There is a reason the Blue Ridge Parkway has been called “America’s Favorite Drive” for decades. But even people who know the Parkway — who have driven the 469 miles of ridgeline highway connecting Shenandoah National Park in Virginia to Great Smoky Mountains National Park in North Carolina — are often surprised to learn that they have been visiting at the wrong time of year.
June is the peak. The rhododendron are blooming right now, covering the mountain slopes in waves of purple-pink blossom. The crowds are smaller than in October. The road is free. And the views, at 6,000 feet along the spine of the Appalachians, are as good as American scenery gets.
America’s Favorite Drive
The Blue Ridge Parkway was built between 1935 and 1987 as a Depression-era infrastructure project and a scenic alternative to driving the back roads of Appalachia. It has no commercial vehicles, no billboards, no traffic signals and no tolls. The posted speed limit is 45 mph. It was designed to be driven slowly, with the landscape as the destination rather than a backdrop.
The Parkway draws approximately 14 million visitors annually, making it the most-visited unit in the entire National Park System by some measures — more than Yellowstone, more than the Grand Canyon. Most of those visitors come in October for the fall foliage. The ones who come in June often keep the secret to themselves.
The Rhododendron Window

Right now, the Catawba Rhododendron is at or near peak bloom along the high-elevation sections of the Parkway in North Carolina. Craggy Gardens, at Milepost 364 near Asheville, is the single most spectacular concentration of blooms on the entire route — a dense, shoulder-to-shoulder carpet of color covering the summit heath bald. As the historic overlook notes, “purple-pink blossoms peak in early to mid June and attract visitors from around the world.”
The trail from the Craggy Gardens Visitor Center to the summit takes about 20 minutes and delivers 360-degree mountain views surrounded by blooms. It is one of the most photographed spots in the eastern United States during this window.
The bloom progression works with elevation. Lower mileposts in Virginia are typically at peak slightly earlier in June; higher North Carolina sections follow later. Roan Mountain, accessible from Carver’s Gap near the Tennessee border, is another spectacular destination with its famous rhododendron gardens and Appalachian Trail access, typically peaking mid-June.
Best Stops Right Now
Peaks of Otter (Milepost 86, Virginia): Early June blooms at a lower elevation, combined with Sharp Top Mountain hike and a lodge that has operated since the 1930s.
Mabry Mill (Milepost 176, Virginia): The most-photographed structure on the Parkway — a working grist mill and blacksmith shop beside a lily pond — is at its greenest in early summer.
Craggy Gardens (Milepost 364, North Carolina): The rhododendron peak destination. Arrive early on weekends to secure parking at the visitor center.
Grandfather Mountain (Milepost 305, North Carolina): A natural landmark with a famous mile-high suspension bridge, wildlife habitats, and one of the best rhododendron viewing spots on the Parkway. The annual Remarkable Rhododendron Ramble typically runs through the first week of June.
Planning the Drive
The Blue Ridge Parkway runs from Milepost 0 near Waynesboro, Virginia, to Milepost 469 at the entrance to Great Smoky Mountains National Park near Cherokee, North Carolina. Most summer visitors drive sections rather than the whole route.
Asheville, North Carolina, is the natural base for a June Parkway visit: well-served by a regional airport, stocked with excellent hotels and one of the best food-and-craft-beer scenes in the Southeast. The city sits right at the bend in the Parkway and provides easy access to the most dramatic views and best rhododendron walks.
The window is real and it’s narrow. By late July, the Catawba Rhododendron is largely finished; the October crowds haven’t yet arrived. June on the Blue Ridge Parkway is one of the best-kept secrets in American road travel.
