Certain areas around the world are considered to be of the utmost importance. From the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, of which six are no longer in existence, to the new Seven Wonders of the World, these locations were, and are still, deemed national treasures, and steps to protect them are undertaken to avoid the fate of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.
But there are more than these seven wonders that make up the beauty in the world. Natural attractions are found worldwide and often right in your own backyard. The United States is filled with such attractions and there is usually no need to travel to far and distant lands to witness the natural scenery that can be found here.
The United States overflows with incredible natural beauty across its 50 states, satisfying even the most discerning explorers. With over 60 designated National Parks and hundreds more protected areas, from wildlife refuges to historic sites, there is generally something for everyone to enjoy.
Glacial valleys, ancient river-carved canyons, and volcanic islands exemplify some of America’s most stunning scenery. While not every state’s most popular spot, these geological formations showcase nature’s majesty. Places like Utah, with Bryce Canyon and Zion National Parks, and Arizona, with the Coyote Buttes and the Wave, showcase more than one awe-inspiring sight.
24/7 Tempo compiled a list of the most breathtaking natural sites in every state after reviewing numerous travel guides and photography collections. Though subjective, these diverse landscapes deserve recognition for their beauty and uniqueness.
Though nature impresses, it may not be for everyone. Human engineering has also produced gravity-defying, breathtaking marvels worth experiencing, and if you prefer the beauty of architectural structures, take a look at the most photographed structures in the world.
Here is every state’s most breathtaking natural wonder
Alabama: Stephens Gap
- Location: Woodville, Jackson County
Alaska: Mendenhall Ice Caves
- Location: Juneau
Inside the 12-mile-long Mendenhall glacier is a network of ever-changing ice caves created by the melting of the glacier. Visitors can only access the caves by first kayaking to the glacier, and then climbing over it to reach the opening.
Arizona: The Wave
- Location: Coyote Buttes North area on the Utah-Arizona border
The Wave is a sandstone rock formation and one of the most photographed sites in the country. Photos of the Wave almost always look photoshopped, even though it is not. Getting to the Wave requires a permit – only 64 people are allowed each day – and is a six-mile roundtrip hike.
Arkansas: Whitaker Point
- Location: Ozark National Forest, near Pettigrew
Whitaker Point offers beautiful views of the Buffalo National River, and the 2.9-mile trail that gets you to the Point is worth the trip. The Point is open year-round and is easy to hike.
California: Lake Tahoe
- Location: Lake Tahoe
Lake Tahoe is the largest alpine lake in the U.S. and covers 191 square miles on the border of California and Nevada. Siting over 6,000 feet above sea level, surrounded by mountains, the waters are famous for appearing in different shades of blue, turquoise, indigo, and purple depending on the location and weather.
Colorado: Maroon Bells
- Location: Elk Mountains of the White River National Forest
North and South Maroon Peaks tower over Maroon Lake, reflecting the red hue of the water on sunny days. The Bells, along with their neighbor Pyramid Peak, are made of red mudstone and are known as the most photographed mountains in the Rockies.
Connecticut: Kent Falls
- Location: Kent Falls State Park
A series of falls that spans a quarter mile and drops 250 feet total, Kent Falls is one of Connecticut’s most popular natural attractions. The area offers picnic tables, a paved path to the upper falls, and a handicap-accessible viewing area at the lower falls.
Delaware: Great Cypress Swamp
- Location: Frankford
The Great Cypress Swamp covers 50 square miles at the headwaters of the Pocomoke River and consists of seasonally flooded forests made up of bald cypress, white cedar, pines, and various hardwoods. It’s the northernmost bald cypress grove in the country and an important habitat for several at-risk bird species.
Florida: Juniper Springs
- Location: Ocala National Forest north of Orlando
Juniper Springs is a series of clear, bubbling freshwater springs contained in a recreation area that allows swimming and snorkeling. The springs are surrounded by palm and oak trees and are home to alligators, river otters, and eels.
Georgia: Tallulah Gorge
- Location: Tallulah Falls
The gorge, about two miles long and almost 1,000 feet deep, can be viewed from above by a suspension bridge about 80 feet above the gorge that offers stunning views of the area’s waterfalls and landscapes. Though very popular, the Tallulah Gorge’s trail is strenuous and a -free- permit is required to hike it.
Hawaii: Na Pali Coast
- Location: along Kauaʻi’s North Shore
Once home to ancient Hawaiian communities, the Na Pali coast is characterized by sharp peaks and mountains that fall steeply to the ocean, forming deep valleys, caves, and cliffs. The only ways to see the coast are by helicopter, boat, or hiking a grueling 11-mile trail over the steep ridges.
Idaho: Sawtooth National Forest
- Location: closest to Twin Falls
The Sawtooth National Forest is home to over 300 alpine lakes, dozens of 10,000-foot snow-capped peaks, and over 700 miles of trails. Sawtooth is a haven for all types of outdoor sports and activities, but those who wish to see it firsthand from the comfort of a vehicle can drive the Ponderosa Pine Scenic Byway.
Illinois: Garden of the Gods
- Location: Shawnee National Forest
These 300-million-year-old sandstone formations are accessible by a quarter-mile observation trail and are one of the most photographed locations in Illinois.
Indiana: Indiana Dunes
- Location: closest to Porter
Spanning 15 miles of coastline on the southern shore of Lake Michigan, Indian Dunes National Park has over 50 miles of dune trails, as well as beaches, wetlands, rivers, forests, and prairies.
Iowa: Upper Iowa River
- Location: rises in southeastern Minnesota near the Iowa border
The Upper Iowa River traverses part of what is known as the Driftless Area, a region untouched by glaciers during the last ice age, which has left the land with intact ancient topography. High bluffs surround this stretch of water, which is a popular area for kayaking and canoeing.
Kansas: Monument Rocks
- Location: near U.S.-83 in western Kansas
The Monument Rocks, also known as Chalk Pyramids, are one of the Eight Wonders of Kansas. Though they are on private land, the 70-foot tall rock formations, formed around 80 million years ago, are open to the public during the day.
Kentucky: Grayson Lake
- Location: Olive Hill
Part of a 1,500-acre state park, Grayson Lake is surrounded by sandstone bluffs covered in dense forest. The lake is open to canoeing and kayaking and is particularly beautiful after rain, when waterfalls appear along the rock formations, some of which can only be viewed by boat.
Louisiana: Atchafalaya Basin
- Location: near Simmesport
The largest swamp in the United States, the Atchafalaya River Basin covers nearly a million acres and stretches 140 miles down to the Gulf of Mexico. Composed of marshes, iconic moss-draped cypress groves, lakes, and bottomland hardwood forest, the area is a crucial wildlife habitat and home to the largest population of nesting bald eagles in the region.
Maine: Cutler Coast
- Location: close to the Canadian border outside of Cutler
The Cutler Coast Public Reserve has hiking trails ranging from 2.8 to 9.2 miles round-trip, offering access to the sheer cliffs and undeveloped coves often referred to as the Bold Coast.
Maryland: Great Falls
- Location: Potomac River outside of Washington DC
Part of the C & O Canal National Historic Park, Great Falls Park offers multiple overlooks of the many rapids and waterfalls. The park has several hiking trails but the Billy Goat Trail has some of the best close-up views of the falls.
Massachusetts: Gay Head Cliffs
- Location: Martha’s Vineyard
These colorful hundred-foot clay cliffs are constantly eroding, which has led to the historic Gay Head Lighthouse being moved to save it from falling into the ocean.
Michigan: Pictured Rocks
- Location: south shore of Lake Superior in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
Michigan’s Great Lakes coastlines are teeming with natural beauty, and the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore offers a little bit of everything beautiful about the coast, including dunes, cliffs, beaches, forests, and inland lakes.
Minnesota: Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness
- Location: Superior National Forest
The area has over 2,000 campsites, 12 hiking trails, and over 1,200 miles of canoe routes. Permits are required for day use as well as overnight trips.
Missouri: Onondaga Cave State Park
- Location: Leasburg
Designated a National Natural Landmark due to the quality of its formations, Onondaga Cave features a wide variety of pristine cave structures and an underground river deeply entrenched in a canyon.
Mississippi: Red Bluff
- Location: outside of Foxworth
Red Bluff Canyon was formed by the erosion of sand, soil, and red clay from the Pearl River. About 200 feet deep at present, the canyon will continue to get deeper as the river continues to erode its banks.
Montana: Lake McDonald
- Location: Glacier National Park
Lake McDonald is the largest, longest, and deepest lake in the park, and features a spectacular array of colorful stones on its shores and beneath its waters. The rocks were formed in different eras, were broken apart by glaciers, and deposited in the lake over the years by rivers.
Nebraska: Toadstool Geologic Park
- Location: Oglala National Grassland, Harrison
Toadstool Geologic Park consists of oddly shaped clay and sandstone formations within the bed of an ancient river that went dry about 26 million years ago. Fossils of saber-tooth cats and prehistoric horses are visible among the eroded cliffs.
Nevada: Fly Ranch Geyser
- Location: near the Black Rock Desert
This geyser was created in 1964 when a geothermal energy company drilled a well to the 200-degree underground spring. The formation around the multiple spouts has been growing ever since due to mineral deposits from the water and is covered in colorful algae.
New Hampshire: Franconia Notch Basin
- Location: Franconia Notch State Park
The Basin is a 15-foot-deep, 30-foot-wide bowl carved into granite by a rushing waterfall. Henry David Thoreau called the Basin “perhaps the most remarkable curiosity of its kind in New England.”
New Jersey: Island Beach State Park
- Location: between the Atlantic Ocean and Barnegat Bay
The narrow Island Beach State Park is about 10 miles long. The 3,000 acres of land, shaped by storms and tides over thousands of years, is almost the same as when it was first described by Henry Hudson, an English explorer, in 1609.
New Mexico: White Sands
- Location: between Alamogordo and Las Cruces
The largest gypsum dune field in the world, White Sands National Monument’s pure white sand mounds stretch for 275 square miles. Gypsum is rarely seen as sand, as it dissolves in water, but New Mexico’s dry climate has preserved the dunes.
New York: Niagara Falls
- Location: Niagara Falls
Formed by Lake Erie draining into Lake Ontario, Niagara Falls is an attraction that spans the border into Canada and is made of three falls: Horseshoe, Bridal Veil, and American Falls. On the U.S. side, Niagara Falls State Park is the nation’s oldest state park.
North Carolina: Linville Falls
- Location: Blue Ridge Parkway
Linville Falls is a three-tiered waterfall that plummets 90 feet into the 12-mile-long Linville Gorge. Multiple trails between one and two miles round trip provide overlooks to the falls.
North Dakota: Painted Canyon
- Location: South Unit of Theodore Roosevelt National Park
One of the most photographed areas in North Dakota, Painted Canyon Overlook affords views of the Canyon, and a one-mile walking trail dips down below the rim to offer views of the unique strata.
Ohio: Hocking Hills Rock House
- Location: Hocking Hills State Park
The Rock House, a tunnel-like cave found up a 150-foot cliff, is a 200-foot-long, 25-foot-high tunnel caused by water erosion. Seven window-like holes and massive sandstone columns helped give the cave its name.
Oklahoma: Gloss Mountains
- Location: Fairview
The Gloss Mountains, also called the Glass Mountains, have a reflective selenite content that mimics glass, especially when the sun hits at the right angle. These aren’t actually mountains but are rather a series of deep red buttes and mesas that rise 150 to 200 feet.
Oregon: Thor’s Well
- Location: Cape Perpetua Scenic Area, near the Yachats
One of the most popular attractions in the state, the waves at Thor’s Well repeatedly fill the sinkhole until the water sprays out from the top. The water then rolls back into the hole, until it fills the bowl again.
Pennsylvania: Cherry Springs State Park
- Location: Susquehannock State Forest
Surrounded by the 262,000-acre forest, Cherry Springs State Park is a remote location perfect for stargazing. The park has some of the darkest skies in the country’s Eastern half, offering uniquely clear views of the Milky Way and other astronomical phenomena.
Rhode Island: Mohegan Bluffs
- Location: Block Island
The Mohegan Bluffs are a series of 200-foot-high coastal cliffs that span over two miles. A beach at the base of the bluffs is accessible by a steep trail from the top, and the overlooks offer views reaching as far as Montauk, Long Island.
South Carolina: Boneyard Beach
- Location: Bull Island
This eerie stretch of coast where trees once grew on the shore, and have been overtaken by the ocean, is known as Boneyard Beach. The saltwater eventually turned them white and grey, and many have toppled over and lie in the waves.
South Dakota: Badlands
- Location: Badlands National Park
The Badlands are not only a diverse display of geologic deposits but are also one of the most prolific fossil beds in the world. A 40-mile scenic byway through the park brings visitors up close to the colorful strata of the rock formations.
Tennessee: Fall Creek Falls
- Location: Bledsoe and Van Buren counties
One of the tallest single-drop waterfalls east of the Mississippi River, Fall Creek Falls is 256 feet high. A short walk from the parking lot leads to an overlook of the falls, and a steep trail leads to the base of the falls.
Texas: Big Bend National Park
- Location: abuts the Rio Grande River along the Mexican border
Big Bend National Park contains the Chisos mountains and miles of limestone canyons carved into the desert by the river.
Utah: Bryce Canyon
- Location:
Eroded by wind and water over millions of years, the thousand-foot limestone and sandstone columns at Bryce Canyon are striped with orange, pink, red, and white layers. Rather than being an actual canyon, the odd-shaped spires are a geologic formation called a hoodoo.
Vermont: Huntington Gorge
- Location: Richmond
As beautiful as the Huntington Gorge is, it is also a dangerous chasm that has claimed dozens of lives. This gorge is a series of cascades and waterfalls in a narrow rock slot and while swimming in the gorge is not recommended, areas further downriver offer safe trails to the water’s edge and countless swimming holes.
Virginia: Skyline Drive
- Location: Shenandoah National Park
This iconic road, the only public one in the park, runs 105 miles along the crest of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The drive should take about three hours, but realistically it will take much longer because you will want to stop and take pictures at many of the road’s 70 overlooks and wildlife sightings.
Washington: Hoh Rainforest
- Location: Olympic National Park
One of the oldest living ecosystems on the planet, this temperate rainforest receives an average of 12 feet of rain a year. Multiple hiking trails bring visitors through the moss- and fern-covered trees, which are mostly Sitka spruce and western hemlock.
West Virginia: Cranberry Glades
- Location: Allegheny Mountains
The acidic soil of these boreal bogs is home to many plants that usually live at higher altitudes, including carnivorous pitcher plants, cranberries, skunk cabbage, and sphagnum moss.
Wisconsin: Apostle Islands
- Location: Lake Superior
The Apostle Islands are a group of 20 islands covered in pits and caverns, old-growth forests, and waterfalls. Accessible by boat during the warmer months, but if the lake freezes deep enough to provide safe passage in the winter, visitors can walk to some of the islands, which are covered in beautiful ice formations.
Wyoming: Grand Prismatic Spring
- Location: Yellowstone National Park
The largest of the springs in the park, the Grand Prismatic Spring’s color rings are due to bacteria that inhabit different temperature zones in the water, which is scalding in the center and cooler at the pool’s edges.