Skip the two-hour drive from Calgary and touch a 75-million-year-old bone instead. A guided day in Alberta's badlands — hoodoos, coulees, and one of the richest fossil sites on the planet.
Round-trip coach from Calgary · Explorers Bus Tour included
Two Calgary pickup points. Get there 15 minutes early — the drive to the park takes about two hours.
Park-and-ride lot off Anderson Station Way SW, south Calgary. Easy LRT access.
Downtown pickup at the Stampede grounds Trailblazer Centre.
One ticket, three parts. We get you there, a park interpreter guides you into the restricted Preserve, and then the badlands are yours to explore.
You sit back in a full-size, air-conditioned coach with big windows and watch the prairies transform into badlands. About 220 km east, near Brooks — roughly two hours. We handle the highway so you don't have to.
This is where the magic happens. You board a bus deep into the Natural Preserve — the 80% of the park most visitors never see — and stop four times to get out and explore. You'll touch dinosaur bones buried for 75 million years, hear stories of the Blackfoot nation and early fossil hunters, and maybe place a protective casting on a fossil like a real field paleontologist. Restricted areas you can only reach with a guide.
After the tour, the park is yours. Hike the Badlands Interpretive Trail (1.3 km, easy), follow the Trail of the Fossil Hunters (0.9 km) with your eyes down for bone fragments, climb the hoodoos, or scramble through terrain that genuinely feels Martian. Visitor Centre with interactive exhibits and a theatre, plus cold drinks at the Cretaceous Café.
Round-trip coach from Calgary and the guided Explorers Bus Tour into the protected Palaeontological Preserve — admission built in.
| Adult | $130 |
| Student / Senior | $117 |
| Child | $65 |
Not included: meals and snacks (Cretaceous Café is seasonal), and optional add-on guided hikes booked on-site. Kids under 14 must be accompanied by a paying adult.
Book Your SeatIn partnership with Dinosaur Trips
Over 75 million years ago this region was an inland sea. Dinosaurs died in river channels and were buried in sand and mud. Those layers eroded into towering hoodoos, sculpted coulees, and otherworldly badlands — and more than 300 complete skeletons have been pulled from this single valley, now displayed in museums around the world.
About 58 species have been found here, from massive Albertosaurus to herds of horned Centrosaurus. The Blackfoot nation are the traditional keepers of this land; they called the hoodoos matapiiski — "the people" — believing them spirits that watch over the valley.
You can literally see 75 million years of time on display.
The badlands are one of Alberta's hottest, driest places — midsummer highs of 25–30°C with almost zero shade. That harsh light is part of what makes the landscape so dramatic, but you'll want to come prepared.
June weather in Alberta is variable — check the forecast and dress in layers.
★★★★★ 4.6/5.0 on Google · what riders actually say (not paid)
I have always had excellent experiences with Parkbus. The ambassadors have been knowledgeable and friendly, and the drivers drive safely with the passengers' comfort in mind.Sharlene H. · Google
It's convenient, destinations are all great, and the staff is nice, polite and funny. I recommend Parkbus to everyone, especially if you don't have a car but want to explore.Natalie N. · Google
Reasonably priced and no need to think about a rental car to get to the wilderness. The ambassadors checked everyone in at their pickups and stuck to the schedule.James Johnson · Happy Parkbus adventurer
Leave the car in Calgary. Touch a fossil, climb a hoodoo, and be home by evening.