Place

Tusayan Pueblo Site and Self-guiding Trail

Grand Canyon National Park

Aerial view of footpaths on either side of a row of rectangular shaped rooms outlines.
A short walk along the Tusayan Pueblo Trail shows outlines of several rooms and a circular kiva.

NPS Photo/M. Quinn

Quick Facts
Location:
Desert View Drive
Significance:
Archeological Site

Historical/Interpretive Information/Exhibits


2025 Hours: Open Thursday through Monday: 9 am to 5 pm

Tusayan Pueblo is located 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Desert View and is the site of a small Ancestral Pueblo village that was inhabited approximately 800 years ago. This thriving community constructed rooms and kivas, created pottery, arrowheads and other household items which all still hold cultural significance today.

Visitors can walk a relatively flat 0.1 mile (200 m) self-guiding trail around the site, that includes a number of partial walls that outline several rooms and a circular kiva. 

  • Visit the Native American Artisan Market with authentic and beautiful arts and crafts for sale, sponsored by Native Americans for Community Action, Inc. (NACA).
  • Ranger-led tours of the pueblo and not being offered at this time.

Grand Canyon has been home to people for thousands of years. Considered sacred by many, this is a nurturing land, a place of spiritual and physical enrichment. Please respect this place as you would your own home. Disturbing the site or walking off trail destroys valuable information and is also illegal. Please help the National Park Service protect this natural and cultural environment for future generations.

The adjacent Tusayan Museum remains closed. When it reopens, it is possible to view exhibits highlighting the lifestyle of the Ancestral Pueblo. Admission is free. View 2000 - 4000-year-old cultural items, along with traditional handicrafts made by Grand Canyon's tribal communities. Learn about the people who made this place their home, and the tribes that are still here today. 

History


This pueblo is one of more than 6000 archaeological/cultural sites recorded in the park. Dendrochronology (tree ring dating, indicate people began construction of Tusayan Pueblo around 1185 CE. The style of buildings and household and ceremonial items associated with the site are typical of the ancestral Puebloan culture.

The people who lived here and in other sites throughout the Southwest are the ancestors of the modern Hopi and Pueblo communities of eastern Arizona and the Rio Grande Valley in New Mexico. The history of these people and their culture is interpreted through physical objects such as the pueblo itself, and the stories of their descendants which have been passed down from generation to generation.

To learn more about the history of this site, visit the Desert View Welcome Center - when it opens, summer 2025, and/or visit tribal lands and learn from the people who carry the stories of their ancestors who occupied the area physically, and are still here spiritually. 

Tusayan Pueblo, Sept. 2020
Photo Gallery

Tusayan Pueblo, Sept. 2020

20 Images

Tusayan Pueblo is the remains of a small Ancestral Puebloan village located 3 miles (5 km) west of Desert View. This was a thriving community that created pottery, arrowheads and other household artifacts. Check the NPS Mobile App or the parks website for days and times when the site is open.

Last updated: April 7, 2025