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Reservations are required before entering the Havasupai Indian Reservation. Guests can hike down 8 miles to the lodge and tourist office, then 2 more miles to the campground. Open Supai Region and Location Maps on their website Open Havasu Canyon Trail and Supai Village Map on their website.
While the current reservation isn’t as large as their traditional homelands, the Navajo Nation encompasses 27,000 square miles to the east of Grand Canyon National Park including parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.
The Havasupai Indian Reservation is a Native American reservation for the Havasupai people, bordering Grand Canyon National Park, in Coconino County in Arizona, United States. It is considered one of America's most remote Indian reservations.
Check-in for ALL permit reservations (campground and lodge) takes place at Grand Canyon Caverns Inn, located at Mile Marker 115, Route 66 near Seligman, Arizona 86434. The trip leader MUST check-in for all members of their group.
The map on the left shows approximate locations of the traditional homelands of the 11 tribes that have cultural connections to Grand Canyon. The map on the right show current tribal reservations as well as the boundary of Grand Canyon National Park. NPS, Adapted from Stephanie Smith, 2020.
The Hualapai Reservation consists of nearly one million acres in a portion of the Grand Canyon about 50 miles west of the Grand Canyon Village. The Reservation is bounded on the north by a 108-mile stretch of the Colorado River the Hualapai call Hakataya, or “the backbone of the river.”
The 2.5 million acre reservation did not encompass much of their traditional land, important ceremonial shrines, or their village of Moencopi. From 1868 to 1934, as the Navajo Reservation grew from 3.5 million to 16 million acres, it encircled and diminished the Hopi Reservation.