Sunset Campground

Death Valley National Park


With 270 sites, first-come, first-served Sunset is the biggest campground in Death Valley and your best bet for snagging a last-minute spot if everything else is full. It's close to Furnace Creek with its visitor center, general store and restaurants. Sites have no fire pits or tables, but flush toilets and water are available. Popular with RVers.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Death Valley National Park attractions

1. Death Valley National Park

0.2 MILES

The very name evokes all that is harsh, hot and hellish – a punishing, barren and lifeless place of Old Testament severity. Yet closer inspection reveals…

2. Borax Museum

0.26 MILES

On the grounds of the Ranch at Death Valley, this outdoor museum illustrates Death Valley's connection to borax mining, and presents pioneer-era mining…

3. Harmony Borax Works

1.47 MILES

Just north of Furnace Creek, a 0.5-mile interpretive trail follows in the footsteps of late-19th-century Chinese laborers and through the adobe ruins of…

4. Zabriskie Point

4.04 MILES

Not many national park features can say they were celebrated in a 1969 film of the same name, but Zabriskie Point claims that honor thanks to director…

5. Devil’s Golf Course

12.18 MILES

Some 15 miles south of Furnace Creek, salt has piled up into saw-toothed miniature mountains in what was once a major lake that evaporated about 2000…

6. Aguereberry Point

13.71 MILES

Named for a lucky French miner who struck gold at the nearby Eureka Mine, Aguereberry Point sits at a lofty 6433ft above the desert floor and delivers…

7. Devil’s Cornfield

15.78 MILES

Just east of Stovepipe Wells Village, Hwy 190 passes through this plain that is not studded with corn but with clumps of arrow weed, an evergreen used by…

8. Eureka Mine

15.94 MILES

In the Panamint Mountains, this gold mine was discovered by French immigrant Pete Aguereberry in 1905 and worked by him until the early 1930s. The mine…