The core decision
Upper vs Lower Antelope Canyon — which to choose
Both are guided-only and both are stunning — here's how to pick the one that fits your trip.
Upper vs Lower Antelope Canyon, compared
| Upper Antelope | Lower Antelope | |
|---|---|---|
| Terrain | Flat, sandy, ground-level | Staircases and ladders, narrower |
| Light beams | Yes — the famous midday shafts | No true beams; softer glow |
| Crowds | Busier | Generally quieter |
| Price | Generally higher | Generally lower |
| Suits | Mobility limits, first-timers, beam-chasers | Photographers, budgets, fewer crowds |
The one-line answer
If you want the famous light beams and an easy, flat walk, choose Upper Antelope Canyon. If you'd rather have narrower, more sculpted passages with fewer crowds at a lower price — and you're comfortable with staircases and ladders — choose Lower Antelope Canyon.
Why Upper is the classic choice
Upper Antelope Canyon is entered at ground level along a flat, sandy floor, which makes it the more accessible option for families, older visitors and anyone with mobility concerns. Its tall, wide chambers are also where the vertical light beams appear around midday in the warmer months — the shot most people picture when they think of Antelope Canyon.
Why Lower rewards photographers and smaller budgets
Lower Antelope Canyon is narrower and more intricate, with tight, sculpted curves that many photographers prefer, and it's usually quieter and cheaper than Upper. The trade-off is a more physical visit: you descend and climb metal staircases and ladders, so it suits reasonably mobile visitors more than the flat Upper route.
Both need an authorized Navajo guide
Whichever you choose, the access rule is identical: you go with an authorized Navajo guide, and the Navajo Nation permit is bundled into the tour. Neither canyon can be visited independently, so the decision is purely about terrain, crowds, price and whether the light beams matter to you.
Can you do both in one day?
Yes — Upper and Lower are a short drive apart near Page, and some visitors do both in a single day, typically timing Upper for the midday beam window and Lower for a quieter slot. If you only have time for one, let the light beams (Upper) or a smaller budget and fewer crowds (Lower) be the deciding factor.
Still deciding Upper vs Lower, or which month?
Leave your email and your target month — we'll send you the light-beam-and-conditions rundown for that specific window.