Getting Oriented
Saline Valley sits in eastern Inyo County, between the Inyo Mountains to the west and the Cottonwood Mountains to the east. The valley is the largest enclosed basin in the western US that drains nowhere — water flows in and evaporates rather than reaching an outlet. Big Pine on US-395 is the closest service town, 15 miles west of the northern access on SR-168. Death Valley NP administers the road and the surrounding land.
Trail Overview
The northern access leaves SR-168 at Waucoba Wash, climbs over Waucoba Pass, and drops 6,000 feet into the valley. Mid-route the road passes the Saline Valley warm springs, an undeveloped clothing-optional hot-springs area maintained by volunteers under an agreement with NPS. South of the springs the road climbs back over Hunter Mountain at 7,500 feet through a Joshua Tree forest before descending to State Route 190 west of Stovepipe Wells.
Driving the full 95 miles takes one long day or two days with stops. Most travelers spend a night at the warm springs. The road's corrugations punish soft tires; serious off-road sidewalls and a full-size spare are essential. Two flats over 95 miles in a single trip is normal for this route.
Points of Interest
- Saline Valley warm springs. Three developed natural hot pools volunteer-maintained on NPS land. Clothing-optional.
- Salt tramway. Remnants of an early-1900s aerial tramway used to haul salt out of the valley over the Inyo Mountains.
- Sand dunes. A small dune field at the valley's south end visible from the road.
- Lippincott Mine Road junction. Connects east to the Racetrack Playa, a more technical alternate.
- Hunter Mountain Joshua Tree forest. Dense stand of Joshua Trees at 6,500 feet, atypical for Death Valley NP.
- Cerro Gordo ghost town. Accessed via a separate spur. Privately owned but the road touches Saline Valley Road.
Where to Camp
Dispersed camping is allowed along the road on NPS land subject to Death Valley's roadside-camping rules. The Saline Valley warm springs has informal camping near the pools. There are no developed campgrounds on the route. Big Pine and Lone Pine on US-395 have commercial RV parks. Mesquite Spring Campground inside Death Valley NP is the closest developed campground to the southern terminus.
Tips for a Safe and Enjoyable Trip
- Visit October through May. Summer temperatures top 115°F in the valley floor.
- Carry two spare tires, a plug kit, and a compressor. Sidewall punctures from rocks are common.
- Travel in two or more vehicles. Recovery from a single-vehicle breakdown is days, not hours.
- Carry full fuel and water for two days plus emergency reserve. There are no services.
- Check road status with Death Valley NP before driving. Inyo County closes the road after storms and snowmelt.
- The warm springs are clothing-optional. The community asks visitors to respect the volunteer-maintained infrastructure and pack out everything.
- Cell coverage is absent. Carry a satellite messenger or PLB.
- Park admission required (Death Valley NP entry fee).
- Contact Death Valley National Park at 760-786-3200 for current conditions.