Burro Creek Campground  campground
KINGMAN, Arizona

Burro Creek Campground

Mixed (reservable + first-come)
25 campsites
Open in maps

25

Total Campsites

Campground

11

Reservable Sites

Mixed (reservable + first-come)

1

Accessible

ADA-compliant sites

Organization

Managing agency

Overview

About Burro Creek Campground

Overview The Burro Creek Campground (1,960’ elevation) is situated along the 57 mile Burro Creek in a transition zone between the upper reaches of the scenic Sonoran Desert and lower reaches of the scenic Mojave Desert. The campground offers visitors a variety of scenery including saguaro-studded cliffs along steep canyon walls that contrast Burro Creek’s dense vegetation and flowing waters that form deep pools of water just adjacent to the campground. Recreation To enhance the visitor experience, the campground features a Watchable Wildlife Exhibit and an Interpretive Desert Garden as well as access to Burro Creek via hiking trails from the campground. The creek offers opportunities for rockhounding, wading, and wildlife viewing especially for birding with a wide-array of raptors and other species of birds. Sites 7, 8, and 9 are best for bird watching. Facilities To enhance the visitor experience, the campground features a Watchable Wildlife Exhibit and an Interpretive Desert Garden as well as access to Burro Creek via hiking trails from the campground. The creek offers opportunities for rockhounding, wading, and wildlife viewing especially for birding with a wide-array of raptors and other species of birds. Sites 7, 8, and 9 are best for bird watching. Natural Features The campground scenery features an adjacent canyon carved by the flow of Burro Creek with other mountains and mesas visible in the background as well as a diverse Sonoran desert plant community including saguaros, a variety of cholla and barrel cacti, creosote bushes, Palo Verde trees, and catclaw. Nearby, on the banks of Burro Creek, visitors will also see willow and cottonwood trees as well as a wide-variety of riparian shrubs. Wildlife is frequent in the campground and include occasional sightings of desert bighorn sheep on the cliffs above Burro Creek and a variety of birds including cactus wren, Gambel’s quail, Gila woodpecker, great horned owl, great blue heron, Vermilion flycatcher, and cliff swallow to name a few. Javelina, raccoons, coyotes, and foxes have been known to use the area as the creek serves an important role in the harsh desert environment. Nearby Attractions The public lands surrounding the Burro Creek Campground are readily available for visitors interested in sightseeing via use of a four-wheel drive vehicle along county-maintained dirt roads. These roads wind through a variety of interesting geologic scenery combined with unique vegetative communities including Sonoran and Mojave deserts intermingled with areas of interior chaparral and pinyon-juniper woodlands. County roads are maintained regularly, but it is always a good idea to check with the local BLM office prior to planning your trip as well as exercising caution when travelling on any of these unimproved dirt roads as visitors travel at their own risk. The area, while desolate during the warm summer months, gives way to cooler temperatures from October through April annually and provides exceptional opportunities for hunting, off-highway vehicle use, wildlife watching, photography, sightseeing, and a variety of other dispersed recreational opportunities. Depending upon winter and spring precipitation, the area surrounding the Burro Creek Campground provides visitors with excellent spring wildflower displays March through May. Charges & Cancellations Recreation.gov Reservation Cancellations & Changes Cancelling a Reservation: Customers may cancel their reservation prior to arrival both on-line and through the call center. A $10 service fee will be withheld from any refund for a cancellation. Depending on when you cancel in relation to your arrival day, it may be considered a late cancellation (see below). Recreation.gov Late Cancellations or Cancellations within the Cut-off Window Individual Campsites: A customer who cancels a reservation the day before or on the day of arrival will pay a $10.00 service fee AND forfeit the first night's use fee (not to exceed the total paid for the original reservation). Cancellations for a one-night reservation will forfeit the entire amount paid and will not be subject to an additional service fee. Group Facility (including Cabins and Lookouts): Customers who cancel a group overnight facility reservation less than 14 days before the arrival date will pay a $10.00 service fee AND forfeit the first night's use fee. Recreation.gov No-Shows -Overnight and Day-Use Facilities: A no-show customer is one who does not arrive at a campground and does not cancel the reservation by check-out time on the day after the scheduled arrival date (or for day-use facilities, by check-in time the day of arrival). Staff will hold a campsite until check-out time on the day following the arrival date and will hold group day-use facilities until check-in time on the arrival date. -No-shows are assessed $20.00 service fee and forfeit the first night’s recreation fee.

  • 25 total campsites listed.
  • 11 reservable sites plus first-come options.
  • 1 accessible campsite listed.
  • Most common site type: standard nonelectric (23).
  • Map coordinates are available for trip planning.
Burro Creek Campground  photo 2
Burro Creek Campground  photo 3

Our Take

What makes Burro Creek Campground special

Burro Creek Campground occupies a remarkable ecological transition zone where the Sonoran Desert meets the Mojave in western Arizona, about 60 miles southeast of Kingman. At just 1,960 feet elevation, the campground sits along Burro Creek, a 57-mile desert waterway that sustains surprising pockets of green in an otherwise arid landscape. Saguaro cacti stud the steep canyon walls while dense riparian vegetation lines the creek below, creating deep pools perfect for cooling off on hot desert days. The 25 sites include both standard and group options, managed by the Bureau of Land Management. Desert wildlife is abundant — javelina, mule deer, Gila monsters, and a spectacular array of desert birds are regularly spotted. Spring wildflower blooms can be extraordinary in good rain years. Winter is the prime camping season when daytime temperatures are mild and comfortable, though nights drop sharply. Summer is brutally hot and best avoided. The campground provides vault toilets, drinking water, and a dump station. Rockhounding in the surrounding desert turns up agates and jasper. For travelers on US-93, Burro Creek makes a far more memorable overnight than any highway pulloff.

Campsite Inventory

25 sites to choose from

STANDARD NONELECTRIC

23total sites

10

Reservable

1

Accessible

GROUP STANDARD NONELECTRIC

1total sites

1

Reservable

0

Accessible

MANAGEMENT

1total sites

0

Reservable

0

Accessible

Amenities & Details

Everything you need to know

ACCESSIBLE CAMPSITES

Accessible Campsites

ACCESSIBLE FLUSH TOILETS

Accessible Flush Toilets

ACCESSIBLE GRILLS

Accessible Grills

ACCESSIBLE PARKING

Accessible Parking

ACCESSIBLE PICNIC AREA

Accessible Picnic Area

ACCESSIBLE WALKWAYS

Accessible Walkways

CREEK ACCESS

Creek Access

Site capacity

Double, Single

Check-in time

02:30 PM, 2:30 PM

Check-out time

2:00 PM

Driveway entry

Back-in, Parallel, Pull-through

Driveway Grade

Moderate, Slight

Driveway length (ft)

120, 20, 28, 34

Driveway surface

Gravel, Paved

Fire Pit

Fire Pit

Max Num of Horses

4

Max guests

12, 5

Max vehicle length (ft)

120, 20, 28, 34

Reservations & Contact

Plan your stay

Mixed (reservable + first-come)

Phone

(928)718-3700

Email

blm_az_kfoweb@blm.gov

Getting There

The Burro Creek Recreation Site is located 60 miles northwest of Wickenburg on Highway 93.   From Kingman, AZ: Travel east 17 miles on Interstate 40, then south 53 miles on Highway 93. The recreation site turnoff is one mile south of Burro Creek Bridge. From the signed turnoff, continue 1.5 miles to the recreation site via the paved access road. From Phoenix, AZ: Travel north on the U.S. 60 towards Wickenburg. At the first roundabout in Wickenburg veer right onto Highway 93 and proceed north towards Kingman for 59 miles until reaching the signed turnoff for the Burro Creek Campground, continue 1.5 miles to the recreation site via the paved access road.

FAQ

Common questions

Everything you need to know before your trip to Burro Creek Campground .

How do reservations work for Burro Creek Campground ?

Reservation availability for Burro Creek Campground can vary by season and campsite type. Check the contact and access section before booking.

What campsite types are available at Burro Creek Campground ?

Burro Creek Campground currently lists STANDARD NONELECTRIC (23), GROUP STANDARD NONELECTRIC (1), MANAGEMENT (1).

Where is Burro Creek Campground located?

Burro Creek Campground is in Arizona near KINGMAN. Coordinates: 34.5361, -113.4519.

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