KRON reports
Several changes are coming to the country’s beloved national parks in 2026, including a new list of free admission days. The Trump administration announced all parks will be offering free admission to U.S. residents on President Donald Trump’s birthday, but five other formerly free days are being dropped.
Last year, Martin Luther King Jr. Day (the third Monday of January), the first day of National Park Week (in April), Juneteenth (on June 19), the anniversary of the Great American Outdoors Act (Aug. 4) and National Public Lands Day (fourth Saturday of September) were all free admission days for visitors. Starting in 2026, admission fees will be charged on those five holidays.
Free admission is now offered to U.S. residents on eight holidays:
- Feb. 16: Presidents Day
- May 25: Memorial Day
- June 14: Flag Day and Trump’s birthday
- July 3-5: Independence Day weekend
- Aug. 25: 110th birthday of the National Park Service
- Sept. 17: Constitution Day
- Oct. 27: Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday
- Nov. 11: Veterans Day
Fee-free days used to allow free entry to all visitors, but starting in 2026 the fee will only be waived for U.S. residents. International visitors will not only have to pay the entrance fee, but also new nonresident fees.
Starting in January, international guests will be charged a $100 per-person fee at the entrance gate of 10 of the most-visited national parks, unless they have an America the Beautiful pass.

