Warm Spring
101 mi from Las Vegas · ~2.9 hr drive
Warm Spring is a warm spring catalogued in California by the U.S. Geological Survey's Geographic Names Information System — about 101 miles from Las Vegas, NV, inside Death Valley National Park. Coordinates and the closest documented metro are listed below; for current access and soaking rules, check with the relevant land manager before visiting.
Safety & access
This feature is inside Death Valley National Park and is federally protected. Stay on designated boardwalks and trails — leaving them damages fragile thermal-features and is illegal. Soaking is prohibited in most NPS thermal areas.
Before you go: check current conditions and access rules with the relevant land manager — National Park Service unit, U.S. Forest Service ranger district, Bureau of Land Management field office, state-park department, or the property owner if it's private. Wild thermal water can be unsafe to enter without a thermometer; surface temperatures can vary dramatically from the deeper pool. When in doubt, don't soak.
- State
- California
- Nearest city
- Las Vegas, NV · 101 mi · ~2.9 hr drive
- Type
- Warm spring
- Coordinates
- 35.9667°, -116.9320°
- Park
- Death Valley National Park (NP)
- County
- Inyo
- GNIS ID
- 251177
About Death Valley National Park
Warm Spring is inside Death Valley National Park, a U.S. National Park managed by the National Park Service. Conditions, road status, trail closures, boardwalk routing, and reservation requirements are published directly on the park's NPS page — check it before driving in, especially in winter.
Entrance fee: $30 per vehicle. Per vehicle, valid 7 days. An America the Beautiful annual pass ($80) covers entrance to all NPS units and is worth it after ~3 park visits per year.
Park homepage: https://www.nps.gov/deva/
Visiting Warm Spring
The exact location is at 35.9667°, -116.9320° — open in Google Maps for driving directions from your location.
If you've visited Warm Spring and have current notes (parking, access, soaking rules, fees, ownership), tell us at /contact — we update pages as we learn more.
Sources
Location data for Warm Spring comes from the U.S. Geological Survey's Geographic Names Information System (public domain), feature class "Spring". We filter the GNIS Spring catalog to thermal features by name pattern (hot spring, warm spring, geyser, boiling spring, thermal). The GNIS records the geographic feature itself; access rules, ownership, and current conditions come from the relevant land manager. To suggest corrections, see our methodology page or contact us.