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Yoho National Park | British Columbia

Yoho National Park sits on the western slopes of the Great Divide in British Columbia. Parks Canada highlights a landscape shaped by water, ice, high rock walls, waterfalls, glaciers, and ancient marine fossils, which makes Yoho one of the most compact but dramatic national parks in the Canadian Rockies.

The park is popular with travellers who want waterfalls, hiking, fossil stories, mountain views, camping, and the carefully managed Lake O'Hara area. It pairs naturally with Banff and Kootenay, but Yoho has its own identity: steep valleys, powerful water, and protected fossil sites.

Why Visit Yoho National Park

Yoho is a strong park for hikers, photographers, geology-minded travellers, and visitors who want major Rocky Mountain scenery on the west side of the divide. Parks Canada points visitors toward guided Burgess Shale fossil hikes, Lake O'Hara, hikes and walks, camping, species-at-risk protection, rare fossil protection, and historic places such as Abbot Pass and Twin Falls Tea House.

Because some of Yoho's most sought-after experiences require planning, it is worth checking official details before building the trip. Lake O'Hara access, guided fossil hikes, campgrounds, trail conditions, fire updates, and seasonal services can shape what is realistic.

Things To Do

Plan around waterfalls, hiking, guided Burgess Shale experiences, viewpoints, camping, Lake O'Hara planning, historic sites, and scenic stops along the Trans-Canada corridor. Parks Canada maintains current links for hikes and walks, camping, trail conditions, visitor guides, closures and restrictions, fire information, fees, and park regulations.

Water activity restrictions are also important here. Parks Canada currently lists waterbody closures in Yoho and Kootenay national parks to reduce the spread of aquatic invasive species, so boating, angling, and water access should be confirmed on the official source before travel.

Planning Notes

Parks Canada lists Yoho National Park as open year-round, with visitor services generally available from May to early October. Confirm Lake O'Hara access, trail reports, campground dates, guided hike availability, water activity rules, fees, fire notices, closures, and seasonal services before travelling.

Park Details

Designation
National Park
Jurisdiction
Federal
Managing Agency
Parks Canada
Source Region
British Columbia
Province/Territory
British Columbia