California · USA

Carrizo Badlands Loop

Alien badlands maze in California's forgotten desert

Moderate

The first time you drop into the Carrizo Badlands, your GPS will throw a fit and your brain will follow. This 45-mile loop through California’s most alien landscape cuts through a maze of slot canyons, fossil beds, and mining ruins that looks more like Mars than Southern California. The soft sand grabs your tires immediately, announcing that this isn’t your typical desert drive—it’s a proper backcountry commitment that demands high-clearance 4WD and the skills to use it.

Starting and ending near Ocotillo, this moderate-rated trail earns every bit of its reputation through relentless sand washes, tight canyon squeezes, and 1,800 feet of elevation gain that’ll test your rig’s cooling system and your patience. The BLM-managed badlands hide centuries of history in their twisted geology—fossilized oyster beds from ancient seas, remnants of the Yuha Desert mining claims, and slot canyons carved by flash floods that still reshape this place every winter. You’ll need to air down early and often, carry recovery gear, and pack two to three days of water since there’s zero cell service and the nearest fuel is back in civilization. The best window runs October through April when temperatures drop below the surface-of-the-sun readings that make summer travel a death wish.

This isn’t a trail for weekend warriors or stock rigs pretending to be capable. The sand is deep, the navigation is complex, and breakdowns happen in places where a tow truck has never been and never will be. But drivers who respect the desert and come prepared will find dispersed camping spots that feel like the edge of the world, night skies unmarked by light pollution, and the rare satisfaction of completing a genuine backcountry loop that most overlanders never even hear about. You’ll leave the Carrizo Badlands with sand in places you didn’t know existed and stories worth telling around every campfire for the next decade.

Q: What vehicle do I need for the Carrizo Badlands Loop?

You need high-clearance 4WD with good approach and departure angles—the soft sand and steep canyon entries will high-center anything less capable.

Q: How long does the Carrizo Badlands Loop take?

Plan for 2-3 days to complete the 45-mile loop, including time for navigation, recovery, and camping.

Q: When is the best time to run this trail?

October through April offers the only survivable temperatures—summer heat in this desert will kill you and your rig.

Q: Is there cell service on the trail?

No cell service exists anywhere on the loop—bring satellite communication or travel with other vehicles.

Q: Can I camp along the Carrizo Badlands Loop?

Yes, dispersed camping is allowed on BLM land throughout the badlands with incredible solitude and night skies.

Have a dirty day.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, , ,
Length (miles)45 mi / 72.4 km
Duration2-3 days
Max elevation (ft)1400 ft
Best seasonOctober-April
Minimum vehicleHigh-clearance 4WD
Nearest townOcotillo, CA
Land managerBLM
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsNo
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Difficulty
Official: Moderate

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