America the Beautiful Pass 2026: The US National Park Pass
The Changes You Need to Know Before Your Next National Park Trip
America the Beautiful Pass 2026: What You Need to Know Before Visiting National Parks
If you’re planning to visit U.S. National Park sites in 2026, major changes are coming that WILL affect how much you pay — and how much support your favorite parks receive. Whether you’re a U.S. resident, an international visitor, or someone who hits multiple parks each year, here’s the updated, need-to-know breakdown of the America the Beautiful Pass.
What Is the America the Beautiful Pass?
The America the Beautiful (ATB) Pass is your all-access annual pass to more than 2,000 federal recreation sites, including:
National Parks
National Monuments
BLM lands
National Forests
National Wildlife Refuges
For anyone exploring multiple parks a year, it’s the most cost-effective way to visit public lands — and in 2026, understanding how you buy it matters more than ever.
2026 Changes You Need to Know
1. Digital Passes Launch in 2026 — But Physical Is Still the Best Choice
Beginning January 1, 2026, Recreation.gov will offer a digital version of the America the Beautiful Pass.
But here’s the part most people don’t realize:
Digital passes send more of your money through federal overhead + contractors.
Physical passes support the actual park.
If you want your dollars to support trail crews, restrooms, parking lots, and visitor centers, digital should NOT be your first choice.
The physical pass is the only option that keeps the majority of your fee where it belongs — on the ground, inside the park you’re visiting.
2. Annual Pass Price for U.S. Residents Stays $80
If you are a U.S. resident, the price remains the same.
No increases for:
Annual Pass
Senior Passes
Military Pass
Access Pass
4th Grade Pass
Volunteer Pass
3. Non-Resident Pass Price Increases to $250
For international visitors, the Annual Pass increases to $250 starting in 2026.
This is the only pass category that sees a price jump.
4. Some Parks Will Add a $100/day Surcharge for Non-Residents
Beginning in 2026, 11 high-visitation National Parks will charge a $100 per person, per day surcharge for non-residents without an annual pass.
This only applies to non-residents and only at certain parks:
Acadia National Park
Bryce Canyon National Park
Everglades National Park
Glacier National Park
Grand Canyon National Park
Grand Teton National Park
Rocky Mountain National Park
Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks
Yellowstone National Park
Yosemite National Park
Zion National Park
This does NOT apply to U.S. residents.
And it does NOT apply if an international visitor buys the $250 Annual Pass.
Why You Should ALWAYS Buy a Physical Pass at a Park
This is the most important part of the entire post:
If you care about National Parks, buy your pass IN PERSON at a park.
Here’s why:
💰 Up to 80% of a physical pass fee stays at the park where you bought it.
Digital and online purchases go through:
Recreation.gov contractors
Processing systems
Federal administrative overhead
Meaning:
Far less of your money stays in the park you’re trying to support.
Physical purchases keep your dollars where they’re desperately needed to maintain:
Trails
Restrooms
Parking lots
Campgrounds
Visitor centers
Habitat restoration
Road repairs
Ranger programs
Your fees directly support the places you love.
The Best Option: Buy Physical → Register It Online
If you want digital convenience but still want your money to stay in the park:
Buy a physical pass at any national park site.
Register it on Recreation.gov.
Get digital backup access tied to your account.
This gives you:
Maximum impact
Digital ease-of-use
Protection if you forget your pass
There is no reason to buy digital first.
Where Your Money Goes (And Why It Matters)
When you buy your pass physically at a park:
80% stays at that specific park
Only 20% is distributed across the National Park System
This funding repairs:
Eroded trails
Damaged campgrounds
Aging restrooms
Unsafe road sections
Visitor center facilities
And supports:
Habitat protection
Trail crews
Ranger-led programs
Your purchase truly matters — especially in parks seeing record visitation and struggling with underfunded infrastructure.
✅ How to Register a Physical America the Beautiful Pass Online
You link your physical pass to your Recreation.gov account.
Once linked, it creates a digital version you can show at entrances in addition to your physical card.
Step-by-step:
Buy a physical America the Beautiful Pass
— Either at a park entrance station or by mail from the USGS Store.Create or log in to your Recreation.gov account https://www.recreation.gov
Go to: “Passes” → “Manage or Add a Pass”
(This is under your account profile.)Enter your pass number
On the back of your physical card there’s a unique pass number.
Enter that number to “add” or “link” your pass.Your pass now appears as a digital pass in your account
You can show this at park entrances if you forget the physical card.
📝 Important Notes
Linking your physical pass does NOT change where your fees go — buying the physical pass still keeps 80% of the fee at the site you purchased it from, which is why I have you push physical purchase first.
Registering online just adds convenience and backup access.
This works for Annual, Senior, Military, and other Interagency passes.
Final Takeaway
The America the Beautiful Pass is still one of the best ways to explore public lands, but the 2026 changes mean:
Digital passes are launching
U.S. residents still pay $80
Non-residents now pay $250
Select parks will add a $100/day surcharge for non-residents
We do not yet have official confirmation whether non-resident Annual Pass holders will be exempt from that surcharge
Buying a physical pass at a park is the best — and most impactful — way to support the places you love
You can still register that physical pass online for digital convenience
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