No airport sits inside Yosemite. The closest major airport is Fresno Yosemite International (FAT) β about 65 miles, an hour and a half drive to the valley. San Francisco (SFO) is three and a half hours on a clear day but has far more flights. This guide covers every airport, the YARTS bus, and what’s changed at the park that affects how you plan the drive in.
Use the buttons below to find the nearest airports, YARTS bus pickup locations, car rental options in Fresno, and hotels in gateway towns outside the park. The map updates to your area automatically.
Drive times shown are to Yosemite Valley (the most visited area). Travel to other park entrances β South Entrance near Wawona, Tioga Pass, or Hetch Hetchy β will vary. Always check NPS road conditions before driving in, particularly for Tioga Road and Glacier Point Road, which close seasonally.
| Airport | To Valley | Drive | Airlines |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresno (FAT) Best Overall | ~65 milesto South Entrance | ~1.5β2 hrs to Valley Β· ~1 hr to South Entrance | Alaska, American, Delta, Southwest, United, Allegiant + more Β· Nonstop from 15+ U.S. cities |
| Merced (MCE) Closest | ~72 milesvia Hwy 140 | ~1.5β2 hrs to Valley Β· Year-round YARTS bus access | Advanced Air only (small regional) Β· LA and Las Vegas connections Β· Very limited schedule |
| Sacramento (SMF) | ~155 miles | ~3 hrs via Big Oak Flat entrance Β· Good Bay Area alternative | Alaska, Delta, Southwest, United + budget carriers Β· Good nonstop options |
| Oakland (OAK) | ~160 miles | ~3β4 hrs Β· Bay Area traffic can add 1β2 hrs on weekends | Southwest focus city Β· Allegiant Β· Alaska Β· Good budget fares Β· International |
| San Francisco (SFO) | ~170 miles | ~3.5β5 hrs Β· Heavy traffic risk on weekends and holidays | 125+ nonstop destinations Β· All major U.S. and international carriers Β· Most flight options |
| San Jose (SJC) | ~185 miles | ~3.5β4 hrs Β· Similar Bay Area traffic risk as SFO | Alaska, American, Delta, Southwest, United Β· Smaller than SFO but less congested |
| Reno-Tahoe (RNO) | ~150 miles | ~3 hrs via Tioga Pass (summer only) Β· 4.5+ hrs in winter via alternate routes | Alaska, American, Delta, Southwest, United Β· Good option if adding Lake Tahoe |
| Mammoth Yosemite (MMH) | ~68 milesvia Tioga Pass (summer only) | ~1 hr to Tuolumne Meadows (summer) Β· 7+ hrs to Valley when Tioga Pass is closed | Advanced Air, United (small regional) Β· Very limited Β· Summer only for Yosemite trips |
The questions below cover every major thing travelers get wrong or get confused about when planning a Yosemite trip from an airport.
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What is the best airport to fly into for Yosemite? Fresno (FAT) for most travelers β 15+ nonstop cities, easiest airport to navigate, closest major airport, no Bay Area traffic Β· SFO if you need international connections or more airline optionsFresno Yosemite International is the sweet spot β not just the closest major airport, but also one of the easiest airports in California to navigate. One terminal, 10 gates, rental car counters right behind baggage claim β you can be in a car and on the road within 30 minutes of landing. That alone saves meaningful time compared to SFO or Oakland, where getting out of the terminal, finding the rental car shuttle, and escaping Bay Area traffic can add hours. Southwest serves Fresno, as do Alaska, American, Delta, United, Allegiant, and several others. The YARTS seasonal Gold Route bus also runs from the Fresno Airport directly into the park in summer, making it the only major airport with direct public transit to Yosemite Valley.
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Is LAX or SFO closer to Yosemite? SFO is closer β 170 miles to Yosemite Valley, roughly 3.5 hours on a clear day Β· LAX is 280+ miles, 4.5β5 hours Β· But neither is close β Fresno (FAT) at 65 miles beats both significantlySFO sits about 170 miles from Yosemite Valley, versus LAX at roughly 280 miles β so SFO is notably closer on paper. In practice, Bay Area traffic on a summer Friday can turn SFO’s 3.5-hour theoretical drive into a 5-hour or longer ordeal. LAX traffic and the length of the drive make it a difficult choice unless that’s where your connecting flight options lead. The honest framing: if your priority is minimizing the ground travel portion of the trip, neither Bay Area nor LA airport competes with Fresno. If you’re flying in from internationally or from a city with no Fresno service, SFO is the better Bay Area choice β easier to navigate and better transit connections than Oakland.
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Is there a bus or shuttle from the airport to Yosemite? Yes β YARTS (Yosemite Area Regional Transportation System) runs from Fresno Airport and Merced directly into Yosemite Valley Β· About $20/person Β· Seasonal (mid-May through early September from FAT) Β· Book at yarts.comYARTS is the only public transit that goes directly into Yosemite National Park. The Highway 41 Gold Route runs from Fresno Airport into Yosemite Valley, with stops in Oakhurst and Wawona along the way. The Highway 140 route runs from Merced, with stops in Mariposa and El Portal. Both routes run seasonally during peak summer months. The YARTS bus uses the employee entrance lane at the park gate, which can shave significant time off entry wait on busy weekends. Round-trip fares run roughly $20 per adult. Once inside the park, Yosemite Valley’s free shuttle system covers all major attractions. In a summer with record parking gridlock, YARTS has become the most stress-free way to experience Yosemite without a car chase for a spot.
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Do I need a reservation to enter Yosemite? No timed-entry reservation required for 2026 β the system was dropped Β· You still need an entrance pass (vehicle fee: $35) Β· Buy it digitally at Recreation.gov before you go to skip the gate line Β· Half Dome and wilderness overnight permits are separate and still requiredYosemite’s timed-entry reservation requirement was eliminated for the entire 2026 season β a significant reversal from the previous two years. This means you can drive up without a time slot booked. However, “no reservation” does not mean “no crowds.” The first major weekend without restrictions saw parking lots full before 8 a.m. and active towing enforcement on roadsides. The practical preparation hasn’t changed: arrive before 7:30 a.m. on peak summer days, use the YARTS bus from a gateway community, or visit midweek. Purchase your entrance pass digitally at Recreation.gov before leaving β digital passes load faster at the gate and shorten the entry line. Text ynptraffic to 333111 the morning of your visit for real-time congestion alerts from the park.
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Does Southwest fly near Yosemite? Southwest serves Fresno (FAT) β daily nonstop flights to Las Vegas and Denver Β· Southwest also serves Oakland (OAK), Sacramento (SMF), and San Jose (SJC) for Bay Area arrivals Β· Southwest does NOT serve Merced or MammothSouthwest’s closest airport to Yosemite is Fresno Yosemite International, making Fresno the best Southwest option if you’re loyal to that airline or have Southwest points to use. Fresno gets nonstop Southwest service from Las Vegas and Denver β two of the most-connected Southwest hubs β which puts it within reasonable reach from a wide range of starting cities via a single connection. If you’re flying Southwest from the East Coast or Midwest with a connection, check whether routing through a Southwest hub to Fresno is competitive in price and total time compared to routing to Oakland or San Jose.
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What is the closest major city to Yosemite National Park? Merced (~70 miles, 1.5 hrs) is the closest city with decent amenities Β· Fresno (~65 miles, 1.5 hrs) is larger with more services Β· Mariposa (~30 miles, 45 min) is the nearest small town with services to the ValleyThe geographic answer is Merced β it sits about 70 miles from Yosemite Valley and is the endpoint of the Highway 140 approach through El Portal. Fresno is about the same distance (65 miles to the South Entrance, longer to the Valley itself) but considerably larger, with more hotel and restaurant options, a full-service international airport, and the Fresno Convention Center. Mariposa, a gold rushβera town about 30 miles from the Valley on Highway 140, is where most visitors stop for their last meal, fuel, and groceries before entering the park. It’s worth getting supplies in Mariposa or Oakhurst rather than at the in-park concessions, which are limited and expensive.
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Is flying into Merced (MCE) a good idea? Technically closest airport Β· But served only by Advanced Air β tiny regional carrier with limited flights from LA and Las Vegas Β· Not recommended unless you have a specific connecting flight that makes the schedule work Β· Hertz and Enterprise car rentals available thereMerced Regional Airport is the geographically closest commercial airport to Yosemite Valley β about 72 miles via Highway 140. But the limited service is a practical barrier for most travelers. Advanced Air (and Contour Airlines starting mid-2026) offer regional routes from Los Angeles and Las Vegas, with small aircraft and infrequent departure times. If your starting city connects cleanly through LA or Las Vegas to Merced and the schedule lines up, it’s worth considering β the shorter drive and straightforward Highway 140 approach to the Arch Rock entrance are genuinely convenient. For most travelers with flexibility, Fresno is a more reliable bet with better schedules, more airlines, and more ground transportation options if something goes wrong.
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Is Mammoth Yosemite Airport (MMH) a practical choice? Only useful in summer when Tioga Pass (Highway 120) is open β typically June through October Β· Gives access to Tuolumne Meadows in ~1 hour Β· To reach Yosemite Valley takes 2.5 hrs in summer, 7+ hrs when Tioga Pass is closed Β· Very limited serviceMammoth Lakes sits on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada. In summer when Tioga Road (Highway 120) is open β typically from late May through October β flying into Mammoth puts you about one hour from Tuolumne Meadows, one of Yosemite’s most spectacular high-country areas and far less crowded than the Valley. If your trip prioritizes hiking in Tuolumne, Mammoth is genuinely attractive. If you want Yosemite Valley β Half Dome views, El Capitan, Yosemite Falls β Mammoth requires a 2.5-hour drive in summer and a circuitous 7-hour drive in winter when the pass is closed. For most visitors, Mammoth’s value is limited to summer-specific high-country itineraries.
Gas, groceries, and restaurant meals inside Yosemite carry a noticeable premium. Mariposa on Highway 140 and Oakhurst on Highway 41 are the last good-sized towns before each entrance. Stock up on food, water, and snacks there rather than at the park’s Curry Village or Yosemite Village stores, where prices reflect the captive audience. Fill your gas tank completely in Mariposa or Oakhurst β there are no gas stations inside Yosemite National Park itself, and the nearest ones once you’re in can be an hour away depending on where you’re staying.
Cell coverage in Yosemite is inconsistent at best and nonexistent in many areas, particularly on roads approaching the Valley from the east and in the high country. Download the Yosemite offline map in Google Maps or Apple Maps before you enter the park. The NPS also has an official Yosemite app with downloadable maps β it shows shuttle stops, trail distances, and current closures without requiring a signal. Downloading it at the airport or your hotel the night before is an easy step that saves real frustration when your GPS drops mid-canyon.
A single Yosemite vehicle entrance costs $35 β or $30 per person if you’re not in a car. The America the Beautiful Annual Pass costs $80 for U.S. residents and covers entrance fees at thousands of federal recreation sites for a full year, including all NPS parks and national forests. If you visit even three national parks in a year, it pays for itself. Senior citizens 62 and older can buy a Lifetime America the Beautiful Senior Pass for $80, or an annual version for $20 β one of the best deals in public recreation. These passes are now available as digital passes through Recreation.gov, which load on your phone and work at the entrance gate without a physical card.
Two of Yosemite’s most spectacular drives close seasonally due to snow. Tioga Road (Highway 120) through the high country is typically closed from November through late May. Glacier Point Road closes similarly and reopened May 9, 2026. If you’re visiting between November and May, plan on entering via Highway 140 (Arch Rock) or Highway 41 (South Entrance), both of which are kept open year-round. Attempting the Tioga Pass route out of season will turn a 2.5-hour drive into a 7-hour detour. Check current road status at nps.gov/yose or call the park’s information line the morning of your drive.
- Step 1: Compare Fresno (FAT) and San Francisco (SFO) on Google Flights before booking. Fresno is closer, easier, and often cheaper β but if your starting city has no good Fresno routing, SFO or Oakland are solid fallbacks.
- Step 2: Buy your entrance pass at Recreation.gov before you land. Digital passes load on your phone and work at the gate β no waiting in the pay booth line, which can add 30 minutes on peak days.
- Step 3: Decide early whether you’re driving or taking YARTS. If it’s a summer weekend and your trip dates are fixed, YARTS from Fresno or Merced genuinely removes the biggest stress point: parking. Book your YARTS seat at yarts.com β seats sell out on peak weekends.
- Step 4: Gas up and buy groceries in the gateway town before entering the park. Mariposa (Highway 140) and Oakhurst (Highway 41) are your best stops. There are no gas stations inside the park.
- Step 5: Download the Yosemite offline map (Google Maps or NPS app) before you lose cell signal. Check park road conditions the morning of your visit at nps.gov/yose or by texting ynptraffic to 333111.
Drive times and distances are approximate and vary based on traffic, road conditions, seasonal closures, and specific destinations within the park. Entrance fees, non-resident surcharges, YARTS fares, and park policies are set by the National Park Service and partner operators β verify current information at nps.gov/yose and recreation.gov before traveling, as these change seasonally. This page has no affiliation with the National Park Service, Fresno Yosemite International Airport, or any transportation operator.