MOAB, UTAH
One of the most iconic 4x4 trails in the American West where Navajo Sandstone drops away beneath your wheels and the canyon opens up in every direction.
Hell's Revenge is Moab's most famous slickrock trail, and for good reason. Cut across a vast expanse of 300-million-year-old sandstone just minutes from downtown, it puts you on terrain that looks impossible from the outside and becomes addictive the moment you're on it with near-vertical descents, tilted ridgelines, and views that sweep from the La Sal Mountains all the way to
Arches National Park. Whether you're researching it for a self-drive trip or looking for a guide who knows every line and every story, this page covers everything.
What Is Hell's Revenge?
Hell's Revenge is a 6.5-mile off-road trail in the Sand Flats Recreation Area, located on Bureau of Land Management land managed by Grand County, Utah. The trailhead sits just east of downtown Moab, about a mile past the Sand Flats Recreation Area entrance station on Sand Flats Road.
The trail runs almost entirely on Navajo Sandstone, the same ancient dune formation that defines the visual language of the Colorado Plateau. Unlike packed-dirt trails, slickrock provides more traction than it looks like it should but it demands precise line selection and a vehicle that can handle severe off-camber angles, near-vertical climbs, and tilted descents that challenge your instincts at every turn.
The name isn't just branding. Hell's Revenge is a serious trail with serious consequences if you misjudge it. It's also one of the most rewarding experiences in Moab a place where first-timers laugh nervously going in and come out wanting to do it again.
Getting to Hell's Revenge
Trailhead Access: From US Highway 191 in Moab, turn east on 300 South. Follow it to 400 East, turn right, then continue east on Mill Creek Drive to Sand Flats Road. The Hell's Revenge trailhead is approximately one mile past the Sand Flats Recreation Area entrance station.
PARK HOURS & PASSES
- $5 7-day motorcycles and bicycles
- $10 7-day pass cars and trucks
- $25/annual pass (Sand Flats Recreation Area)
- Open 24 hours
Hell's Revenge Trail Facts
| DETAIL | INFO |
|---|---|
| Location | Sand Flats Recreation Area, Moab, UT |
| Trailhead Access | Sand Flats Road, ~1 mile past entrance station |
| Directions | From US-191, turn east on 300 South → right on 400 East → east on Mill Creek Drive → east on Sand Flats Road |
| Trail Length | ~6.5–6.8 miles (loop) |
| Elevation Gain / Loss | ~825 ft gain / ~975 ft descent |
| Estimated Time | 3–4 hours (self-guided) |
| Difficulty Rating | 6/10 on main trail; 8–9/10 with optional hard obstacles |
| Day Use Fee | Navajo Sandstone slickrock, rock ledges, broken rock, sand |
| Best Seasons | Spring (March–May) and Fall (September–November) |
| Summer Note | July–August highs regularly reach 90–100°F+ — exposed slickrock amplifies heat significantly |
| Vehicle Requirement (self-drive) | High-clearance 4x4 with low-range gearing; lockers strongly recommended; 30"+ tires advised |
| Not Recommended For | Stock 2WD vehicles, standard AWD crossovers, ATVs |
What Hell's Revenge Actually Feels Like
The first thing that catches most people off guard is the scale. Hell's Revenge isn't a canyon trail it runs across the top of a massive, open slickrock plateau, and the views come at you from all sides almost immediately. The La Sal Mountains to the southeast. The Moab valley below. Arches National Park to the north. The deep cut of the Colorado River canyon to the west. You're not threading through terrain, you're crossing it.
The second thing is the traction. Navajo Sandstone has a texture like coarse sandpaper, which is exactly what makes near-vertical climbs possible on a surface that looks like it should be a slide. That friction is the whole physics of slickrock driving — the angle that looks undriveable from behind the wheel is often the line that goes cleanly once you commit to it.
The third thing is the quiet. Sand Flats sits just far enough from town that the noise drops away. What you hear is the engine, the sandstone, the wind, and occasional laughter, often your own.

Getting to Hell's Revenge
Hell's Revenge sits high enough that the views arrive quickly and stay wide the entire route. From the upper sections of the trail, you're looking at:
Trailhead Access
From US Highway 191 in Moab, turn east on 300 South. Follow it to 400 East, turn right, then continue east on Mill Creek Drive to Sand Flats Road.
The Hell's Revenge trailhead is approximately one mile past the Sand Flats Recreation Area entrance station. The entrance station collects day-use fees — $10 for a 7 day pass per vehicle.
Best Time to Go
Spring and fall are when Hell's Revenge is at its best. March through May offers mild temperatures (50s–70s°F), excellent light for photography, and wildflowers at the lower elevations.
September through November brings the same comfortable range after the summer heat breaks.
Summer is a different. Exposed slickrock in July and August absorbs and radiates heat significantly beyond air temperature. It's not impossible, but it requires an early start and serious hydration. Temperatures frequently reach over 100 degrees Fahrenheit daily.
What to Bring
Water (plan for at least a liter per person per hour in warm weather), sun protection, closed-toe shoes with grip, snacks. Cell service is limited to nonexistent in Sand Flats.
Vehicle Requirements for Self-Driver
Hell's Revenge requires a capable 4x4 with low-range gearing, genuine high clearance, and ideally front and rear lockers. Tall tires (30" minimum, 35" recommended) help on the steeper obstacles. This is not a trail for lifted trucks without lockers, and certainly not for stock SUVs or AWD vehicles. If you have to ask whether your vehicle can handle it, the honest answer is probably no or you need to stick to the main trail and skip every optional obstacle.
The Slickrock Plateau Itself
In a place as famous for its views as Moab, the slickrock on Hell's Revenge is still a sight. Rolling domes, fossilized dune crests, and a surface that changes color from cream to rust to deep red depending on the hour. It's a landscape that looks more alien the longer you look at it.
Hell's Revenge — Questions We Get Every Day
How hard is Hell's Revenge?
The main trail is rated 6 out of 10 by the Red Rock 4-Wheelers Club — challenging, but passable for experienced drivers in properly equipped vehicles. The optional hard obstacles (Hell's Gate, Devil's Hot Tub, Tip Over Challenge) push the difficulty to 8–9 out of 10. On a guided Hummer tour, your guide selects the lines and handles all vehicle operation — guests experience the terrain without managing the difficulty.
How long does Hell's Revenge take?
Self-guided, plan for 3–4 hours depending on your pace and how many optional obstacles you attempt. MAC's guided tours run 2–4 hours depending on which tour you choose.
Can I do Hell's Revenge without a 4x4?
No. The trail requires a true high-clearance 4x4 with low-range gearing. Stock 2WD vehicles, AWD crossovers, and ATVs are not appropriate for this trail. If you don't have the right vehicle, a guided tour is the most practical and often the most enjoyable way to experience Hell's Revenge.
Is Hell's Revenge open year-round?
The trail is accessible year-round, but spring and fall offer the most comfortable conditions. Summer heat on exposed slickrock is intense — July and August daytime temperatures regularly exceed 100°F. MAC's guided Hummer tours run February through November.
What does the Sand Flats Recreation Area charge to enter?
There is a day-use fee for private vehicles: $5 for a day pass, $10 for a 7-day pass, and $25 for an annual pass. Guided tours from Moab Adventure Center include trail access — no separate entry fee required.
Are MAC's Hummer tours appropriate for kids?
Yes. MAC's guided tours are designed for all experience levels and have a minimum age of 5. The custom vehicles with raised rear seating are built for groups — families with young kids do these tours regularly. The minimum age for private tours is 3.
Is there a difference between the morning and sunset tours?
Yes — the terrain is identical, but the light is different. The sunset tour (MAC's most popular) puts you on the slickrock during the golden hour, when the canyon walls and La Sal Mountains are at their most photogenic. The 2-hour morning tour is a great choice if you're building a full day of activities and want to fit in Hell's Revenge early.
Not finding what you're looking for?
What You'll See from Hell's Revenge
Hell's Revenge sits high enough that the views arrive quickly and stay wide the entire route. From the upper sections of the trail, you're looking at:
The La Sal Mountains
Moab's snow-capped backdrop, rising to over 12,000 feet. They look close enough to touch from the slickrock plateau, especially in the morning light when the contrast between red rock and white peak is at its sharpest.
Arches National Park
The park's iconic formations are visible to the north from the higher points on the trail. Seeing them from the outside, from a vantage most park visitors never reach, is one of those moments that reframes what you already knew.
The Colorado River Canyon
The river cuts its deep groove to the west, and from the right perches on Hell's Revenge you can look down into the canyon and trace the water's path through the red rock. In the afternoon, the light on the canyon walls shifts from orange to deep crimson.
The Moab Valley
The town sits below you, surrounded by mesas and towers. There's something clarifying about seeing where you came from and how far the landscape stretches beyond it.
The Slickrock Plateau Itself
In a place as famous for its views as Moab, the slickrock on Hell's Revenge is still a sight. Rolling domes, fossilized dune crests, and a surface that changes color from cream to rust to deep red depending on the hour. It's a landscape that looks more alien the longer you look at it.
The Obstacles on Hell's Revenge
Hell's Revenge has several named obstacles, each with bypass options for drivers who want to dial back the intensity. The optional hard obstacles are what push the difficulty rating from 6 to 8–9 out of 10. While our Hummer tours don't navigate these obstacles, they are amazing to see.
Hell's Gate
The trail's opening statement. A steep climb over a bulge of sandstone with significant exposure on the downhill side. It's the obstacle that sets the tone for everything that follows — and the one that makes most first-timers grip the door handle on the way up.
The Escalator
A series of stair-stepped slickrock climbs, each one flowing into the next through a series of V-notches and tilted faces. The Escalator is where line selection matters most — the correct path twists to avoid the steep canyon drop below. Easily bypassed, but worth doing if your vehicle is up for it.
Rubble Trouble
A transition zone of broken rock and ledges that breaks up the long slickrock sections. Less dramatic than the named climbs but unforgiving on a vehicle with low clearance. A reminder that this is still a serious trail even when the headline obstacles are behind you.
The Hot Tubs (Carwash, Mickey's Hot Tub, Devil's Hot Tub)
Three natural sandstone bowls in the slickrock that collect rainwater and look like drive-through rock pools. The Carwash is the first and shallowest. Mickey's Hot Tub is the crowd favorite. Devil's Hot Tub is the widest, deepest, and steepest of the three — with walls steep enough that a misjudged approach can leave a vehicle perched on the rim. In wet seasons, these fill with water. In dry months, they're still a spectacle.
Tip Over Challenge
The final named obstacle and the one that earns its name. A severe off-camber crossing that creates a real tilt on the vehicle — enough that passengers who've been calm all day tend to get quiet again. There's a bypass for those who want it. Most people who made it this far take the challenge.
The Case for a Guide on Hell's Revenge
If you have a purpose-built 4x4, the experience, and the right vehicle for the terrain, self-driving Hell's Revenge is one of the great off-road experiences in the American West.
If you don't or if you're bringing people who want the experience without the prep work the math changes fast. The vehicle alone (high-clearance 4x4 with lockers and proper tires) isn't something most visitors have in their driveway. Renting something capable costs time and money. And then there's the navigation: Hell's Revenge isn't a marked highway, and the wrong line on the wrong obstacle has potentially deadly consequences.
Moab Adventure Center's Hummer tours solve all of that. You get the terrain, the views, and every named obstacle with a guide who has driven these lines hundreds of times, knows the route history, and can read the sandstone well enough to make the whole thing feel less terrifying and more incredible.
The question most people ask after the tour: "Can we go again tomorrow?"

Hell's Revenge Hummer Tours with
Moab Adventure Center
Moab Adventure Center runs guided Hummer safaris on Hell's Revenge in custom-built vehicles with raised rear seating — so every passenger has a view, not just the people up front. Guides bring the kind of knowledge that takes years to earn: every obstacle, every viewpoint, every story the slickrock holds. No experience is required.

Gravity-defying fun on Moab’s slickrock: Heart-pounding climbs and nonstop views in just two hours on the legendary Hell's Revenge Trail.
- Duration: ~2 hrs
- Departures: AM & PM
- Season: Feb – Nov
ADULTS 13+
$115
YOUTH 5-12
$95

Moab’s wildest sunset: Steep climbs, unreal views, and golden-hour thrills on our most popular off-road adventure at the perfect time of day.
- Duration: ~3 hours
- Departures: Evening
- Season: Feb – Nov
ADULTS 13+
$145
YOUTH 5-12
$125

Ultimate backcountry ride: Towering vistas, rugged terrain, and more miles of jaw-dropping Moab views than any other off-road Hummer tour.
- Duration: Approximately 4 hrs
- Departures: 7:00 am or 11:00 am
- Season: February – November
ADULTS 13+
$239
YOUTH 5-12
$205

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