Tonto National Monument
Arizona
Managed by National Park Service
Established 1907
1,120 acres
Website: nps.gov/tont
Overview
After farming along the Salt River (or Rio Salado) for centuries, in the 1300s the Salado people moved to natural caves where they constructed cliff dwellings. Perhaps following catastrophic flooding or drought, the entire Tonto Basin was abandoned by 1450. When construction of Theodore Roosevelt Dam began in 1906, its namesake President protected these ruins using the power of the 1906 Antiquities Act.
Learn more about the other 137 National Monuments in our book Monumental America: Your Guide to All 138 National Monuments. It is now available for sale on Amazon.com.

Highlights
Museum, film, Lower Cliff Dwelling, Upper Cliff Dwelling guided tour
Must-Do Activity
Every visitor who is in good enough shape for the 350 foot ascent should make their way up to Lower Cliff Dwelling (with 28 rooms) after watching the film at the National Park Service visitor center. While at the top, talk to the volunteer stationed there for more information about the people who once inhabited the ruins. Only offered from November through April, the 10 a.m. ranger-guided tour (reservations required) to the Upper Cliff Dwelling (with 40 rooms) crosses washes and ascends 600 feet via switchbacks and 60 steps over a three-mile roundtrip.
Best Trail
The paved trail to the Lower Cliff Dwelling gains 350 feet of elevation in a half-mile, providing excellent views of Theodore Roosevelt Lake.
Photographic Opportunity
Hiking to Lower Cliff Dwelling is a good introduction to native plants of the Sonoran Desert, including the iconic saguaro cactus, yucca, sotol, cholla, and barrel cactus.

Peak Season
Winter
Hours
https://www.nps.gov/tont/planyourvisit/hours.htm
Fees
$10 per person or America the Beautiful pass
Road Conditions
Highway 188 provides paved access to Tonto National Monument between Payson and Globe, while Arizona Highway 88 (“Apache Trail”) is unpaved past Canyon Lake and until December 2024 that section was closed due to a wash out in 2019. Together they make for a beautiful scenic loop drive suitable for high-clearance vehicles.
Camping
There are campgrounds around Theodore Roosevelt Lake and within Tonto National Forest, which also allows dispersed camping in some areas.
Related Sites
Casa Grande Ruins National Monument (Arizona)
Montezuma Castle National Monument (Arizona)
Tuzigoot National Monument (Arizona)


























Explore More – When was the nearby village of 15 pit houses at Eagle Ridge first settled by humans in the Tonto Basin?

Learn more about the other 137 National Monuments in our book Monumental America: Your Guide to All 138 National Monuments
Thanks for this tour of Tonto! We wanted to go here from Phoenix a couple years ago but due to the road closure we didn’t make it (not enough time to go out and around).
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My brother who lives in Arizona just told me that they reopened the last section of SR 88 (Apache Trail) so it is now possible to do the loop drive again. https://azdot.gov/projects/southeast-district-projects/state-route-88-apache-trail
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I enjoyed your pictures. Thanks for sharing.
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That is a very unique park, we didn’t make it there when we were in Arizona
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It’s a little out of the way east of Phoenix and not near anything else. There are so many cool ruins in Arizona to see.
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Yes we should try to get back to Arizona at some point. We’ll see how things go this year 🙂
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