Death Valley National Park
Photograph: Courtesy Death Valley National Park
Photograph: Courtesy Death Valley National Park

Where to see Southern California wildflowers

Every spring, a fresh bloom of Southern California wildflowers (usually) appears. Here are the best places to see the blossoms.

Michael Juliano
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Every spring in SoCal brings wildflower excitement and hopes of a super bloom. And while last year was a bit of a letdown, bloom-wise, this season has immediately shown more promise, starting strong with early blooms at a number of parks. In fact, California State Parks has predicted a “moderate-to-strong wildflower bloom across desert state parks.” You can thank the widespread rainfall Southern California has experienced on-and-off since the holidays. A super bloom requires a specific set of circumstances, and one is above-average rainfall (wind and warm—not too hot—weather also play a part). And though we might not see a full-blown super bloom this year, it’s definitely worth planning a trip to one or more of these lovely wildflower destinations.

Even if you miss peak bloom periods, embarking on one of the best hikes in L.A. or taking a day trip to one of our state parks is never a bad idea. In the meantime, we’ll keep you updated on any wildflower developments.

What’s the latest bloom status?

As of mid-March, many of our favorite destinations for wildflowers have reported action. While we’re not seeing a super bloom this year, you can spot lots of flowers at the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve and Carrizo Plain National Monument. The early bloom at Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is now be past its peak, but you can still spot some flowers. And, perhaps most exciting of all: Death Valley National Park is seeing the best bloom it’s had in a decade, and though low-elevation blooms are dwindling, high-elevation blooms are still on the way.

We’ve checked in on some of our favorite spots to see SoCal wildflowers and their current bloom status. We’ll update each location as soon as there’s some new bloom activity. It’s still always a good idea, though, to check with each individual park for the most up-to-the-minute info on any road closures or weather updates. California State Parks, which manages many of the most notable potential sites for wildflowers, maintains its own bloom status tracker on this page. We’ll also shout out the Theodore Payne Foundation’s wildflower hotline (available online, too), which releases super helpful weekly status updates each Friday in March.

Please be responsible when visiting the sites below; remain on marked trails and don’t trample the flowers.

The best places to see Southern California wildflowers right now (and the latest bloom status)

1. Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve

Poppies are beautiful when they cover the desert hillsides in orange flowers. But poppies are also fickle: If there’s too much rain, the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve can only expect a moderate poppy season. Too dry? Not a great bloom either (but you could still potentially see some other wildflowers). But luckily, after last year brought only sporadic poppies, this spring’s conditions seem to be more favorable.

In a typical year, peak poppy season is usually from March to mid-April—a short window if you want to catch the blooms at their height. And despite the reserve’s name, you might spot some other wildflowers in addition to poppies, including owl’s clover, lupine, goldfield, cream cups, coreopsis, fiddleneck or redstem filaree.

The nice thing about Antelope Valley—other than its relative proximity to L.A. proper—is that you can check the reserve’s livestream for the up-to-the-minute bloom status before you make the drive there. If you see orange, take the next step and check the weather—poppies tend to close in the late afternoon or when it’s windy.

You can also check the park’s website or Instagram account for the latest bloom status—though it’s tempered visitors’ expectations by openly declaring that this won’t be a super bloom year. As of March 13, though, there are large poppy blooms to be found on the south loop of the poppy trail, and goldfields and owl’s clover on the north loop. Just don’t expect to see hillsides completely covered in flowers (as you may be seeing in photos people are reposting from past years). And since a heat wave is on the way, that may spell an early end to this year’s poppy season, as it prompts the flowers to switch from blooming to seed production.

If you do visit, just be sure to stay on the trail—the reserve warns that Mojave green rattlesnakes regularly make an appearance in the fields, but if you stick to the path and keep your ears open for their namesake warning, you should be fine.

2. Carrizo Plain National Monument

This sprawling grassland in southeastern San Luis Obispo County may stretch past what we’d typically consider Southern California, but the three-hour trip is often well worth it after a wet winter. Make no mistake: On most days you’ll find an arid, dry lake bed at the center of this national monument, which is bisected by the San Andreas Fault. But if the conditions are just right—as they memorably were in 2017—you may catch a couple of weeks where the hillsides turn into rolling carpets of daisies, goldfields and other yellow, orange and purple flora.

This year probably won’t quite reach super bloom status, but thanks to early winter storms, the plain has been experiencing an early wildflower bloom, painting the Temblor Mountains with sunny yellows and oranges as early as February. And according to Theodore Payne’s report, the slopes of the Caliente Range that face the Cuyama Valley have now come alive with hillside daisies, goldfields and forked fiddlenecks, which are joined by some blazing star, California poppies, chick lupine, desert candle and more. Ironically, a July 2025 fire on the plain has resulted in a more dazzling display of flowers, since it burned off old grass thatch.

Just a heads-up if you do visit the park: Be sure you have enough food, water and fuel—it takes around an hour to drive through the park, and there are no service stations around. And if it’s rained recently, some roads get wet and muddy, and no towing services are readily available in the relatively remote area.

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3. Death Valley National Park

So far, Death Valley is proving to be the star of this wildflower season. After a disappointing, below-average bloom last year, the park has sprung into life this spring. You can thank the record rainfall that graced the notoriously dry park in recent months. In fact, it’s experiencing its best bloom year in a decade (following the 2016 super bloom), according to the park’s official website. And many sprouts still have yet to flower: Low-elevation flowers—including yellow desert gold—are still in bloom on several hillsides, though many areas are past their peak, but at higher elevations, you can still expect blooms from April to June.

As of March 13, you can find desert gold and phacelia on Badwater Road, and more of those two, as well as gravel ghost and Mojave desert star, along Highway 190 (between Stovepipe Wells and Furnace Creek). At Beatty Cutoff, there’s even more desert gold, phacelia and gravel ghost. According to the Theodore Payne Foundation’s report, Highway 178 west of Highway 127 is also a good viewing location, though you should plan on getting out of your car to scout the scattered blooms (while being careful not to trample them).

Most Angelenos are looking at a four-hour or so trek to get out there, so it’s always a good idea to check out the park’s latest wildflower report online before making your plans. Given the buzz, expect crowds and limited parking during this peak bloom period.

4. Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

Located west of the Salton Sea, and about a three-hour drive from L.A., this sprawling state park mostly known for its rough terrain and dry lakes has become an oddly reliable wildflower destination over the past few wet winters. In fact, Anza-Borrego made headlines in mid-January for its early-season wildflowers.

Henderson Canyon Road welcomed desert sand verbena, brown-eyed primrose and desert sunflower across the canyon floor. Meanwhile, Borrego Palm Canyon saw desert lavender, chuparosa, datura, yellow nightshade groundcherry, Emory’s rockdaisy and bush mallow. But due to recent temps in the high 90s, these lower-elevation booms are now past their prime, though you should still be able to spot some scattered flowers throughout the park. Your best bet as spring unfolds is higher-elevation areas that hold moisture for longer, but as of March 13, the park is looking ahead past wildflowers to the cacti that are starting to bloom.

Anza-Borrego is also roughly in the same direction as South Lake Park in San Marcos, a small hillside trail on the northern edge of San Diego County that was blanketed with lilacs in 2024, so if history repeats itself, it could be worth the slight detour.

For detailed updates before you visit (to help you determine if it’s worth the drive), the Anza-Borrego Foundation has you covered. You can also check the park’s Instagram for bloom news and trail information as the season progresses, as well as this very helpful interactive map of the park.

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5. Chino Hills State Park

Chino Hills may never achieve full-blown super bloom status, but the state park pretty much always looks like the Shire after a wet winter (and heavy rain will often close the sopping wet trails for a couple of days). This spring, there are a variety of flowers to be found throughout the park.

Last year, the park was a late bloomer (pun intended), with wildflower season stretching well into May. But as early as January 2026, there were already small pockets of blooms beginning to peak on Bane Road. As the season progresses, you might spot wild radish, redmaids, black mustard, canterbury bells and arroyo lupine scattered throughout the park—and even some patches of California poppies around Bane Canyon, though last year their growth was inhibited by invasive mustard plants. As of March 11, island morning glory, Catalina mariposa lily, cliff aster, hairy lotus, chia and common cryptantha—a.k.a. “popcorn flower”—could be spotted on the Scully Hill Trail. 

Regardless of whether or not there’s a full-scale bloom, the park still offers a beautiful hike. Follow the lone park road, and just before it turns toward its terminus, you’ll find a dirt parking lot where Bane Canyon Road turns into Telegraph Canyon Road. Follow the signs for the Bane Ridge Trail and—in those years when they actually bloom—this is usually one of the easiest-to-reach spots for poppies. You’ll need to pay to park ($10 for the day), though it’s free in the residential area near the entrance—but you’ll be tacking two to three hilly, shadeless miles onto your trek.

6. Point Dume State Beach

Take a hike along the top of the iconic Malibu cliff, and you’ll find bundles of giant coreopsis that turn from dusty green to lively yellow each winter and spring.

As of late February, there seemed to be clusters of the yellow flowers visible on the hillside—though not blanketing it—but more recent photos suggest they might already be past peak bloom. Either way, you can’t go wrong with a beach day—especially with this heat wave on the way—so scope out the flora yourself on your way to the sand. 

You’ll find a very limited number of parking spots on Cliffside Drive, between Birdview Avenue and Dume Drive, and zero parking in the surrounding neighborhoods. But thankfully you can reach the flowery bluff via a lovely (and uphill but not punishingly so) hike from the sandy beach below.

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7. Walker Canyon in Lake Elsinore

Marked by traffic nightmares, brief closures and the crush of thousands of visitors, Walker Canyon in Lake Elsinore was a super bloom sensation in 2019. The hillside trail was covered with eye-poppingly beautiful carpets of poppies and other colorful flowers—with Disneyland-sized lines of people snaking their way through them. It caused such a nightmare for locals that the City of Lake Elsinore flat-out closed the area by the canyon to both cars and pedestrians in 2023 and 2024 in anticipation of a super bloom that never actually arrived.

So far this year, some poppies—complemented by yellow and purple blooms—have been reported in the canyon, but don’t expect anything approaching super bloom status. (The city formerly had a livestream of the trail, but right now it literally just shows a couple of dumpsters.)

If you’re simply looking for a floral backdrop in that general direction of SoCal, consider venturing another hour south along the freeway toward the Flower Fields in Carlsbad. These perfectly manicured rows of planted flowers are a little less magical than hillsides blanketed in poppies, but they’re still visually stunning—and way more predictable.

8. Diamond Valley Lake

When Walker Canyon closed in 2023, Diamond Valley Lake’s 1.3-mile seasonal wildflower trail quickly emerged as a fair substitute. The typically dry terrain had turned a lush green and was covered with patches of orange poppies, purple lupines, goldfields, baby blue eyes and indian paintbrush. The trail reopens each spring, and is now open for the season (Wed–Sun).

In the years when there is a brilliant bloom, expect thick crowds and no shade. You’ll want to arrive early with cash for the entrance fee ($4 per person) and prepare to wait in a line of cars. Parking ($11) is available at the marina (2615 Angler Ave); from there follow the Lakeview Trail for about a half mile and you—and the crowd in front of you—will reach the wildflower loop.

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9. Palos Verdes Peninsula

On the Palos Verdes Peninsula, wildflowers bloom year-round, thanks to its coastal location, but like most Southern California locations, March and April are peak months. In the summer, you’ll see buckwheats with soft white blooms, cactus, native milkweed, cliff aster and California aster.

Head to any number of the area’s nature preserves—the Palos Verdes Nature Preserve, Linden H. Chandler Preserve, George F. Canyon and White Point Nature Preserve—in the springtime to try to catch blooms. For those years when wildflowers disappoint, consider the manicured displays at South Coast Botanic Garden as an area alternative.

10. Point Mugu State Park

There are about 900 native plants that grow throughout the Santa Monica Mountains, so you’re bound to find small patches of wildflowers on any trail in the area each spring once the weather starts to warm. You likely won’t find a spectacular sight, but once the flowers do start to bloom, consider heading to Point Mugu State Park and Rancho Sierra Vista, both of which flank the western end of the range. Try taking the Chumash Trail; it starts at PCH and is a steep climb, where chocolate lily and globe gilia are known to grow along the ridgeline. Or start on the north side, at Rancho Sierra Vista near Thousand Oaks, where you can walk the rolling hills in serch of wildflowers under the shadow of Boney Mountain.

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11. Malibu Creek State Park

Though the landscape was significantly altered in the wake of the devastating Woolsey Fire, Malibu Creek State Park has shown considerable signs of recovery since 2018—and it was luckily unaffected by the Palisades Fire. While winter rains regularly carpet the park in green, we’ve yet to see those storms bring a miracle super bloom to the region—fingers crossed that changes this year. On March 28, the park is hosting a “Wildflower BioBlitz,” inviting visitors to come help document the different species of wildflowers in Malibu Creek, so it’s safe to assume there are some flowers in bloom. 

12. Idyllwild Nature Center

Wildflowers are such a big deal in Idyllwild, located in the San Jacinto Mountains, that there’s an entire festival dedicated to them. The wildflower show—this year’s will take place May 23 to 24—typically coincides with the region’s peak bloom, which comes much later in the season due to the area’s elevation around 5,400 feet. So if you head over in late May, you should find a variety of species, including western azaleas, a variety of lupine, both leafy and Alpine asters and a variety of penstemon. If you travel above 6,000 feet, you’ll find even more varieties, but those tend to bloom even later in the season (say, June or even July). If you’re looking to take a hike to see the flowers, try taking the Summit Trail from the nature center down to the meadow in the County Park, then returning via the Perimeter Trail.

Don’t feel like leaving the bloom status up to chance?

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