Chinle, AZ Road Trips
Plan drives from Chinle, AZ with practical route pages for distance, drive time, fuel cost, road character, and places to stop along the way.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Trip Routes
4
Longest Drive
348.9 mi
Surprise, AZ
Quickest Drive
6h 22m
Scottsdale, AZ
Plan Around Chinle, AZ
Popular Incoming Routes
Useful if Chinle, AZ is the arrival point and you want the strongest routes into the city first.
Continue From Chinle, AZ
Good next legs if this city is only one stop in a longer road trip.
Trips from Chinle, AZ
Chinle, AZ by the Numbers
Recent demographic snapshot from the US Census Bureau's American Community Survey.
Population
4,395
Median Income
$46,458
Median Home Value
$38,000
Median Age
31.9
Source: US Census Bureau ACS 5-year (public domain). See our methodology for details.
Traveler Guide to Chinle, AZ
Canyon de Chelly National Monument (duh-SHAY) is a national monument within the Navajo Nation in Northern Arizona. The park preserves ruins of the indigenous tribes that lived in the area, from the Ancestral Puebloans (formerly known as Anasazi) to the Navajo, and reflects one of the longest continuously inhabited landscapes of North America.
Canyon de Chelly is unique among National Park Service (NPS) units, as it is comprised entirely of Navajo Tribal Trust Land that remains home to the canyon community. NPS works in partnership with the Navajo Nation to manage park resources and sustain the living Navajo community. Canyon de Chelly has been occupied for millennia. In several places petroglyphs (rock carvings) and cliff houses of the Anasazi can be seen. The Navajo were living in the canyon when the Spanish arrived in the 1700s. The next century was marked by repeated conflicts with the Spanish and other Indian tribes, and later with the U.S. Finally, in 1864, Kit Carson led a campaign to remove the Navajo to Fort Sumner. Cold and hungry, most surrendered and began the Long Walk to Fort Sumner. After four years of hardship, the Navajo signed a treaty with the U.S., which established the reservation. A few dozen families live in the canyon at least part of the year, farming and herding. The national monument comprises three canyons. Canyon del Muerto and Monument Canyon join to form Canyon de Chelly. At its mouth, the canyon floor is broad and flat. There is sufficient water for patches of lush vegetation. The canyon walls rise steeply for about a thousand feet. The temperature can reach 100 ℉ (37 ℃) on the canyon floor in the summer. Winter temperatures range from lows around 20 ℉ (-7℃) to highs of 40 ℉ or 60 ℉ (4 ℃ to 15 ℃).
The 1 White House Ruins Trail leads to the only Anasazi ruin that can be visited without a guide, and is open seasonally (April-September). Check the Navajo Nation Parks website for updates. Scenic overlooks along the North and South Rim Drives provide dramatic views of the canyon below, with its sheer walls. South rim: 1 Tunnel Overlook, 2 Tsegi Overlook, 3 Junction Overlook, 4 White House Overlook, 5 Sliding House Overlook, 6 Face Rock Overlook, and 7 Spider Rock Overlook North rim: 8 Antelope House, 9 Mummy Cave, 10 Massacre Cave
Thunderbird Lodge Canyon Tours, ☏ +1 928-674-5841. Thunderbird Lodge offers full- and half-day tours in big six-wheel military transport vehicles. Your guide will show you cliff houses and petrogylphs set against spectacular cliff walls. You will learn of the Navajo's history in the canyon, including the deaths of 115 men, women and children at the hands of the Spanish at Massacre Cave, and the siege by Kit Carson's forces of Fortress Rock, a butte at the confluence of the three canyons, on which some 300 Navajo took refuge.
Thunderbird Lodge has a pleasant 1 cafeteria, with Navajo rugs (for sale) on the walls. The Holiday Inn and Best Western Hotels have restaurants. There is a supermarket, 2 Bashas' Diné, in Chinle.
Don't. Alcoholism is a serious problem, and alcohol is absolutely prohibited on the reservation. If you happen to have any with you, lock it in your trunk—don't bring it into your room.
1 Holiday Inn Canyon de Chelly and 2 Best Western Canyon de Chelly Inn are nearby, between Chinle and Canyon de Chelly. 3 Thunderbird Lodge, ☏ +1 928 674-5841, +1 928 674-5842. Open year-round. This comfortable motel-style facility is at the canyon mouth. A small 4 campground with 15 basic units is at the monument itself; first-come, first-served, open year-round. Spider Rock Campground, ☏ +1 928-781-2016, [email protected]. Stay in a traditional Navajo hogan, with a wood burning stove. Also has tent and RV sites (with water fill up and dump station, but no electric hook-ups). It's on open range, so horses and sheep may wander through-keep pets on leash. The campground has WiFi and sells Espresso drinks, snacks, and firewood. No credit cards. (updated Dec 2021) Backcountry camping is only permitted when accompanied by a licensed tour operator.
Canyon de Chelly National Monument is off US Route 191, about 1 hour and 15 minutes north of the town of Chambers at the intersection of US-191 and Interstate 40. Chambers is about 2 hours east of Flagstaff (with Petrified Forest National Park en route) and 2 hours and 40 minutes west of Albuquerque on I-40. If coming from the northeast (e.g. Farmington, New Mexico), it may work nicely to stop at the overlooks on the north rim on your way in rather than driving to the Visitor Center (at the west of the park) and then backtracking. The closest city with an Amtrak station is Gallup, New Mexico, about 45 minutes east of Chambers on Interstate 40. It is served by the Southwest Chief Los Angeles–Chicago route. Canyon de Chelly National Monument is very far from any major airport. Your best bet would probably be Albuquerque International Sunport (ABQ IATA).
As with all high-desert locales, it can be hot in the summer, cold in the winter. Dress appropriately and remember a hat. Leave your car locked with valuables out of sight. As in much of the West, animals on the road are a hazard, especially at dusk or in the night; both deer and livestock are drawn to the vegetation supported by rain runoff from the pavement.
Travel tips adapted from Canyon de Chelly National Monument on Wikivoyage, licensed CC BY-SA 4.0. Content summarized; visit the source for the full article. See our methodology for how we use it.
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