Tourists Outraged: US To Slap USD 100 Extra On Foreigners At 11 Iconic National Parks

From USD 80 annual passes to a USD 250 nonresident ticket and a USD 100 per-person surcharge at 11 top parks, the US is changing park pricing from January 1, 2026. Officials say it funds upkeep and prioritises residents
US To Hike Fees At 11 National Parks for Foreign Travellers: Check Updated Rates, Free Entry Days & Rollout Date
Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USAJames Lee/Unsplash
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Starting January 1, 2026, the US Department of the Interior will add a USD 100-per-person surcharge for non-U.S. residents at 11 of the country’s most-visited national parks. Nonresidents’ annual “America the Beautiful” pass will also jump from the current USD 80 to USD 250; US residents keep the USD 80 price. The new surcharge applies at Acadia, Bryce Canyon, Everglades, Glacier, Grand Canyon, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia and Kings Canyon, Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Zion National Parks.

The headline increases are straightforward: a one-off USD 100 entry surcharge per person at affected parks, or the option to buy the nonresident annual pass for USD 250. For context, many parks already charge standard entrance fees (commonly USD 35 per private vehicle at the busiest sites), so the surcharge is on top of those existing charges. Using current market rates (1 USD ≈ INR 89.36 on November 28, 2025), the USD 100 surcharge is roughly USD 8,935, and the new USD 250 nonresident annual pass is about INR 22,340 — a major jump from the INR 7,150 equivalent of the old USD 80 pass. (Rates fluctuate; travellers should check live conversions when booking.)

Why Officials Say They Did It

Grand Canyon, United States ticket price for entry
Grand Canyon, United StatesOmer Nezih Gerek/Unsplash

The Interior Department frames the policy as a revenue and prioritisation move: parks face staff shortages, maintenance backlogs and budget pressure, and the changes, presented as part of an “America-first” pricing approach, are intended to keep costs lower for US residents while shifting more of the funding burden onto international visitors. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and administration statements say the revenue will go toward infrastructure, visitor services, and conservation work. The policy follows an executive directive to rework fee structures for nonresidents.

What It Means For Travellers And The Tourism Industry

For independent international travellers and small tour groups, the surcharge significantly raises the cost of visiting signature landscapes that are often bucket-list items. Tour operators and businesses that depend on foreign visitors— from outfitters and lodges to local restaurants— warn that the added cost could deter some travellers, especially those on short itineraries who visit only one or two parks. Analysts also note a behavioural nudge: the higher per-visit charge pushes nonresidents toward buying the pricier USD 250 annual pass only if they plan multiple park visits. Some tourism stakeholders fear reduced bookings and lost spending in gateway towns.

Non-U.S. visitors who plan multiple park visits may still find value in the USD 250 annual pass. Families can calculate whether the pass or per-park surcharges are cheaper for their itinerary. Travellers should also check park-specific reservation systems and whether reservation windows or resident-priority access affect their plans; the new policy includes changes to reservation priorities on some high-demand days. Finally, compare seasonal timing and alternative federal or state public lands that aren’t affected by the surcharge.

Everglades, Miami, Florida, USA
Everglades, Miami, Florida, USAShelly Collins/Unsplash

Proponents say the change is a pragmatic way to raise funds for crumbling facilities and to protect fragile parks from overtourism by creating modest price signals. Critics counter that singling out international visitors is protectionist and could harm local economies that rely on foreign tourism dollars; they argue funding should come from broader budget allocations rather than targeted surcharges. Expect legal and political pushback and close scrutiny of visitor numbers after implementation.

FAQs

1. Which US national parks will charge the new USD 100 surcharge?
The surcharge applies to 11 major parks including Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Zion, Glacier, Acadia, Grand Teton, Everglades, Bryce Canyon, Rocky Mountain, and Sequoia–Kings Canyon.

2. When does the new pricing for non-U.S. residents begin?
The new rates take effect on January 1, 2026, applying to both per-visit surcharges and the revised annual pass.

3. How much will the nonresident annual pass cost?
The America the Beautiful annual pass for non-U.S. residents rises from USD 80 to USD 250, while U.S. residents continue paying USD 80.

4. Do residents and nonresidents still pay standard park entrance fees?
Yes. The USD 100 surcharge is in addition to existing entrance fees, which at many top parks are around USD 35 per vehicle.

5. Will international tourists still benefit from the USD 250 annual pass?
Only if they plan multiple park visits. For single or two-park trips, paying individual surcharges may be cheaper than buying the pass.

US To Hike Fees At 11 National Parks for Foreign Travellers: Check Updated Rates, Free Entry Days & Rollout Date
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