Candlestick Campground is a primitive backcountry campsite located along the iconic White Rim Trail (also known as White Rim Road) in the Island in the Sky District of Canyonlands National Park, Utah. Situated roughly 55 miles from the Island in the Sky Visitor Center (about a 7-hour drive along the trail when traveling clockwise), it is one of the more remote and secluded vehicle-accessible sites on the loop.
The single-site campground sits in a dramatic desert landscape near the distinctive Candlestick Tower (or Candlestick), a prominent sandstone monolith that rises dramatically and serves as a visual landmark. Campers enjoy expansive views of the surrounding canyons, the White Rim sandstone formation, and the nearby Green River as the trail begins to parallel it more closely in this section. The area offers a true sense of isolation amid towering cliffs, buttes, and vast open skies, making it a favorite for those seeking solitude on multi-day 4WD, motorcycle, or mountain bike adventures. The site accommodates up to 15 people and 3 vehicles (with motorbikes and trailers counting toward the vehicle limit), and all camping activities must stay within the designated boundaries.
Amenities at Candlestick Campground
As a designated backcountry vehicle campsite in Canyonlands, Candlestick offers very basic, primitive facilities typical of the White Rim Trail:
- One designated campsite (single site only).
- Vault toilet (pit-style backcountry toilet).
- No water, electricity, trash collection, or picnic tables.
- No fire rings (wood campfires are prohibited park-wide; charcoal fires in a fire pan are allowed but all residue must be packed out).
- Campers must pack out all trash, including toilet paper (or use required human waste disposal systems where mandated near rivers).
- Food and scented items must be stored securely to prevent wildlife access (hard-sided animal-resistant containers are recommended in many areas).
Visitors need to be fully self-sufficient, bringing their own water, shelter, and waste management supplies. A high-clearance 4WD vehicle with low range is required to reach the site, as the White Rim Trail includes steep sections, rocky terrain, and potential exposure. Permits are mandatory for all overnight stays and day-use on the trail.
History of the White Rim Trail
The White Rim Trail is a roughly 100-mile unpaved loop that traverses the top of the White Rim Sandstone formation, a prominent Permian-era layer (about 280 million years old) below the Island in the Sky mesa. It offers stunning panoramic views of the Colorado and Green Rivers, towering buttes, arches, and deep canyons.
Human use of the area dates back thousands of years, with evidence of Ancestral Puebloan (Ancient Puebloan) rock art, dwellings, and granaries scattered throughout. Later, white settlers used the region for winter cattle grazing, creating interconnecting trails with their livestock.
The modern White Rim Road was primarily constructed in the 1950s by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) during the Uranium Boom of the Cold War era. The AEC built roads across southeast Utah (nearly 1,000 miles total) to encourage prospectors to search for uranium deposits needed for nuclear weapons production. While large uranium finds occurred elsewhere in the region, very little was successfully mined along the White Rim, and most operations were quickly abandoned. The road was later incorporated into Canyonlands National Park (established in 1964) and has since become a world-renowned destination for 4WD overlanding, jeep tours, and mountain biking. Today, it sees tens of thousands of visitors annually but remains a remote, permit-required adventure.
Note: Always check current conditions, road status, and permit requirements on the official National Park Service website (nps.gov/cany) before planning a trip, as weather, flash floods, and seasonal closures can affect access. The trail demands preparation for extreme desert conditions, self-reliance, and Leave No Trace principles.