Cimarron, NM Road Trips
Plan drives from Cimarron, NM with practical route pages for distance, drive time, fuel cost, road character, and places to stop along the way.
Photo: Zeynep Sude Emek
Trip Routes
1
Longest Drive
23.8 mi
Eagle Nest, NM
Quickest Drive
40m
Eagle Nest, NM
Plan Around Cimarron, NM
Continue From Cimarron, NM
Good next legs if this city is only one stop in a longer road trip.
Trips from Cimarron, NM
Cimarron, NM by the Numbers
Recent demographic snapshot from the US Census Bureau's American Community Survey.
Population
717
Median Income
$40,673
Median Home Value
$143,500
Median Age
56.5
Source: US Census Bureau ACS 5-year (public domain). See our methodology for details.
Notable People from Cimarron, NM
A sampling of people born in Cimarron, NM.
Agnes Morley Cleaveland
1874–1958
American writer
Landmarks & Historic Sites
Attractions and heritage-registered places located in Cimarron, NM.
National Scouting Museum
anchors River Orienteering / Community Stewardship Trails-n-Tales
City data from Wikidata (Q652006), available under CC0. Photos from Wikimedia Commons under their respective licenses. See our methodology for details.
Traveler Guide to Cimarron, NM
Cimarron is a small town in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of Northeast New Mexico. Popular in the summer for world-class fly-fishing in the Cimarron River it is the closest town to Philmont Boy Scout Ranch. Outside of the town, the area is dominated by very large ranches, some owned by celebrities or wealthy corporate scions. The town's historic downtown area was once a stopping point for settlers heading west on the Santa Fe Trail, and it still has the feeling of a dusty frontier town.
The town is small with a population of just under 800 (2020).
1 Aztec Mill Museum, W. 17th Street, ☏ +1 575 376 2417. M-Sa 10am - 4pm (summer only), closed winter. Regional history museum housed in an 1860s grist mill. Numerous displays about the town's colorful characters and stories. (updated Jul 2025) Dawson is a ghost town about 17 km northeast of Cimarron. The former mining town once had a population over 9,000 but suffered a pair of deadly mining accidents before the mines were shut down in 1950 and the town completely abandoned within a few short years.
Cimarron Canyon State Park - mountainous park with four campgrounds with 94 campsites, miles of hiking trails through the pine forests, picnic grounds with tables and grills provided, fly-fishing in the Cimarron River, hunting permitted seasonally (autumn). Popular for snowshoeing in winter months. Carson National Forest Fly-fishing in the Cimarron River
1 Kit Carson Restaurant, 31033 US-64, ☏ +1 575 376-4548. Daily 7am - 2pm. Western motif restaurant serving breakfast and lunch daily. $10. (updated Jul 2025) 2 Cimarron House of Pizza, 253 9th St., ☏ +1 719 717-8751. Daily 11am - 5pm. Casual pizza place also serving calzones and subs. $10. (updated Jul 2025) 3 Cree-Mee Drive In, 31089 US-64, ☏ +1 575 376-4480. Daily 10am - 8pm. Local drive-in with fast food fare including burgers, ice cream, and shakes. $10. (updated Jul 2025) 4 Cimarron Mercantile, 709 S Collison Ave., ☏ +1 575 376-4103. M-Sa 7am - 2pm, closed Su. Touristy place with rustic atmosphere, friendly service, and good food. Breakfast includes burritos and breakfast tacos. Lunch is sandwiches, paninis, tacos, etc. Good homemade salsas. $10. (updated Jul 2025)
1 Hikers Coffee Co., 337 9th St., ☏ +1 575 689-2635. Tu-Sa 7am - 3pm, closed Su-M. Small, local coffee shop with friendly atmosphere and good coffee drinks. Also serves breakfast items, donuts, churros and ice cream. $1. (updated Jul 2025)
1 St. James Hotel, ☏ +1 575 376-2664. Check-in: 3PM, check-out: 11AM. Historic hotel built in 1873, famous for its many famous outlaw and lawmen guests, including Wyatt Earp, Buffalo Bill, Jesse James (room 14), Annie Oakley and more. The hotel was notorious for being the site of frequent murders. Today, it offers rooms in two sections: the old historic section, and a newer modern section. The restaurant serves regional New Mexican and western dishes. The hotel is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. (updated Jul 2025) 2 Hikers Inn and RV Campground, 212 E 10th St., ☏ +1 575 376-2268. Check-in: 3pm, check-out: 11am. $25+ (campsite), $100+ (room). (updated Jul 2025) 3 Blue Dragonfly Inn, 600 W. 18th St., ☏ +1 575 425-0005. Small, family owned and operated inn with clean, comfortable rooms, breakfast served daily in a common room, indoor swimming pool and hot tub. (updated Jul 2025)
The nearest commercial airports are in Santa Fe, New Mexico or Colorado Springs, Colorado. From either airport, rent a car and drive to Cimarron. It might also be possible to get there via Amtrak to Raton. Cimarron is about 160 miles (2-1/2 hours) from Santa Fe, New Mexico, or about 190 miles (2-3/4 hours) from Colorado Springs, Colorado, both via interstate 25. From Santa Fe, drive north on interstate highway 25 to exit 419 and drive west on New Mexico state highway 58 for about 20 miles to Cimarron. From Colorado Springs, drive south on interstate highway 25 to exit 446 and drive west on U.S. highway 64 for about 35 miles to Cimarron.
Cimarron is a very small town with wide open ranch country all around. There is no scheduled bus service or public transit to or in Cimarron. Boy scouts usually hike. Ranchers usually ride horses when they aren't driving around in their gigantic air-conditioned 4WD trucks. Tourists drive around in their air-conditioned rental cars.
Travel tips adapted from Cimarron 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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