How to actually get a campsite at Olympic National Park
Facts checked July 2026 · release windows change — the campground pages carry the live status
There are two separate games for a campsite at Olympic National Park: the release game — booking the moment dates go on sale — and the cancellation game. Most people only play the first one, and for peak dates it has the worst odds. If the release already sold out on you, you haven't lost. You've just moved to game two.
Game one: the release
Olympic's reservable campgrounds sell through recreation.gov on the standard rolling window — six months ahead, released at 10:00 am Eastern (7:00 am Pacific).
Kalaloch is the prize: bluff-top sites directly above a wild Pacific beach, with summer dates effectively gone the day their window opens. Sol Duc pairs old-growth forest with the hot springs, which keeps it full all season. Olympic's saving grace is its size — the park holds many more campgrounds than the two everyone fights over, a real advantage when you're flexible.
The campgrounds, briefly
- Kalaloch — Bluff-top sites directly above a wild Pacific beach on Olympic's coast — some look straight over the ocean.
- Sol Duc — In the old-growth Sol Duc valley beside the hot springs resort, with the pools and Sol Duc Falls a walk away.
Game two: the cancellation
Here is the part the booking page doesn't tell you: a sold-out campground leaks sites back all season. On release day, people don't book the trip they'll take — they book every weekend they might take, because holding a site is cheap and getting one later feels impossible. Then real life arrives, and the extra weekends get trimmed.
The trims aren't random. They cluster in the last couple of weeks before an arrival date, as people on the fence finally bail, and they show up at odd hours — late evening is when “we're not actually going” becomes a click. Weeknights come back far more often than Saturdays, so if you can shape your trip around a Sunday–Thursday window, your odds jump.
The watch-for-drops play
The catch is speed. A dropped peak-season site can be re-booked within minutes, because plenty of people — and plenty of software — are watching continuously. Checking the grid at lunch means the site that opened at 9:40 pm and vanished at 9:52 pm never existed as far as you're concerned.
By hand, the playbook is: check your exact dates (not the whole month grid) late at night, check daily starting about two weeks out, prefer weeknights, and have a fallback picked. That playbook genuinely works — it's how people got these sites for years. It's also a part-time job, and the moment you stop checking is always the moment a site opens.
The alternative is to let something else do the vigilance. A scout that checks your exact campground and dates continuously, around the clock, and emails you the moment a site opens — with the booking link, so you're clicking within a minute of the cancellation — wins this game for the least clever reason imaginable: it never blinks.
That's what Calafia does. Tell it the campground and dates in plain English — “email me if a site opens at Kalaloch for my dates” — and it starts checking, stays silent until something actually changes, and tells you honestly on the days it couldn't check. Watching one thing is free.
If you strike out
Much of Olympic's camping is first-come, first-served or seasonal, and Olympic National Forest wraps the park with more options — check the park's current camping page for the live list by season. If the coast is the goal, midweek dates at Kalaloch are far more catchable than summer Saturdays.
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FAQ
When do Olympic campsite reservations open?
Olympic's reservable campgrounds sell through recreation.gov on the standard rolling window — six months ahead, released at 10:00 am Eastern (7:00 am Pacific).
Is it possible to get a Kalaloch campsite after they sell out?
Yes. Cancellations flow back all season as reservation-holders trim trips — most often in the last couple of weeks before an arrival date. The catch is speed: popular openings are usually re-booked within minutes, so you either check constantly or have something check for you.
What time do recreation.gov campsites release?
Most recreation.gov campgrounds release sites on a six-month rolling window at 10:00 am Eastern (7:00 am Pacific) — some parks run exceptions, so check your campground's recreation.gov page for its exact window.
Does Olympic have first-come, first-served camping?
Yes — a meaningful share of Olympic's campgrounds run first-come or seasonal, and the list changes with the weather; check the park's current camping page on nps.gov for what's open before you drive.