Back to StoriesYellowstone Breaks Visitor Records Amid Historic Budget Cuts
June 20, 2025
Yellowstone Breaks Visitor Records Amid Historic Budget CutsTrump administration announces proposed 2026 budget cuts to NPS as Yellowstone sees busiest May on record
by Sophie Tsairis
In early May, President Donald Trump’s administration advanced a sweeping proposal to slash the National Park Service budget for fiscal year 2026. Just weeks later, Yellowstone National Park reported its busiest May on record, highlighting a growing tension between public interest in national parks and the shrinking resources needed to support them.
According to newly released NPS data, Yellowstone saw 566,363 visitors in May 2025, an 8 percent increase from the same month last year. The surge marks a 20 percent jump from May 2021, when the park hosted 473,799 visitors during what was then a record-setting year with more than 4.8 million total visits. So far in 2025, Yellowstone has already seen 762,672 visitors, reflecting a steady upward trend.
This record-breaking attendance comes at a precarious moment for the Park Service. Despite hosting a record 331 million visits across all national parks in 2024, the National Parks Conservation Association estimates the agency has lost 13 percent of its workforce since January, with many critical positions remaining unfilled.
While national parks across the country grapple with staffing shortages and deferred maintenance, Yellowstone appears, at least for now, to have avoided the immediate fallout from the initial round of layoffs implemented in February. In an email statement, YNP spokesperson Linda Veress confirmed that the park is fully staffed and open for the season. “We are expecting another busy summer and are ready to host visitors as we have in years past,” she wrote.
In May 2025, Yellowstone National Park saw 566,363 visitors, an 8 percent increase from the same month last year. The surge marks a 20 percent jump from May 2021.
According to Veress, Yellowstone had a total of 769 staff members going into the 2025 summer season. While that’s up 21 employees from last year, the ratio of seasonal and permanent workers has shifted. The number of seasonal employees increased this year from 356 to 387, while the number of permanent employees decreased from 392 to 382. Veress declined to comment on whether or not Yellowstone has felt any impact from the 2025 federal layoffs.
In April, Mountain Journal reported on restrictions to external communications related to national park visitation data.
The broader outlook for the Park Service, and subsequently Yellowstone, is far more uncertain. The Trump administration’s proposed 2026 budget includes a $1.2 billion cut to the NPS, the largest in its 109-year history.
According to the National Parks Conservation Association, a nonprofit that advocates on behalf of the National Park System, the proposed reductions include $900 million from daily operations, $73 million from park construction, $158 million from the Historic Preservation Fund, and $77 million from recreation and preservation.
The National Parks Conservation Association estimates the National Park Service has lost 13 percent of its workforce since January.
Both the NPCA and the Coalition to Protect America’s National Parks, a watchdog and advocacy of current, former and retired NPS employees, have warned that the cuts could severely impact visitor services, historic site preservation, and the overall ability of parks to meet growing public demand.
“This is the most extreme, unrealistic and destructive National Park Service budget a President has ever proposed in the agency’s 109-year history,” NPCA President and CEO Theresa Pierno said in a press release last month. “It’s nothing less than an all-out assault on America’s national parks.”
As Yellowstone braces for another busy summer, it stands as a powerful symbol of the American public’s enduring value of national parks, just as the agency tasked with protecting them faces its most significant fiscal challenge in over a century.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mountain Journal is a nonprofit, public-interest journalism organization dedicated to covering the wildlife and wild lands of Greater Yellowstone. We take pride in our work, yet to keep bold, independent journalism free, we need the support of readers like you. Thank you.
Related Stories
September 30, 2024
Montana Preps for Potential Grizzly Bear Delisting
State Fish, Wildlife and Parks has released its final EIS proposing a statewide grizzly management plan.
May 7, 2025
Tragedy Strikes Again: Another of Grizzly 399's Descendants Lost to Vehicle Collision
Bear 1058, the five-year-old male from famous quadruplet litter, on Tuesday became the latest casualty on a Grand Teton roadway.
December 21, 2023
Two Wyoming Elk Feedgrounds in Limbo Amid CWD Concerns
As Wyoming Game and Fish assesses the viability of two Wyoming elk feedgrounds, concerns over the spread of chronic wasting disease...