Discover Yosemite National Park with our self-guided tour, allowing you to explore one of the world's most awe-inspiring landscapes at your own pace. Drive into Yosemite Valley where the sheer granite face of El Capitan rises 900 meters from the valley floor and the iconic Half Dome stands sentinel over meadows and forests below. Watch Yosemite Falls thunder 739 meters in the tallest waterfall in North America, stand among giant sequoias in Mariposa Grove where the Grizzly Giant has lived for nearly 2,000 years, and ascend to Glacier Point for panoramas across the valley to the High Sierra crest. Follow the Tioga Road through subalpine meadows at 2,600 meters in Tuolumne, hike the Mist Trail alongside the cascade of Vernal Fall, discover the reflections of Mirror Lake beneath Half Dome's sheer northwest face, and explore Hetch Hetchy's granite-ringed reservoir — a valley that John Muir fought to save and that rivals Yosemite itself in grandeur.
This is a self-guided app-based tour with no in-person guide or fixed meeting point. Travelers are free to start at the suggested location below or choose any stop on the route as their starting point, and explore in the order that suits them best.
The most iconic vista in all of American national parks — the first breathtaking panorama of Yosemite Valley as you emerge from the Wawona Tunnel, with El Capitan on the left, Bridalveil Fall cascading on the right, and Half Dome centered in the distance above the forested valley floor stretching into the granite wilderness.
The best ground-level viewpoint of El Capitan's 900-meter vertical granite face — the largest exposed granite monolith on earth. From the meadow, watch rock climbers on the sheer wall through binoculars as they attempt multi-day ascents of routes like The Nose and Dawn Wall that have become legends in climbing history.
The tallest waterfall in North America at 739 meters — plunging in three stages from the valley rim to the floor. The Lower Yosemite Fall trail is an easy paved loop offering face-to-face views of the thundering cascade in spring, while the strenuous Upper Fall trail climbs to the top for dizzying views down into the valley.
The classic postcard view of Half Dome reflected in the calm waters of the Merced River — Sentinel Bridge offers the most photographed perspective of Yosemite's most recognizable landmark, its sheer northwest face rising 1,444 meters above the valley floor. The reflection is best in the still waters of early morning.
A seasonal lake that creates perfect reflections of Half Dome and Mount Watkins in its still surface — reached by a gentle 3.2-kilometer trail from the valley shuttle stop. In spring the reflections are stunning; by late summer the lake recedes to a meadow, revealing Yosemite's ever-changing seasonal character.
A 2,199-meter viewpoint offering the most spectacular panorama in Yosemite — looking straight across at Half Dome's face, down 975 meters to the valley floor, and across to Yosemite Falls, Vernal and Nevada Falls, and the High Sierra peaks stretching to the horizon. One of the greatest viewpoints in any national park worldwide.
Yosemite's largest sequoia grove — home to over 500 mature giant sequoias including the Grizzly Giant, nearly 2,000 years old with a base circumference of 28 meters. Walk among the largest living organisms on earth on accessible boardwalk trails through a cathedral-like forest that inspired the conservation movement.
A 97-meter waterfall reached by Yosemite's most popular hike — the Mist Trail climbs granite steps alongside the thundering cascade, drenching hikers in spray during peak flow. The 4.4-kilometer round trip to the top of the falls rewards with views down the granite staircase to the Merced River canyon below.
The largest subalpine meadow in the Sierra Nevada at 2,620 meters — a vast expanse of wildflower-dotted grassland surrounded by granite domes and peaks along the Tioga Road. The meadows serve as a gateway to Yosemite's high country wilderness, with trails leading to Cathedral Lakes, Lembert Dome, and the Pacific Crest Trail.
A granite-ringed valley that John Muir called 'a grand landscape garden' — flooded in 1923 to supply San Francisco's water, the dam remains one of America's most controversial conservation stories. Walk across the O'Shaughnessy Dam and hike to Wapama Falls cascading over 300 meters of granite into the turquoise reservoir.
The highest highway crossing in the Sierra Nevada — Tioga Road traverses 60 kilometers of stunning high-country scenery from the valley to the eastern Sierra. Olmsted Point offers a unique rear view of Half Dome's curved back, surrounded by glacially polished granite and erratics, with Tenaya Lake's blue waters shimmering below.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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