Tower Fall drops 132 feet into Tower Creek and Yellowstone River. Named for the “towers” of stone formation spotted at the top of the falls.
Kepler Cascades falls 150 feet into Firehole River. This waterfall is located between canyon walls and features three different tiers.
Yellowstone National Park’s granddaddy of waterfalls is Yellowstone River Falls. Made of two levels: upper and lower.
Plummeting almost 200 feet, Fairy Falls is one of the highest waterfalls in the park. Use Fairy Falls Trail to get there.
Gibbon Falls is an 84 feet high cascade that pours into Gibbon River and toward Yellowstone’s iconic caldera rim.
Moose Falls is a geothermal waterfall that drops 30 feet alongside Crawfish Creek.
This waterfall was created more than 120,000 years ago from a rhyolite lava pool in Yellowstone supervolcano caldera.
Dropping 1200 feet into the Yellowstone River, Silver Cord Cascade is located in the Backcountry of Yellowstone.
Plunging 129 feet, Crystal Falls flows over three separate rocky tiers from Cascade Creek.