Ken's Lower Antelope Tours
NAVAJO NATION PARKS AND RECREATION WILL REMAIN CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE.
COVID-19 update:
All areas of the Antelope Canyon are only accessible via guided tour. Tour guides are mandatory. To make arrangements for your visit to Antelope Canyon, please select a guided tour operator from our list below.
Best Dining in Page, Arizona: See 23,237 Tripadvisor traveler reviews of 60 Page restaurants and search by cuisine, price, location, and more. Over the years, Lower Antelope Canyon has become a favorite gathering place for photographers, tourists, and visitors from around the world. The views in Lower Antelope Canyon change constantly as the sun moves across the sky, filtering lights softly across the stone walls. Phase 1. of your tour begins at Ken’s Lower Antelope Canyon Tours. After checking in at their brand new visitor services pavilion, your Navajo Indian Guide will escort you to Lower Antelope Canyon’s entrance. A series of ladders takes you down into a landscape of pure magic, as sculpted sandstone walls bathed in soft, muted colors envelop you. You have to book a tour through Dixie Ellis or Ken's Tour in order to view Antelope Canyon since it's located on Navajo reservation. The two are located right next to each other and owned by a brother and sister. The perks of Ken's Tour is that they have actual restrooms and a gift shop, but honestly, you could go with either tour. 994 reviews of Ken's Tours - Lower Antelope Canyon 'There are actually two Antelope Canyons. The Upper Antelope Canyon is featured on numerous television commercials and print ads. If you want to see it, you have to check into the increasingly touristy compound on Route 98 and take a tour that runs you through the slot canyon like a golf ball on a driving range.
Upper Antelope Canyon
Lower Antelope Canyon
Other Canyons
Land Department/Parks & Recreation 48 West Taylor Rd. Bldg #8966, Hwy 264, St. Michaels, Arizona 86515
Our Mission is to protect, preserve and manage tribal parks, monuments and recreation areas for the perpetual enjoyment and benefit of the Navajo Nation – the spectacular landscapes, buttes, canyons, clean air, diversity of plants and wildlife, and areas of beauty and solitude.