This page displays webcams from various national parks in the United States, aggregated using the NPS API. Click on the "View Webcam" button to see the live feed from the camera. Click on the "Visit Park" button to visit the park's official website.
Data refreshed 17 min. ago.
Hosted in partnership with Dawnland LLC, which operates Jordan Pond House.
This webcam is maintained by the Utah Department of Transportation. It is located across US 191 from the Arches National Park entrance road.
Big Bend is famous for wide expansive panoramas. The view from Park Headquarters is always changing, and always spectacular. The view is to the Northwest, and updated every 15 minutes. On a clear day, distant peaks over 80 miles away are clearly visible.
Camera looking west from Boston Light on Little Brewster Island. View looks toward downtown Boston in the distance, with several islands including Great Brewster and Georges Island in the midground.
North camera from top of Bunker Hill Monument, looking over the Charlestown neighborhood, Interstate 93, and Cambridge and Somerville just beyond.
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Bonner Bridge Pier, a fishing pier on the south side of Oregon Inlet on the northern tip of Hatteras Island. This webcam allows anglers to check conditions, and provides great views of the sunrise, sunset, and ocean conditions.
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The San Miguel Island Ranger Station Webcam provides views of Cuyler Harbor, Harris Point, Green Mountain, the rain gauge, and the airstrip with Santa Rosa Island in the background.
View from the Saddlehorn Visitor Center on Rim Rock Drive. On most days a small sliver of the visitor center roof is in the foreground, beyond that are the red rock cliffs of Wedding and Monument canyons. On a clear day, in the distance, one can see the Grand Mesa (one of the largest flat-topped mountains in the United States).
The Steel Information Center at Park Headquarters (elevation 6,450 feet) is open daily except December 25th. The current hours are 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM. This view is useful in showing the amount of snow currently on the ground in the park. It can be 10 to 15 feet deep in the late winter and early spring. Image updates every 5 to 7 minutes.
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The Berry Bear is an iconic sculpture outside Denali's main visitor center.
This webcam updates every 30 seconds to show a still image of live conditions at the park. The webcam is mounted on the historic Devils Tower Visitor Center. Parking is limited with peak visitation in the summer between 10 AM and 3 PM with both the visitor center and lower dirt parking lots filling completely. The visitor center flagpole is in the middle of the image.
This webcam is located on the Quarry Exhibit Hall, home of the wall of dinosaur bones. It is pointed toward the highly eroded Split Mountain. You can also see numerous rock layers that are exposed and tilted on their side. Frequent viewers might catch the sun or moon rise over Split Mountain or maybe even a summer thunderstorm as it rolls through.
A view looking east from the top of the Netherlands Carillon in Arlington Ridge Park. In the view you will see the Potomac River, the Arlington Memorial Bridge, and the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, and United States Capitol all lined up, one of the best views of Washington, D.C.
Two hundred fifty years ago this entire area was covered with ice. Now it’s home to sea otters, humpback whales and orcas. Occasional ships enter Glacier Bay, rounding Point Carolus from Icy Strait; park visitors wander the shoreline, checking out tidepools at Halibut Point. Weather patterns over the Bay change by the minute … click this preview image for a live view!
The West Entrance to the park is a good indicator of how busy things may be at locations inside the park. During July and August expect to see a long string of cars as they line up to purchase their entrance passes. We sell several different passes including a 7-day pass for $35.00, an annual pass for $70.00, and the America the Beautiful Pass for $80.00. The America the Beautiful Pass will allow entrance into any national park in the country and is good for some services on National Forests and at other Federal agencies.
A view over Wahweap Launch Ramp on Lake Powell in northern Arizona. The image will update every 10 minutes.
The Grand Canyon National Park's Air Quality Webcam offers a window into the current sights, weather, air quality and seasonal changes that the park is experiencing. The view refreshes every 15 minutes.
View looking toward the west into Pine Springs Canyon - "View Webcam" link opens a larger picture that updates every 30 seconds.
Check out the latest viewing conditions of Haleakalā Crater via our webcam at Puʻuʻulaʻula located at the summit.
This image is from a research camera located on the down-dropped block in Kīlauea caldera and east rim of Halemaʻumaʻu crater within Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. The camera is looking west towards Halemaʻumaʻu crater. Disclaimer: The webcams are operational 24/7 and faithfully record the dark of night if there are no sources of incandescence or other lights. At times, clouds and rain obscure visibility. The cameras are subject to sporadic breakdown and may not be repaired immediately. Some cameras are observing an area that is off-limits to the general public because of significant volcanic hazards.
Homestead National Historical Park webcam overlooking the natural prairie.
The Dry Falls Visitor Center maintains a webcam which looks across the 3.5 miles wide dry waterfall. Created when Ice Age Floods water eroded the canyon below back to the cliff edge. This dry waterfall is perhaps one of the largest in the world.
Perched atop the Windigo Visitor Center, the Windigo Webcam offers a sweeping view of Washington Harbor. You might find a moose swimming or foraging through these sheltered Lake Superior waters, or catch a colorful sunset in all its brilliance on a late summer night. The webcam is active only during the summer months when power is available to it (typically from the beginning of May until late September).
Description: Sheep Rock is one of the magnificent centerpieces of John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. Located just across the John Day River from the Thomas Condon Visitor Center, it rises over 1,000 feet above the valley floor. Colorful, fossil-rich volcanic ash layers can be seen on its slope. The camera is located at an elevation of approximately 2,100'.
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This camera provides a bear’s eye view of Brooks Falls and a trout’s eye view at the mouth of the Brooks River.
Sanford-Yake provides easy access to Lake Meredith. A boat ramp, fishing dock, and bait shop make this one of the busiest places at Lake Meredith National Recreation Area. The Sanford Dam was completed in 1965 and can be seen in the background. Funding for this webcam was provided by the Lake Meredith and Alibates Friends Group. The functionality of the camera was provided by Wright-On Bait and Tackle Shop.
From over 4,700 feet above sea level, this webcam looks out from the visitor center north over nearly 30,000 acres of wilderness towards the Tule Lake Basin 20 miles away. Please click on the link for the most up-to-date image.
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In 1839, a small, humble, one-and-a-half cottage was constructed at the corner of Eighth and Jackson Streets in Springfield, Illinois. In 1844, Abraham Lincoln purchased this house and moved in with his wife and his first son, Robert Todd Lincoln. The Lincoln family called this place home for the next seventeen years. The home grew and changed with the Lincoln family to become the two-story tan house with green shutters visible today. View the Lincoln home throughout the seasons.
This air quality camera shows the view to the north from the Green River Bluffs trail and also displays current air quality and weather data.
Check the Canyon Rim webcam for the view of the gorge from Canyon Rim Visitor Center.
The park's main visitor center sits on a hill overlooking the Clearwater River. In the Nez Perce language, this place is called ?iyíwewiy. In English we call it the Spalding site. It was at this location that Henry Spalding set up his mission in the 1830s. Enjoy!
This webcam shows the parking lot at Hurricane Ridge. This view, from the north side of Hurricane Ridge Visitor Contact Station, is rarely obstructed and is often monitored by locals to check the weather or snow pack to determine if conditions are good for a trip up the mountain. This view is brought to you by Washington's National Park Fund.
Welcome to the Malaquite Beach webcam page. The page will automatically reload every 60 seconds. You can reload the page quicker by hitting your refresh browser button.
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Watch as the sunrises in the morning. This webcam shows views from the southwest to the east. The camera is on a loop that highlights selected features in this range of view such as the East Point of South Bass, Kelleys Island, Ballast Island, Middle Island, the most southern part of Canada, and the Marblehead Peninsula with the Marblehead lighthouse, and the rides of Cedar Point in the distance.
View of Point Reyes Beach Looking North-Northeast from the Point Reyes Lighthouse Visitor Center. Image refreshes every fifteen minutes.
The Longs Peak Webcam is located in the beautiful Tahosa Valley along Hwy 7. The webcam takes you to the tallest mountain in Rocky Mountain National Park. Longs Peak sits at an elevation of 14,259 feet above sea level and is a challenging mountain to climb under the best conditions. Visit https://www.nps.gov/romo/planyourvisit/longs_peak_conditions_report.htm for more information.
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A spectacular, streaming view looking east across a rural landscape to the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah National Park.
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The EarthCam set up at Steamtown National Historic Site provides an aerial view of the park's Roundhouse and Turntable complex. Various pieces of equipment are on display within the complex. Buildings within the city of Scranton can be seen in the backdrop. Turntables were primarily used by railroads during the steam era. Locomotives awaiting light-duty maintenance and repairs were moved from yard tracks onto the turntable. The turntable operator would then use controls to operate the electric motors that powered the turntable to rotate, aligning the turntable tracks with those for an available maintenance bay in the roundhouse. When servicing and minor repairs were complete, the locomotive would back onto the aligned turntable, and be rotated to return to revenue service or await a new assignment.
This camera is located on the roof of the park visitor center and looks west over Whiskeytown Lake.
This is the view from our Visitor Center at Park Headquarters in Copper Center, looking east across the Copper River Valley to the Wrangell Mountains. From this vantage point, Mt. Drum (12,010 ft) and Mt. Sanford (16,237 ft) are visible. Watch the colors in this scene change throughout the seasons: the brilliant yellows and golds of the aspens in the fall, followed by stark white snows and pink mountain alpenglow during the cold days of winter, and then the greening of the whole landscape as the days warm and lengthen in the springtime.
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This live view is made possible by the <em>Eyes on Yellowstone</em> program funded by <strong>Canon USA, Inc.</strong> through a generous grant to <strong>Yellowstone Forever</strong>.
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This webcam, located at about 8,000 feet in elevation, shows Half Dome and the surrounding high country. This webcam image is provided courtesy of Yosemite Conservancy.
This webcam is located at park headquarters in Zion Canyon and shows one of the park's most famous views, The Temples and Towers of the Virgin.