An editorial directory · 2,536 stays cataloged
Find a treehouse, a yurt, a desert dome.
Sleep where the landscape does the talking.
GlampTrail is a hand-organized guide to glamping accommodations across the United States — sourced from open public datasets, written by humans, and arranged the way you'd actually plan a trip.
Browse by stay type
All stay types →Yurts
Round, canvas-walled structures with wood frames and centered skylights.
Safari Tents
Hard-floored canvas tents with real beds — the classic glamping silhouette.
Bubble Domes
Transparent inflatable domes engineered for stargazing under open sky.
Cabins
Insulated wood structures with full plumbing — glamping with a real roof.
Airstreams
Restored aluminum trailers parked in scenic settings, hooked up and ready.
Browse by U.S. region
All regions →Pacific Northwest
Old-growth temperate rainforest, fog-soaked coast, and volcanic peaks.
Rocky Mountains
Alpine lakes, aspen meadows, and granite ridgelines from Colorado to Montana.
Southwest Desert
Red-rock canyons, dark-sky stargazing, and saguaro-studded basin and range.
Southeast
Live-oak hammocks, longleaf pine, barrier islands, and Blue Ridge highlands.
Midwest
Great Lakes shoreline, hardwood forests, and prairie horizons.
Northeast
Adirondacks, Berkshires, White Mountains, and the Maine rocky coast.
Featured stays
Browse all stay types →Yurts · California
Cruickshank Campground
Airstreams · Minnesota
Section 13
Cabins · New Mexico
Dean Cow Camp
Safari Tents · Maine
Long Pond Outlet Tentsite
Cabins · Utah
Willow Lake Fishing/Camping Area
Airstreams · Utah
Ferron Reservoir Campground
Cabins · California
Middle Paradise Valley
Cabins · New Mexico
Crooked Creek Camp
Cabins · New Mexico
Elephant Rock Campground
Cabins · Utah
Kane Hollow Camping Area
Airstreams · Oregon
Hee Hee Illahee RV Resort
Safari Tents · Maine
Long Pond Pines Tentsite
Why we built GlampTrail
Most "glamping near me" searches dump you into ad-cluttered marketplaces that flatten every property into the same rounded card. We think the difference between a yurt at 9,200 ft in Colorado and a bell tent in the Carolina Lowcountry is the entire point. So we organized this directory the way you'd actually plan a trip — by what you want to sleep in, and where you want to wake up.