring water. Bring a pencil. Bring sunscreen. The visitor center has the rest.

Ranger Sworn-In, Then What?

The badge itself is a big deal, especially the first few times. Our kids each have a vest and a hat covered in patches now, and they remember most of the parks by which patch came from which place. If your kid loves it, the National Park Service has a whole online community for Junior Rangers, including a webrangers program and several remote-only badges you can earn from home.

Tips From a Family That Has Earned a Lot of These

Hit the visitor center first. Ask for the highest-age booklet you think your kid can handle. Bring a clipboard if you can, especially for hike-along activities. Take pictures of the booklet pages before you turn it in if your kid wants a copy. Be flexible. If a park has a long ranger-led program in the booklet and the timing does not line up with your visit, ask if there is an alternate activity. Most rangers will say yes. They love this program too.

The Full List

Junior Ranger Programs by State

Every park, forest, sanctuary, monument, and historic site we have confirmed runs a Junior Ranger or Junior Naturalist program, organized by state. Tap any state to see the parks, then click a park name to visit its official site.

Alabama

7 Programs

Alaska

6 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Chugach National Forest

Second-largest national forest; Junior Ranger at Begich Boggs Visitor Center.

Anchorage, AK

USFS · National Forest

Tongass National Forest

Largest national forest in the US; Junior Ranger at Southeast Alaska Discovery Center.

Ketchikan, AK

Arizona

20 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Coconino National Forest

Flagstaff-area forest; Red Rock Ranger District offers Junior Ranger at Sedona.

Flagstaff, AZ

USFS · National Forest

Coronado National Forest

Sky island forest with Junior Forest Ranger Smokey Bear program.

Tucson, AZ

BOR · Dam Visitor Center

Glen Canyon Dam

Lake Powell dam; Junior Ranger co-managed with NPS Glen Canyon NRA.

Page, AZ

NPS · National Monument

Navajo National Monument

Well-preserved Ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings on Navajo land.

Tonalea, AZ

Arkansas

7 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Ouachita National Forest

Oldest national forest in the South; Junior Ranger at Winding Stair and Talimena.

Hot Springs, AR

California

21 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Angeles National Forest

LA-area forest; Junior Ranger with Smokey Bear at Grassy Hollow Visitor Center.

Arcadia, CA

USFS · National Forest

Klamath National Forest

Northern California forest; Junior Ranger booklet and Smokey Bear activities.

Yreka, CA

DoD · Historic Post

Presidio of San Francisco

Historic military post now NPS site; Junior Ranger covers former Army post history.

San Francisco, CA

BOR · Dam Visitor Center

Shasta Dam

California’s tallest dam; Junior Ranger activity book at visitor center.

Shasta Lake, CA

USFS · National Forest

Tahoe National Forest

Sierra Nevada forest; Junior Forest Ranger at Big Bend Visitor Center.

Nevada City, CA

Colorado

7 Programs
USFS · National Forest

White River National Forest

Popular Colorado forest; Junior Forest Ranger at ranger district offices.

Glenwood Springs, CO

Connecticut

2 Programs

Delaware

1 Program

Washington, DC

15 Programs
NPS · National Memorial

Lincoln Memorial

Iconic statue and temple to the 16th US president.

Washington, DC

NPS · National Memorial

World War I Memorial

Memorial in Pershing Park honoring WWI service members.

Washington, DC

NPS · National Memorial

World War II Memorial

Memorial to the 16 million Americans who served in WWII.

Washington, DC

Florida

3 Programs

Georgia

8 Programs

Guam

1 Program

Hawaii

7 Programs

Idaho

2 Programs

Illinois

4 Programs

Indiana

2 Programs

Iowa

1 Program

Kansas

4 Programs

Kentucky

2 Programs

Louisiana

4 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Kisatchie National Forest

Louisiana’s only national forest; Woodsy Owl Junior Ranger activities.

Pineville, LA

Maryland

11 Programs
County Garden

Brookside Gardens

Montgomery Parks garden with youth programming.

Wheaton, MD

Massachusetts

12 Programs

Michigan

6 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Hiawatha National Forest

Michigan Upper Peninsula forest; Junior Ranger booklet at Munising and St. Ignace.

Gladstone, MI

Minnesota

1 Program
USFS · National Forest

Superior National Forest

BWCAW forest; Junior Ranger at Kawishiwi and Gunflint ranger stations.

Duluth, MN

Mississippi

3 Programs

Missouri

4 Programs

Montana

2 Programs

Nebraska

6 Programs

Nevada

3 Programs
BOR · Dam Visitor Center

Hoover Dam

Iconic Colorado River dam; Junior Ranger booklet at visitor center.

Boulder City, NV

New Hampshire

2 Programs

New Jersey

4 Programs

New Mexico

7 Programs

New York

15 Programs
DoD · Museum

West Point Museum

US Military Academy museum; Junior Cadet activity booklet.

West Point, NY

North Carolina

8 Programs
USFS · Historic Site

Cradle of Forestry in America

Birthplace of forestry education in America; Junior Forest Ranger badge and certificate.

Pisgah Forest, NC

USFS · National Forest

Nantahala National Forest

Western NC forest; Junior Ranger program with Cherokee heritage activities.

Murphy, NC

USFS · National Forest

Pisgah National Forest

Western NC national forest; Junior Forest Ranger booklets at Pisgah Ranger Station.

Pisgah Forest, NC

North Dakota

2 Programs

Ohio

13 Programs

Oklahoma

2 Programs

Oregon

4 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Mount Hood National Forest

Oregon volcano forest; Zigzag and Mount Hood Information Center offer Junior Ranger.

Sandy, OR

City Arboretum

Hoyt Arboretum

Youth self-guided discovery activities.

Portland, OR

Pennsylvania

16 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Allegheny National Forest

Pennsylvania’s national forest; Junior Forest Ranger at Kinzua Point Visitor Center.

Warren, PA

Puerto Rico

1 Program

Rhode Island

1 Program

South Carolina

7 Programs

South Dakota

3 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Black Hills National Forest

South Dakota forest; Junior Ranger at Pactola and Mount Rushmore visitor centers.

Custer, SD

Tennessee

5 Programs

Texas

9 Programs

Utah

1 Program

Vermont

2 Programs

Virginia

16 Programs

US Virgin Islands

1 Program

Washington

8 Programs
BOR · Dam Visitor Center

Grand Coulee Dam

Columbia River dam; Junior Ranger program at visitor center.

Grand Coulee, WA

USFS · National Forest

Olympic National Forest

Surrounds Olympic NP; Junior Ranger at Hood Canal and Quilcene district offices.

Olympia, WA

West Virginia

2 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Monongahela National Forest

West Virginia forest; Junior Ranger at Cranberry Mountain Nature Center and Seneca Rocks.

Elkins, WV

Wisconsin

4 Programs

Wyoming

3 Programs
USFS · National Forest

Shoshone National Forest

First national forest in the US; Junior Ranger program at Wapiti Ranger District.

Cody, WY

Junior Ranger Map Questions

It is a free, mostly self-guided activity program for kids at hundreds of parks across the country. Pick up the booklet at the visitor center, complete the activities while you explore the park, bring it back, and your kid gets sworn in by a real ranger and earns a free badge or patch. The vibe is part scavenger hunt, part nature lesson, part rite of passage.

The program itself is free at almost every park. The booklet is free. The badge or patch is free. The swearing-in ceremony is free. You may still need to pay the regular park entrance fee to be in the park at all, but the Junior Ranger program comes with the visit.

Most park booklets are designed for ages 5 to 13, but they typically have age-specific tracks so younger kids and older kids both have something to do. Many parks welcome adults to participate too, and some have toddler stickers or simplified booklets for the under-5 crowd. If you are not sure, just ask the ranger at the visitor center.

Plan on one to three hours per park. Some are fast, especially at smaller historic sites. Others, like the big national parks, can take most of an afternoon. The activity time is the point, so do not rush it.

Many do. Texas, Florida, California, and several other state systems run their own version, often with their own patches or pins. We add state programs to the map as we run into them on the road.

Yes. The National Park Service offers WebRangers and several remote Junior Ranger programs you can complete from home. A bunch of individual parks also publish PDF booklets you can print and mail in for the badge. It is a great rainy day project, and the badge still arrives in the mail.

Pencils, water, sunscreen, and a willingness to look closely at things. A clipboard makes writing on the trail easier but is not required. The booklet is free at the visitor center, so you do not need to print anything ahead of time.

We add pins as we visit Junior Ranger parks. The list of participating parks does shift a little year to year, so the map is a strong starting point. Always confirm with the visitor center on the day of your visit, especially in the off-season when ranger programming can be limited.

Follow the Adventure

New parks. New badges. Every month.

We add pins to the map every time our kids earn another patch. Follow along on social to see what they are working on this week.