Hole in the Rock: This famous and historic Mormon Trail is a two-night, three-day trip. Most of the trail is sandstone with a mix of sand, dirt, and rock. Rating: 6
Hotel Rock Trail: 90 miles south of Moab and Blanding, Utah, Hotel Rock includes steep rockclimbs, sandy washes, rocks, sandstone, and narrow trails. Rating: 5
Kane Creek Canyon: A creek-bottom trail, Kane Creek runs south from the Colorado River past Moab. There is a possibility of deep water and quicksand. The trail consists of rocks, sand, and ledges with numerous river crossings. Rating: 6
Metal Masher: The trail traverses Arth's Rim 1,300 feet above Highway 191 with incredible scenic views. A varied mix of dirt, sandstone ledges, flat slickrock, and sand. Rating: 6
Moab Rim: Moab Rim is just outside of town off the Colorado River and features great views of the river and sandstone canyon walls. The first part of the trail is bedrock with ledges, steps, slickrock, blow sand, and sandy dirt. Rating: 7
Poison Spider: Poison Spider Mesa is a popular trail that leaves the Potash Road and climbs the steep rim of the canyon wall. The trail is made up of sandstone, slickrock, rock, rock ledges, and sandy wash bottom. Rating: 5
Porcupine Rim: The only access to the area of Coffee Pot Rock, the trail leave Sand Flats Road above the slickrock Bike Trail and onto a ledge above Negro Bill Canyon. The trail features loose sand, some sandy dirt, bedrock, ledges, and lots of rock. Rating: 5
Pritchett Canyon Mesa: Perhaps the toughest trail in Moab, it starts at Kane Springs Road. The trail is full of sandy river bottoms, steep ledges, and difficult obstacles. Rating: 9
Rose Garden Hill Trail: This is a short version of the Top of the World Trail and more difficult, and it features a cliffhanging section. The trail travels over bedrock, rock, dirt, and sand. Rating: 6
Secret Spire: This trail rides the ridge between Spring and Hellroaring Canyon and is fairy easy. The roads are mostly sandy dirt with scattered rocks. Rating: 2
Sevenmile Rim: The trail leaves Highway 191 just north of Highway 313 north of town. It passes the old Cotter uranium mine and switches back to the cliff rim above the mine. The trail features a mix of slickrock, wash bottom, rocks, and dirt. Rating: 4
Steel Bender: The trail sits between the town of Moab and the scenic La Sal Mountains in the area of Mill Creek with spectacular views. The trail crosses stream rocks, with slickrock, dirt, sand, rocks, and ledges. Rating: 6
Strike Ravine: This trail is south of Moab and follows old mining roads and scenic views of the La Sal Mountains. The trail consists of bedrock, sandy dirt, loose rocks, creek-bottom rocks, boulders, and ledges. Rating: 5
Tip-Toe Through Hell: The trail follows Hell's Revenge but bypasses the tougher obstacles. The trail is a mix of slickrock, dirt, sand, and rock. Rating: 4-5
Top of the World: This trail has a 7,000-foot viewpoint on Waring Mesa and offers great views of the La Sal Mountains and Fisher Valley. Some of the road is graded with rock, dirt, and sand. Rating: 4
Wipeout Hill: This trail is south of Canyonlands Airport and west of Highway 191. It uses parts of Bartlett Wash, Courthouse Pasture, Tusher Canyon, the south cliff base of Big Mesa, and Gemini Bridges. The terrain is mixed sand, rock, dirt, slickrock, ledges, and long sandy wash bottom. Rating: 5