Wyoming: what to do, see & eat — curated guide to the Equality State 2026
The Cowboy State — the least-populated state in the union, holding the most famous landscape on Earth.
Wyoming is where America keeps its superlatives: the world's first national park, the Rockies' most photographed range, a monolith sacred long before the movies borrowed it — plus antler arches, five museums under one Cody roof, and hot springs given free to the public by treaty. And for our readers, the quietest big gambling story in the country: a state with no commercial casinos that nonetheless moved $2.77 billion in wagers in a single year — nine-tenths of it through horse-racing machines most visitors never notice — while running the nation's first crypto-friendly, 18-and-up online betting market. All of it below.


The LocalsInsider Picks for Wyoming
One place above all in Wyoming stays with you after the parks: Martin and Alex's pick for the state's most important — and most quietly moving — hour.
Heart Mountain — the Camp Beneath the Mountain
📍 Heart Mountain Interpretive Center — 1539 Rd 19, Powell, WY 82435Heart Mountain rising behind the former camp site between Cody and Powell. Photo: [credit]
Between Cody and Powell, beneath the peak that gave it its name, stood one of America's ten WWII incarceration camps — nearly 14,000 Japanese Americans, most of them U.S. citizens, confined here from 1942 to 1945 in what became Wyoming's third-largest community. The Interpretive Center (opened 2011, and one of the highest-rated museums in the state at 4.8★) tells it through first-person accounts, photographs and belongings of the incarcerees themselves; outside, the original hospital boiler-house chimney and a walking trail across the camp grounds remain, free to visit. Open daily 10–5; give it two hours, and pair it with the Cody museums 20 minutes south.
Here is our curated guide to Wyoming: hand-picked places to eat, museums worth your time, trails to hike, and spa retreats to rest and recharge — plus the best time to go.
Outdoors
What to See in Wyoming: Yellowstone, the Tetons & the Tower
Wyoming’s nature is the genre’s reference set — geysers, granite, and a monolith — with the crowds to match and the backcountry to escape them.
Yellowstone National Park
The world’s first national park (1872) and still its strangest: more than half of Earth’s geysers and hydrothermal features on one volcanic plateau — Old Faithful’s schedule, Grand Prismatic’s impossible rainbow (the Fairy Falls overlook is the view), the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone’s golden gorge, Mammoth’s travertine terraces, and the Lamar and Hayden valleys running the lower-48’s greatest wildlife show (bison jams are traffic law; wolves at dawn for the committed). Our 4.8★ gate’s practical consensus: pack your own food (reviewers are united on the concessions), book lodging a year out, and give it three days minimum. Most of the park is in Wyoming; see our Montana guide for the north doors.
Official site: nps.gov ↗
Grand Teton National Park
Our gate’s 4.9★ — the range with no foothills, 7,000 feet of granite straight off the sagebrush: Jenny Lake’s boat-and-Cascade-Canyon classic, Schwabacher Landing and Mormon Row’s barns for the photographs everyone owns, Snake River floats beneath the skyline, and moose in the willows as advertised. Connected to Yellowstone by the Rockefeller Parkway — the two-park loop is the American itinerary.
Official site: nps.gov ↗
Devils Tower National Monument
The 867-foot igneous monolith rising alone from the Belle Fourche valley — America’s first national monument (1906), Close Encounters’ icon, and Bear Lodge (Mato Tipila) to the twenty-plus Nations whose prayer cloths line the boulder field (June brings a voluntary climbing pause in respect; our 4.8★ gate’s reviewers honor both stories). The 1.3-mile Tower Trail circles the columns; climbers dot them most days.
Official site: nps.gov ↗
The Wind River Range
The connoisseur’s Rockies: 40+ peaks over 13,000 feet, the Cirque of the Towers’ granite amphitheater, and Titcomb Basin’s alpine heaven — backpacking’s Wyoming cathedral, earned by miles (Pinedale and Lander are the doors; grizzly protocol applies).
The Bighorns & the Medicine Wheel
The “little Rockies” between the plains and the parks: Cloud Peak’s wilderness, US-14A’s white-knuckle descent — and the Medicine Wheel/Medicine Mountain National Historic Landmark, the 80-foot stone circle sacred to the Plains Nations for centuries (walk the 1.5 miles in; ceremonies take precedence).
Flaming Gorge & the red-desert south
The overlooked quarter: Flaming Gorge’s canyon reservoir, the Killpecker Sand Dunes (among the largest living dune fields in North America) with their wild-horse loops, and Vedauwoo’s climbing hoodoos off I-80.
City Guide
Best Cities & Towns to Visit in Wyoming
The town square’s four elk-antler arches (built by the Rotary Club since 1953, 2,000+ naturally-shed antlers each, per our gate’s well-read reviewers) anchor the West’s most polished mountain town: boardwalk galleries, the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar’s saddle stools, the National Museum of Wildlife Art on the butte (see Museums), and both parks out the door — with prices to match the zip code and shoulder seasons as the sane play.
Official site: visitjacksonhole.com ↗
The showman’s own creation (he founded it, 1896): the Center of the West’s five museums (see Museums), the Cody Nite Rodeo — every single night, June through August, since 1938 — the Irma Hotel’s cherrywood bar (a gift from Queen Victoria, the story insists), and Yellowstone’s east gate up the Shoshone Canyon.
Official site: codyyellowstone.org ↗
The Bighorns’ front-porch town: King’s Saddlery’s ropes-and-museum wonder, the Mint Bar’s neon (since 1907), polo Sundays (genuinely — the Big Horn club dates to 1898), and WYO Theater nights — cowboy culture without the costume.
Official site: sheridanwyoming.org ↗
Wyoming’s college town at 7,200 feet: a restored downtown of bookstores and brewpubs, the Territorial Prison (Butch Cassidy’s only verified incarceration), and Vedauwoo’s boulders twenty minutes east.
Home of Hot Springs State Park (see Spas — the free bathhouse is the point) and the Wyoming Dinosaur Center’s dig-site museum (a Thermopolis Archaeopteryx is the flex) — the Bighorn Basin’s soak-and-fossils double.
Official site: thermopolis.com ↗
The Occidental Hotel’s bullet-holed saloon (Owen Wister’s Virginian country), Crazy Woman Canyon’s shelf road, and the red-walled Hole-in-the-Wall where Cassidy’s Wild Bunch actually hid — outlaw geography, intact.
Wellness
Best Spa & Wellness Retreats in Wyoming
Wyoming’s wellness runs from treaty-guaranteed free hot springs to some of the priciest lodge spas in America — choose your tax bracket.
Feature
Hot Springs State Park
The people’s spa, by treaty: when the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho ceded the Big Spring in 1896, Chief Washakie’s condition was that the waters remain free to all — and the State Bath House still honors it: 104°F mineral soaks at no charge, terraces and a swinging bridge over the Bighorn, bison on the hill above. Our 4.7★ gate calls it the “world’s largest mineral hot spring” per the hillside’s own painted claim; the commercial pools next door add slides for families. The best free wellness stop in the American West.
Thermopolis
Official site: wyoparks.wyo.gov ↗
The Jackson luxury tier
The other pole: Amangani’s cliff-edge infinity calm, the Four Seasons’ ski-in spa at Teton Village, Caldera House’s eight-suite discretion — Jackson as the Rockies’ Aman-grade address.
Amangani, Four Seasons & Caldera House
Granite & Astoria
The in-between: Granite Hot Springs (a 1930s CCC pool up a canyon south of Jackson — dogsled access in winter is the move) and Astoria’s riverside mineral pools — wilderness soaking with logistics.
the wild soaks
Saratoga
The southern secret: Saratoga’s free, 24-hour Hobo Hot Pool beside the North Platte (the Saratoga Hot Springs Resort adds the teepee-covered option) — a fly-fishing town where the soak is municipal birthright.
the Hobo Pool
Culture
Best Museums in Wyoming
Buffalo Bill Center of the West — Cody
Five full museums under one roof, and our 4.8★ gate’s reviewers call it the best in the West: the Buffalo Bill Museum (the showman’s actual world), the Plains Indian Museum (one of the country’s finest Nations collections), the Whitney’s western art (Remington’s and Sharp’s actual studios installed), the Draper’s natural-science wing, and the Cody Firearms Museum’s 9,000+ pieces — plus a live Raptor Experience. The ticket is valid two days because one is not enough. The Smithsonian of the West, unironically.
Official site: centerofthewest.org ↗
National Museum of Wildlife Art — Jackson
The genre’s national home on the butte facing the Elk Refuge: Rungius and Kuhn in depth, Bierstadt’s romances, the sculpture trail outside — and our gate’s tip that the building, staircase and view reward even a lobby visit.
Official site: wildlifeart.org ↗
The Wyoming Dinosaur Center — Thermopolis
Working dig sites you can join, a Supersaurus spine running the hall, and that European celebrity — a genuine Archaeopteryx (one of the very few outside Europe) — in the Bighorn Basin’s fossil belt.
Official site: wyodino.org ↗
The Historic Governors’ Mansion & Cheyenne’s capital set
The capital’s compact circuit: the restored Capitol’s gold dome, the Wyoming State Museum’s free galleries, and the mansion where Nellie Tayloe Ross — America’s first woman governor (1925, the Equality State earning its name again) — lived.
Historical Sites
Best Historical Sites in Wyoming
01
Independence Rock & the Oregon Trail corridor
The “Register of the Desert”: the granite whale-back where thousands of emigrants carved their names (arriving by July 4 meant you’d beat the snows — hence the name), with the Trail’s Wyoming spine intact around it — deep wagon ruts at Guernsey (axle-cut into sandstone, the corridor’s best-preserved anywhere) and Register Cliff’s signatures beside them. Stand in the ruts; the continent crossed here.
02
Fort Laramie NHS
The Plains’ crossroads post: fur-trade fort, Oregon Trail lifeline, and the treaty ground of 1851 and 1868 — the agreements whose breaking wrote the northern Plains wars (our Black Hills and Little Bighorn entries carry the consequences). A dozen restored buildings; the story told increasingly whole.
Official site: nps.gov ↗
03
between Cody & Powell
Heart Mountain Interpretive Center
The hardest modern history: the WWII camp where 14,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated — told at the site by the descendant community with unflinching care (the hospital boiler stack still stands against the mountain). Essential, and done right.
Official site: heartmountain.org ↗
04
South Pass City & the gold ghosts
The Continental Divide’s gentle crossing (the Trail’s whole point) beside the gold camp preserved at 17 buildings — where, in 1869, Wyoming Territory passed the nation’s first women’s suffrage act (Esther Hobart Morris’ justice-of-the-peace claim included). The Equality State’s origin ground.
05
The Wind River Reservation’s living history
The Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho homelands: Sacajawea’s gravesite (Fort Washakie’s cemetery, by Shoshone tradition), Chief Washakie’s grave with military honors, powwows open to respectful visitors (Eastern Shoshone Indian Days, June) — the Nations’ Wyoming, present tense.
Official site: windriver.org ↗
Experiences
Signature Experiences
The two-park grand loop
Teton dawn (Schwabacher’s reflection) → Jenny Lake boat → Rockefeller Parkway → Old Faithful timed right → Grand Prismatic overlook → Hayden Valley bison dusk: the American itinerary in one long day, better in three.
A Cody Nite Rodeo evening
Every night, June–August, since 1938: bulls, broncs, mutton-busting kids, and the Irma’s prime rib after — the rodeo as municipal utility.
Official site: codystampederodeo.com ↗
The tram to Corbet’s
Jackson Hole Mountain Resort’s tram to 10,450 feet (Rendezvous’ summit wind included) with Corbet’s Cabin waffles at the top per our 4.7★ gate’s unanimous doctrine — over the lip of Corbet’s Couloir for experts, back down the tram for the wise. Summer hikers ride it too.
Official site: jacksonhole.com ↗
The National Elk Refuge sleigh ride
Winter’s gentlest spectacle: horse-drawn sleighs among thousands of wintering elk below the Sleeping Indian (mid-December–early April) — with the antler math explained (the Boy Scouts’ May antler auction on the square funds the refuge’s feed).
Official site: fws.gov ↗
Cheyenne Frontier Days
“The Daddy of ‘Em All” since 1897: the world’s largest outdoor rodeo — ten days of championship rough stock, air-show afternoons, pancake feeds by the ten-thousand and night-show headliners. Book Cheyenne a year out.
Official site: cfdrodeo.com ↗
A Wind River backpack or a Gorge houseboat
The committed pick: Titcomb Basin’s three-day granite immersion — or the family pick: a Flaming Gorge houseboat week on the red-canyon water. Wyoming scales both directions.
Local Cuisine
What to Eat in Wyoming: Local Cuisine & Where to Find It
Wyoming eats ranch-first — beef and game with provenance, chuckwagon rituals, and a surprising fine-dining pocket at altitude.
Snake River Grill & Jackson’s polished bench
The resort town’s serious tables: Snake River Grill on the square (our 4.4★ gate notes the beloved room, the reservation necessity and the price-honesty debate), the Blue Lion’s elk institution, Persephone’s bakery lines — Jackson dining as the state’s haute pocket.
Official site: snakerivergrill.com ↗
The steak canon
Cattle country’s table: the Irma’s prime-rib room under Buffalo Bill’s bar, Sheridan’s Rib & Chop loyalty, Hudson’s Svilar’s and Club El Toro (the sheepherder-Basque steakhouse pair that ranchers drive hours for) — order the rib eye, expect the relish tray, tip like a hand.
Game, trout & the mountain plate
Elk medallions, bison tenderloin and pronghorn where licensed kitchens dare; Snake River fine-dining’s game-forward menus; and pan trout as the campfire truth. Rocky Mountain oysters surface at brandings and Frontier Days for the willing.
Chuckwagon & Dutch-oven culture
The working original: brisket-and-beans cookouts out of Jackson and Cody (covered-wagon dinner shows for the families), Dutch-oven peach cobbler as the range’s dessert, and branding-day feeds as the real thing tourists approximate.
The Basque thread & lamb country
Sheep-country’s inheritance: Buffalo and Johnson County’s Basque tables (family-style lamb, beans, bread — the Occidental’s dining room carries it), a thread our Nevada guide’s Basque hotels continue west.
Huckleberries, square ice cream & oddities
The northwest corner shares Montana’s purple religion (Jackson’s shakes comply); Farson’s Mercantile scoops the famous “big cone” oasis on the desert crossing; and the Yellowstone gateway’s fudge-and-taffy boardwalk economy endures because road trips demand it.
Betting & Casinos
Casinos, Betting & Racetracks in Wyoming
Wyoming runs the most misunderstood gambling economy in America. Ask around and you’ll hear “no casinos” — true, commercially — yet the least-populated state moved $2.77 billion in wagers in 2025, and the famous part (the nation’s first crypto-friendly, 18-and-up online sportsbooks) is barely a tenth of it. The real engine hides in plain sight: historic horse racing terminals humming in off-track parlors from Cheyenne to Casper, beside legally sanctioned skill games on the bar tops. Everything analog that Montana banned digitally, Wyoming quietly regulated. Here’s the full picture.
The $2.77 billion quiet colossus — HHR (THE story)Historic horse racing terminals account for roughly 90% of all Wyoming wagering — slot-style machines resolving on archived race results, spread across OTB parlors statewide under the Wyoming Gaming Commission, funding schools and local governments (monthly statewide handle runs ~$240–245M, HHR’s share lapping everything). It’s the racino model with the racino deleted: our HHR lineage (Kentucky’s Derby-funding invention → WV → VA’s Rosie’s → NH’s charity conversion) reaches its purest form here — machines first, live racing revived by them (race days and purses have grown on HHR money; live racing itself is under 1% of handle but the legal foundation of it all).
Sports betting — the famous tenthHB 133 was voted down, reconsidered the next day, and passed (the legislature’s best plot twist), signed by Governor Gordon in April 2021, live September 1, 2021: an online-only commercial market with no retail anchor requirement — Tennessee’s structural twin — now carrying five books (DraftKings and BetMGM at launch; Caesars from August 2022; FanDuel, ESPN Bet). The signature quirks: betting age 18 (among the nation’s few), a 10% tax (a 2025 push to double it to 20% held hearings and stalled — 10% holds through 2026), no operator cap, DFS legalized in the same bill — and the headline: the first state to authorize cryptocurrency deposits (any digital asset convertible to cash — the statute’s payment list runs from Bitcoin to traveler’s checks, which is very Wyoming). Tribal retail books operate at Wind River under compact.
Skill games — the legal pole of the gray-machine warWyoming did what six of our Southern guides watched states litigate: it legalized and regulated “skill-based amusement games” — the bar-top and convenience-store machines run licensed here, reporting net proceeds to the Commission (~half a million dollars in monthly tax) as a lawful fourth channel. For our gray-machine epic (SC’s outlaw era → GA’s COAM empire → PA’s court war → VA/AL’s bans), Wyoming is the ending where the state just says yes and takes a cut.
iGaming — studied, not yetHB 120 (2024) failed its introduction vote; the Commission then commissioned a Spectrum Gaming study (October 2024) on full-market impacts — with HHR’s parlor economy as the obvious incumbent question. Watch the odd-year sessions.
Sweepstakes casinosAccessible and unbanned — no statute, no enforcement — though the Gaming Commission has said plainly that cash-prize sweeps sit outside the legal market: the permitted-with-side-eye shade of our four-tier pattern, notable beside Montana’s felony wall one border north.
Prediction marketsNo Wyoming action — platforms operate under the federal umbrella, and in the state that wrote America’s DAO law and courts crypto exchanges, the silence reads almost like hospitality. The national war lives in our RI/KY guides.
Everything elseThe Wind River floors (below) are the only true casinos; WyoLotto (2013) sells draw games only — no scratch tickets by statute — the nation’s other no-scratch lottery beside North Dakota’s; charitable and calcutta wagering carry the small-town social layer; ADW racing apps are fully legal. RG: 1-800-522-4700.
Riverton
Wind River Hotel & Casino
The Northern Arapaho flagship on the Wind River Reservation — the state’s largest floor: machines and tables, a hotel tier our 4.0★ gate prices warmly, the Northern Arapaho Experience room telling the nation’s story on-site (a casino with its own cultural museum — the series notes it approvingly), and a sportsbook under the compact. Little Wind and 789 fill out the Arapaho properties; the Eastern Shoshone’s Shoshone Rose (Lander) completes the reservation’s set.
Official site: windriverhotelcasino.com ↗
the everyday floor
The HHR parlors
Wyoming’s actual casino experience: 307 Horse Racing, Wyoming Downs’ and Cowboy Racing’s OTB rooms in Cheyenne, Casper, Gillette, Rock Springs and beyond — terminals, simulcast walls and sports kiosks in strip-mall parlors. Unromantic, ubiquitous, and nine-tenths of the state’s handle.
Evanston
Wyoming Downs
The live anchor: the state’s flagship summer meet (weekends, roughly late June–August) whose HHR network revived it — quarter horses and thoroughbreds under the Uintas, family lawn included.
Official site: wyomingdowns.com ↗
Quick Answers
Wyoming FAQ
What is Wyoming known for?
Yellowstone and the Tetons, Devils Tower, rodeo (Frontier Days and Cody’s nightly ritual), the Oregon Trail’s ruts, the Equality State’s suffrage first, Jackson’s arches, crypto-friendly laws — and fewer people than any state, on purpose.
What to do in Wyoming this weekend?
Northwest: the two-park loop + a Cody rodeo night. East: Devils Tower + Sheridan’s Mint Bar. Center: Thermopolis’ free soak + the dinosaur dig. July: Frontier Days, booked early.
Is Wyoming LGBTQ+ friendly?
The honest split-screen: statewide protections are absent and MAP scores Wyoming low — the Equality State’s name notwithstanding, and Matthew Shepard’s Laramie legacy is part of any honest telling — while Jackson runs visibly welcoming (resort-economy pragmatism plus a genuine community) and Laramie’s university scene organizes actively. Resort-and-campus comfort, rural discretion. (Sources: MAP; HRC.)
What food is Wyoming famous for?
Steak with provenance, elk and bison, chuckwagon cobbler, Basque lamb tables, trout, Farson’s big cones, Jackson’s polished pocket — ranch food, honestly priced outside the Tetons.
What is the best time to visit Wyoming?
June–September for the full kingdom (park interior roads open ~May–October); September is the connoisseur’s month (rut bugles, gold aspens, sane crowds); late July belongs to Frontier Days; winter to Jackson’s tram and the elk sleighs.












