Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Great Basin Visitor Center

    4.3 (17 reviews)
    Closed 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

    Great Basin Visitor Center Photos

    More like Great Basin Visitor Center

    Recommended Reviews - Great Basin Visitor Center

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    Reviews With Photos

    Norm K.

    On my way to Lehman Caves, I first came upon the entrance to the Great Basin Park where the visitor center is located. There is no fee for this national park so there's no need to stop to pay your fee. However, if you don't stop, you'll miss a lot of the history of the Great Basin and miss your chance to see a slab of the Prometheus Tree. Prometheus was thought to be one of the oldest if not the oldest non-clonal thing on Earth at an age estimated at 4,862 years old and possibly more than 5,000. The ranger at the desk explained one version of why the tree was cut down. In the 1960s, a researcher was trying to do core samples to count the rings. The technology of the day was not good enough and the core samples were not effective. He then asked for permission from the US Forest Service to cut down the tree. The last part of this description is open to different stories. Some say it was plain stupidity to cut down such an old tree. Some say the US Forest Service was not involved in the decision. I guess you can believe what you want. In any case, 22 years after this action, the Great Basin National Park was established as a way of protecting these trees that grow generally at elevations of 10,000 feet and above. The ranger also gave me a tip on where to hike after my tour of Lehman Caves. He was very helpful!

    Craig T.

    Stopped in here for some information for the next day. Great facility and a lot of information inside. We watched a 20 minute movie here that was very helpful in giving us a background of the park. Rangers here we're super helpful.

    Entrance to the Basin visitor center.
    Maria H.

    I've been waiting 20 plus years to visit this park. TOTALLY worth the drive and time spent taking in all the scenery. We camped in our RV at Upper Lehman campground, only drawback was no campfires because of high fire season. I recommend getting Lehman Cave tour reservations, totally worth it. And if you are a hiker, hike the Bristlecone Trail to see a rare glimpse of our oldest living trees, Bristlecone Pines. Do the loop to Teresa and Stella Lakes, totally worth the extra 2 miles. If you are a REAL hiker, hike to Glacier Point. Additionally, if you have even more time, go an hour out of your way to Ely, Nevada to the Northern Nevada Railway and take a ride on a steam engine and visit the working train museum (most amazing experience EVER!). The park is a member of the International Dark-Sky Association, which means that they are elitist in stargazing. Great Basin is an undervalued and understated national park in the National Park System. I highly recommend a few days visit.

    Nicole D.

    We were on a road trip and were unsure of whether or not to stop at Great Basin. We had heard mixed things. DO IT. It's a great park! The visitor center has some cool things. There are beautiful views, nice forested areas, NO BEARS, and lots of deer. We got some great photos of deer frolicking around our campsite. We had an AWESOME campsite for only $12! Pas the visitor center, there is a place where you can go on guided cave tours (you can only see them with a guide) which I did not go on because we had our dog with us (dogs aren't allowed in the caves) but my husband went and got some great photos. It's not as well known or talked about, but it's a beautiful national park.

    The website lies, they don't open until 1100.

    See all

    7 months ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of PohLi L.
    12
    68
    42

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Norm K.
    1424
    3267
    19675

    8 years ago

    Helpful 7
    Thanks 0
    Love this 6
    Oh no 0

    4 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Maria H.
    8
    207
    147

    4 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 12
    Thanks 0
    Love this 14
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    10 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 3
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Nancy V.
    336
    1099
    2278

    10 years ago

    Helpful 4
    Thanks 0
    Love this 7
    Oh no 0

    10 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    10 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    9 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 4
    Oh no 0

    9 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Amanda L.
    21
    40
    27

    8 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Anrana S.
    97
    1373
    7641

    9 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    13 years ago

    A must stop on your way to visit Great Basin National Park. Very interesting exhibits and helpful staff.

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    Ask the Community - Great Basin Visitor Center

    Review Highlights - Great Basin Visitor Center

    This visitor center is much like so many of the national park centers around the U.

    Mentioned in 5 reviews

    Read more highlights

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    Lehman Caves Visitor Center - Nice setup!

    Lehman Caves Visitor Center

    4.3(6 reviews)
    5.1 mi

    The Lehman Caves VC is your gateway and waiting area for a tour of the caves. There are some…read moreexhibits about how the stalactites and stalagmites were formed and there are different films that run in a separate room. After checking in and getting the ticket I had purchased online, I was immediately drawn to the Winchester Rifle that was found leaning against a tree in 2014. It had been there for many decades and it's incredible that it survived the conditions encountered at this high elevation with the winds and snow/rain the area receives. The Visitor Center has restrooms and a snack bar that is open during the summer months when the park and the caves have peak attendance. I would imagine there are times when the VC is closed due to snow. While waiting for your tour of the caves, kick back, have a soda, and enjoy the exhibits. Above all, make sure you check out that amazing Winchester.

    Lehman Caves Visitors Center (Baker, NV)…read more The Lehman Caves Visitors Center is a must if you're visiting the actual caves. The visitors center is where to go for parking and to check-in for your reservations. Walk-in's are also welcome if there's enough spots available. The staff at the visitors center will also take you to the start of the tour, which is just outside the double doors. The visitors center is also a museum detailing the Lehman Caves, the history, and wildlife that can be found in or around the caves. Clean restrooms, benches to sit, coffee, and a snack bar is also located at the visitor centers. Operating hours is based on the season. My advice...call ahead.

    Photos
    Lehman Caves Visitor Center - Signage

    Signage

    Lehman Caves Visitor Center - Cave display in the visitor center

    Cave display in the visitor center

    Lehman Caves Visitor Center - Plenty of parking but no EV charging to be seen in the lot.

    See all

    Plenty of parking but no EV charging to be seen in the lot.

    Great Basin National Park - Trees in Autumn  09-21-2025

    Great Basin National Park

    4.4(72 reviews)
    7.5 mi

    Great Basin National Park is a relatively small portion of the Great Basin as a whole. There is no…read moreNational Park entrance fee required to visit. Per Google: "The Great Basin is a large, arid region in the western United States, defined by its geography and centered on Nevada. It is situated between the Sierra Nevada and Cascade ranges to the west and the Rocky Mountains to the east. The region includes most of Nevada, about half of Utah, and parts of Idaho, Wyoming, Oregon, and California." While planning our visit, I looked on the nps.gov website, I saw that there are cave tours. I signed up for the Lehman Cave Parachute Shield Tour. The tickets are purchased from recreation.gov website. We started off with a visit to the Great Basin Visitor Center where we looked at exhibits and got a general feel for the area. We bought a few small souvenirs and were on our way! I must say that the park was super beautiful with the changing of the leaves! Parts of the mountains were lit up with red & gold foliage! We drove the Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive all the way to the Wheeler Peak Overlook. Go slow-ish and enjoy the views! We stopped by: Osceola Ditch Trail - was a man-made waterway used for mining Wheeler Peak Summit Trail Summit Trailhead Bristlecone-Alpine Lakes Trailhead Mather Overlook Wheeler Peak Overlook - end of the scenic drive and has an awesome view of [yes!] Wheeler Peak Wheeler Peak Overlook is the final destination of the scenic drive. There are stops along the drive. Since we weren't hiking, we stopped at most of the pull-outs and parking lots. Wheeler Peak stands at 13,063 feet and is the second tallest point in Nevada! There are viewing scopes you can use to get a closer look! We made a quick stop at Mather Overlook. You can see Wheeler Peak from here as well. This overlook is named for Stephen Mather, the first director of the National Park Service (NPS). There's a cool bronze relief map of the Wheeler cirque. Then we drove back down to the Lehman Caves Visitor Center for our tour. The tour was very informative and was roughly an hour long. We stayed in Ely, NV which suited our needs. Baker, NV seemed pretty desolate from what I saw driving on the NV-487. Great Basin National Park is fairly remote compared to other National Parks, but definitely worth coming out to visit at least once!

    This review is for Baker Creek Loop which was a ~3.5 miles round trip that took ~2 hours to…read morecomplete. With the unexpected closure of the last 10 miles of Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive, we had no choice but to do a different hike in the area. Baker Creek Loop was a scenic forest trail with a meadow halfway through. Starting the trail clockwise; trail was an incline up the mountain and a decline back down to the aspen forest. Fall colored aspens were prominent at the start and end of the trail! Wooden bridges were slippery with ice. Decent sized parking area at the trailhead. Restroom available at the parking lot. Required to drive on gravel road for ~3 miles. Short video of the hike for those interested! https://youtu.be/gmfUHF9BAc0

    Photos
    Great Basin National Park
    Great Basin National Park
    Great Basin National Park - 09-21-2025

    See all

    09-21-2025

    Lehman Caves - Typical cave feature on the Gothic Palace Tour.

    Lehman Caves

    4.8(45 reviews)
    5.1 mi

    These caves are located in The Great Basin National Park. You need to go to the Lehman Caves…read moreVisitor Center. This is a different location from The Great Basin Visitor Center. In order to visit the caves, you need to purchase a ticket (which is also your reservation) and a National Park Entry Pass of some sort. I purchased my tickets for the Parachute Shield Tour online at the recreation.gov website. I got a Senior ticket ($6) & a regular ticket ($12). There is no additional fee. When I went to check-in, I presented my ticket confirmation email and my National Park Pass. The tour is about an our long. It is said that Absalom S. Lehman discovered the caves when riding his horse. The horse broke through a crust covering the cave's natural entrance. No one really knows for sure who discovered the cave or how. Lehman Caves was designated Lehman Caves National Monument before it became part of The Great Basin National Park. We gathered at a door that looked like the right door. It was the right place to be at, but not the one we used. The Ranger met us here and instructed us to use the shoe washing station. After we all washed the soles of our shoes, we all walked up the hill to a different door to begin our descent into the cave. It's the same door we exited from at the end of the tour. The first room we arrived at was the Lodge Room. Then we walked through a man-made walkway called "The Panama Canal" which led us to the next room, The Inscription Room. Here, you can see where the explorers belly crawled through "Fat Man's Misery" (natural entrance) to get here. When they made it to the Inscription Room, they used the soot from their flame to inscribe their name on the ceiling. To get to the Grand Palace, we walked on the path called "The Rocky Road" which took us past the Lake Room & Cypress Swamp. Our tour ended at the Sunken Garden. To exit, we retraced our paths back to where we entered. We toured these rooms: Lodge Room Inscription Room - has names & dates on the ceiling Cypress Swamp - many stalactites suspended from the low ceiling resemble a swamp full of Cypress Trees Lake Room - named for the small, year-round pool to the side Grand Palace - the largest room on the tour and absolutely wondrous Sunken Garden - deepest part of the cave at about 235 ft below the surface. There's a viewing platform here. The Grand Palace is where you'll see the cave bacon, stalactites and stalagmites that almost touch, this tour's namesake, the Parachute Shield, and other points of interest. Lehman Caves boasts of shield formations, most iconic is the Parachute Shield which is pictured on souvenirs. While most other caves have a couple shield formations, Lehman Caves amazingly has more than 500. Just before the end of our tour, the ranger asked if our group wanted to experience the cave pitch black. We all agreed and the lights were turned off for a minute or two. It was pretty eery, the silence and darkness. Once the lights were back on, we walked out of the cave. This was a very fascinating tour. They say that each time you enter the cave, the experience will be different. If we ever come back here, I'd be willing to take the tour again!

    Lehman Caves is a small part of the experience when exploring Great Basin National Park. It's…read morelocated 6 miles from the entrance and just past Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive which takes you to the summit of Great Basin. Since Lehman Caves are done by guided tours with park rangers at specific times, I'd suggest signing up for a tour and checking off going inside the caves in the morning and then having the remainder of the day to drive to Wheeler Peak and do some hiking at your own leisure. This way you're not held hostage to taking an afternoon tour and having to keep an eye on the clock. There are two types of Lehman Cave tours. - Gothic Palace - 30 minutes - $8 fee - 10:30am, 1:30pm - no reservation needed - Lodge Room - 60 minutes - $12 fee - 9am, 11am, 1pm, 3pm - reservation required. 9:30am, 12:30pm - no reservation needed Reservations for cave tours can be made online at recreation.gov. Spontaneously walking up for day of tours can be made at the Lehman Caves Visitor Center which again is situated 6 miles into Great Basin Park and just past Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive. Here's the gist from my experiences... During my first visit to Great Basin back in 2019, I enjoyed seeing the 60 minute Lodge Room. It was a photogenic cave from my recollections. I recommended it at the time. Now for my return visit back in September of 2024, I tried the 30 minute Gothic Palace and was disappointed. You enter one simple room. The hanging walls of stalagmites and stalactites aren't so dramatic. And for a quick 30 minute tour, half the time is spent reviewing rules and procedures. Yes, the ranger turns out the lights for a few moments and gives you a few minutes to capture a few photos. My thoughts were...."I'd rather be hiking at the top of Wheeler Peak." So I guess what I'm trying to say is...choose the 60 minute Lodge Room tour over Gothic Palace. But either way for me....caves are just not my thing, yet I still return to them as I'm a glutton for punishment, lol. Extra notes... - Average cave temperatures are 52 degrees. - No touching the walls due to oils from your hands. - Before entering, you'll wipe the soles of your shoes in a liquid to prevent the spread of disease to the resident bats. - When you complete the tour, you can consider walking the Mountain View Nature Trail for 1/3rd of a mile which starts beside the cave entrance/exit. Though...this nature trail has zero to offer. You're better off getting onto Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive ASAP. Overall, Great Basin NP is host to a variety of natural wonders and ecosystems including ancient bristlecone pine trees, alpine lakes, cascading streams, craggy mountain peaks, a lone standing glacier, adventurous hiking trails and these Lehman Caves. You can include a guided cave tour as part of your journey but in my opinion, you wouldn't be missing anything special if you decide to opt out and simply get started exploring the park on your own terms.

    Photos
    Lehman Caves - Inside the Gothic Palace

    Inside the Gothic Palace

    Lehman Caves - 09-21-2025

    09-21-2025

    Lehman Caves - On the 30 minute Gothic Palace Your, you'll confront stalagmites and stalagtites.

    See all

    On the 30 minute Gothic Palace Your, you'll confront stalagmites and stalagtites.

    Great Basin Visitor Center - visitorcenters - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...