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8-Day Yellowstone National Park, Grand Canyon, Antelope Canyon Tour from LA/Vegas | 5-Star Vegas Hotel | Small Group Option

 

Our Price:

Single occupancy $1799/Person Double occupancy $1199/Person
Triple occupancy $1099/Person Quadruple occupancy $999/Person
Available: Mon (2025/4/21-2025/10/13) Depart from: Las Vegas, NV; Los Angeles, CA; El Monte, CA
Visit Antelope Canyon, Bryce Canyon National Park, Grand Canyon, Grand Teton National Park, Yellowstone.

Day 1: Los Angeles - Las Vegas (270 miles)

Today, you'll journey through the stunning Mojave Desert, capturing photos of iconic Joshua trees en route to Las Vegas. We will make a stop at Seven Magic Mountains to marvel at the colorful, stacked boulder sculptures. You'll arrive at the prestigious Resorts World Las Vegas for an evening of entertainment.

Las Vegas is known as the "Entertainment Capital of the World" for a good reason-- casinos and hotels line its streets, and visitors can gamble, see shows, and shop at virtually any hour of the day or night.

  • A large-scale land art sculpture designed by Ugo Rondinone (born 1964), a New York-based, Swiss-born mixed-media artis. The seven fluorescently-painted totems of large, car-size stones stacked 32 feet high.

  • See the Sphere's amazing lights, enjoy Bellagio's famous water show, tour inside fancy Caesars Palace, and explore old town Las Vegas. Experience the best of Vegas, from new wonders to classic spots, inside and out!

    Tour Fee (Optional): Adult $50; Child $50|Duration: 2-3 Hours

Dulexe Hotel: Resorts World Las Vegas (Hilton group) or similar

Meal: Excluded

Day 2: Las Vegas - Grand Canyon East Rim - South Rim - Horseshoe Bend - Page (379 miles)

Experience the Grand Canyon's East and South Rims at a comfortable pace. For an unforgettable perspective, you'll have a chance to see the Grand Canyon by helicopter. You'll visit Horseshoe Bend for a perfect photo, capturing the breathtaking beauty of this iconic landmark.

Considered one of the seven natural wonders of the world, the Grand Canyon was carved over 17 million years by the Colorado River. This breathtaking, 18-mile-long canyon has been stunning visitors for hundreds of years.

  • Desert View Drive is a scenic route to the east of Grand Canyon Village on the South Rim which follows the rim for 25 miles out to the Desert View Watchtower and East Entrance. Meanwhile, the Watchtower also commands a magnificent view of the Grand Canyon.

  • More than five million people every year visit the South Rim of the great Grand Canyon. The South Rim offers a wealth of activities, including driving and walking tours and campgrounds. The South Rim area includes hotels and other amenities.

  • Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets, currently being shown on an impressive IMAX screen in a theater located on the South Rim of the canyon, focuses not on the geology of the canyon, but on the history of human involvement.

    Admission (Optional): Adult $33; Child $33; (Include Lunch)

  • This helicopter tour is the best way to catch a panoramic view of the majestic South Rim of the Grand Canyon, viewing the massive canyon walls glimmer and reflect in the sun.

    Tour Fee (Optional): Adult $299; Child $299

Page is a city in Coconino County, AZ, near the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell. Page was founded in 1957 as a housing community for workers and their families during the construction of nearby Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River.

  • Horseshoe Bend, located within the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area about 5 miles downriver from Lake Powell, is a sharp turn in the Colorado River that formed from erosion over the course of millions of years.

Standard Hotel: Best Western Plus or similar

Meal: Excluded

Day 3: Antelope Canyon - Glen Canyon Dam - Lake Powell - Bryce Canyon - Salt Lake City (431 miles)

Embark on a journey to explore the famous natural wonder in the American West - Antelope Canyon. Next, travel through the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell before reaching the magnificent Bryce Canyon National Park.The final stop of the day will be the crossroads of America - Salt Lake City. You will stay overnight in Salt Lake City, preparing for the adventures that lie ahead on your journey.

Antelope Canyon is a beautiful slot canyon located on the Navajo Nation near Page, Arizona. All areas of the Antelope Canyon are only accessible via Guided Tour at an additional cost.

  • The lower canyon is in the shape of a "V" and Longer, shallower than the Upper Antelope. Lighting is better in the early hours and late morning. It draws a considerable number of photographers.

    Those who do not participate this tour will be picked up from hotel after Antelope tour ends.

    Admission (Optional): Adult $98; Child (3-12 yrs) $98; Infant (Under 3 yrs) $20; Suggested tips to Navajo Guide: $5/person.

Page is a city in Coconino County, AZ, near the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell. Page was founded in 1957 as a housing community for workers and their families during the construction of nearby Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River.

  • This concrete arch dam in northern Arizona barricades the Colorado River and creates Lake Powell, the second-largest man-made lake in the country. Lake Powell is a haven for water-skiers and boaters, and is also popular with fishermen.

  • Lake Powell is a beautiful reservoir along the Colorado River amid the vast desert expanses of Utah. It is in the vicinity of the Rainbow Bridge, Ticaboo Canyon, and iconic Antelope Canyon.

Bryce Canyon National Park is named for just one of many canyons which form a series of horseshoe-shaped amphitheaters on the edge of the Paunsaugunt Plateau in southern Utah.

Utah's gorgeous capital city sits amidst the mountains of the American Southwest on the shores of the breathtaking Great Salt Lake. The city is steeped in history and architecture in addition to wondrous vistas and scenery.

Standard Hotel: Radisson Hotel or similar

Breakfast: Included|Lunch: Excluded|Dinner: Excluded

Day 4: Salt Lake City - Jackson Hole - Grand Teton - Yellowstone (571 miles)

You'll head to Jackson, Wyoming, to see the famous Elk Antler Arches. You'll drive along Snake River to Grand Teton National Park for stunning mountain views. You'll enter Yellowstone's South Entrance, exploring the Lower Loop's highlights: West Thumb Geyser, Yellowstone Lake, Old Faithful, Geyser Trail, and Morning Glory Pool. You'll overnight near West Yellowstone.

Famous frontier town, located at the crossing of Grand Teton and Rocky Mountains, it became a heaven for outdoors sports enthusiast. The widely praised Elk Antler Arches Park, with its four arches made with thousands of elk antlers is a must see.

  • Constructed in the early 1960s, the Antler Arches stand at each of the four corners of Jackson's town square. As the name suggests, they were built from the shed antlers of deer, which were intertwined into their current shape.

Grand Teton National Park is located in the Rocky Mountains, Northwest Wyoming. Grand Teton National Park is noted for its stunning mountain vistas, its shimmering alpine lakes and its abundant wildlife.

The largest, oldest, and most famous national park displays a fascinating scenery of hot springs, geysers, canyons, waterfalls, and nature everywhere you look!

  • The West Thumb Geyser Basin is the largest geyser basin at Yellowstone Lake, and an impressive area of geothermal activity that contains hot springs, mud pots, and geysers-- some of which are even in the lake itself.

  • Yellowstone Lake isn't just the largest single body of water in Yellowstone National Park, but the largest elevated freshwater lake in the US. The lake contains several underwater hot springs that melt its otherwise thick ice sheets in the winter.

  • Old Faithful is a cone geyser in the Upper Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park. It is one of the park's most well-known natural features, and is famous for its predictability. It generally erupts every 91 minutes.

  • This hot spring in the Upper geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming is famous for it's bright red-orange and blue-green coloring. These colors come from the bacteria which inhabit the geyser's interior.

    Duration: Approx. 20 Minutes

Standard Hotel: Dude & Roundup (West Yellowstone) or similar

Breakfast: Included|Lunch: Excluded|Dinner: Excluded

Day 5: Yellowstone National Park (241 miles)

Spend a full day exploring the magnificent Yellowstone National Park. You will have the opportunity to visit the core attractions of this world's oldest national park. Along the way, you will witness a variety of geothermal phenomena and abundant wildlife. This day offers a fantastic chance to connect intimately with nature and experience the vitality of our planet, creating unforgettable memories that will last a lifetime.

The largest, oldest, and most famous national park displays a fascinating scenery of hot springs, geysers, canyons, waterfalls, and nature everywhere you look!

  • Yellowstone National Park is full of areas like this - geyser basins - large, open areas where geothermic pressure from below the ground's surface force up various geysers and springs. The Norris Basin is one of the more accessible.

  • Fountain Paint Pot, heated by the region's underground hot springs, F.P.P is half hot spring, half mud basin. The spring releases natural shades of red and yellow because of the oxidation of iron in the soil.

  • The third largest hot spring in the world, the Grand Prismatic Hot Spring gets its color from bacteria around its rim that feed off of the mineral-rich water. In the summer months, the hot spring is a vivid red-orange shade.

  • This impressive gap in the earth in the first large canyon on the Yellowstone River. It is 24 miles long, and can reach a quarter-mile in depth and 3/4 a mile in width. It is gorgeously colored.

  • Located a quarter-mile upstream of the larger Lower Falls, the Upper Yellowstone River Falls plunge 109 feet down an eroded lava cliff into the basin below. The area below the falls has been subject to heavier erosion than above.

  • The Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River in Wyoming are the largest by volume in the Rocky Mountains of the western United States, and they stand more than 300 feet tall-- almost twice as high as Niagara Falls.

  • Named after the famous sketches of the waterfalls by Thomas Moran (but not actually the location where the sketched were done) this beautiful location showcases one of the most famous views in Yellowstone National Park.

  • The Mud Volcano blew itself apart in the early 20th century, but visitors can still see the impressive crater and other geothermal features in the surrounding area, such as the Mud Cauldron, Black Dragon's Caldron, and Dragon's Mouth Spring.

  • A large, sub-alpine valley in Yellowstone National Park straddling the Yellowstone River between Yellowstone Falls and Yellowstone Lake. The valley is well known as one of the best locations to view wildlife in Yellowstone.

  • Located near the mouth of the Yellowstone River, the Fishing Bridge is a great location to spot the native Cutthroat trout. There is an RV park of the same name nearby.

  • This waterfall in Yellowstone National Park gets its name from the rock spires that sit at the top of the 132 foot drop along the Tower Creek in the northwestern region.

Standard Hotel: Yellowstone Big Rock (Gardinner) or similar

Meal: Excluded

Day 6: Yellowstone - Salt Lake City (369 miles)

You'll start from North Yellowstone and head back into Yellowstone National Park. You'll explore the remaining spots of the Figure 8 loop, including the terraced Mammoth Hot Springs, the cone-shaped Liberty Cap, and the historic Roosevelt Arch. After taking in these final Yellowstone wonders, you'll say goodbye to the park and hit the road towards Salt Lake City.

The largest, oldest, and most famous national park displays a fascinating scenery of hot springs, geysers, canyons, waterfalls, and nature everywhere you look!

  • This large complex of hot springs is impressive both for its unique beauty as well as its scale. Formed hundreds of thousands of years ago by volcanic and seismic activity, these springs are one of Yellowstone's most popular spots.

  • A rusticated triumphal arch at the north entrance to Yellowstone National Park. The top of the arch is inscribed with a quote from the Organic Act of 1872, the legislation which created Yellowstone, which reads: "For the Benefit and Enjoyment of the People".

  • Liberty Cap, a prominent hot spring cone in Yellowstone National Park, stands as a testament to geothermal activity, named for its resemblance to a Revolutionary War cap, located near Mammoth Hot Springs.

Standard Hotel: Park Inn Radisson

Meal: Excluded

Day 7: Salt Lake City - Las Vegas (420 miles)

You'll enjoy a quick tour of Salt Lake City, seeing highlights like the Utah State Capitol, historic Temple Square, and the vast Great Salt Lake. Then, you'll hit the road, leaving Salt Lake City behind as you head to the bright lights of Las Vegas.

Utah's gorgeous capital city sits amidst the mountains of the American Southwest on the shores of the breathtaking Great Salt Lake. The city is steeped in history and architecture in addition to wondrous vistas and scenery.

  • The home of all of the governmental processes for the state of Utah, the Utah State Capitol in Salt Lake City. The building is done in the ornate neoclassical revival style, purposefully reminiscent of the nation capitol in DC.

  • This 250,000-square-foot temple is the largest of the temples belonging to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known colloquially as the Mormons. The public cannot tour the interior, but the facade is a sight to behold.

  • The largest saltwater lake in the Western Hemisphere is the famous Great Salt Lake in northern Utah. People visit the lake's namesake, Salt Lake City, every year to see the natural wonder and tour its shores.

Dulexe Hotel: Resorts World Las Vegas (Hilton group) or similar

Breakfast: Included|Lunch: Excluded|Dinner: Excluded

Day 8: Las Vegas - Los Angeles (270 miles)

Before departing Las Vegas, embark on a brief highlights tour exploring multiple city landmarks such as AREA15, Luxor, and M&M's World. Enjoy lunch at The Venetian, experiencing a taste of Venice in the desert. En route to Los Angeles, take a break at Outlets at Barstow for some shopping at various designer and brand-name stores before continuing your journey to the City of Angels.

Las Vegas is known as the "Entertainment Capital of the World" for a good reason-- casinos and hotels line its streets, and visitors can gamble, see shows, and shop at virtually any hour of the day or night.

  • Start at AREA15 and Luxor for photos, then hit M&M's and Coca-Cola stores. Enjoy lunch and free time at The Venetian. En route to LA, stop at Seven Magic Mountains and Barstow Outlets.

    Tour Fee (Optional): Adult $50; Child (Under 12 yrs, must be accompanied by an adult or guardian (14 years old or older)) $50|Duration: Approx. 3 Hours

  • Welcome to Coca-Cola Store Las Vegas! Make Coca-Cola Store part of your Las Vegas adventure! Experience the world's most iconic beverage brand in an immersive retail destination including exclusive Coca Cola branded merchandise, unique and entertaining experiences and true refreshment that inspires the senses.

  • Experience Venice in Las Vegas at The Venetian. Explore the Grand Canal Shoppes, glide on a gondola ride through recreated canals, and marvel at stunning Italian-inspired architecture. Immerse yourself in luxury, romance, and Old World charm on the Strip.

Meal: Excluded

 

Departure and Return Details


Price Includes:

Price Excludes:

Destination Adult Child Infant
Antelope Canyon
Lower Antelope Canyon (Optional)
Suggested tips to Navajo Guide: $5/person.
$98 $98 (3-12 yrs) $20 (0-3 yrs)
Grand Canyon
Grand Canyon IMAX (Optional)
(Include Lunch)
$33 $33 /
South Rim Helicopter Tour (Optional) $299 $299 /
Las Vegas, NV
Las Vegas Highlights Tour (Optional) $50 $50 (0-12 yrs, must be accompanied by an adult or guardian (14 years old or older)) /
Las Vegas Night Tour (Optional) $50 $50 /