Our story
About Rockhounding Sites
Connecting rockhounds with America's best mineral collecting destinations.
- 11620Locations
- 52States
- 8Specimen types
What this directory is
Rockhounding Sites is a comprehensive guide to natural rockhounding sites across the United States — from quartz pegmatites and fossil exposures to desert washes and coastal agate beaches. We catalog places where the dig site is the destination: spots worth the drive, the hike, or the last mile on a forest road.
Our directory includes 11620 verified locations across 52 states. Each listing brings together practical planning details — specimen type, access notes, fee information, nearby towns, and coordinates when available — alongside original descriptions written to help you understand what makes a place special before you go.
Whether you are chasing a hidden fossil exposure, a family-friendly gravel bar, or a quiet outcrop on a hot afternoon, this site is built to help you find the right specimens for the trip you have in mind — and to treat every landscape with the respect it deserves.
What we offer
Everything you need to plan a day in the field — not just a name on a map.
Detailed locations
Directions, highlights, FAQs, and section-by-section guidance so you know what to expect on the ground.
Essential details
Fees, primary specimens, access difficulty, facilities, and safety context — the information that turns a photo into a trip you can plan.
Smart browse
Search the directory, filter by state or type, and follow related spots when building a road trip or weekend loop.
How we research locations
Building a directory at this scale means combining many sources of truth. We start with public geographic and recreation data — land management boundaries, hydrology, and open mapping — then layer in site-specific notes on access, fees, and seasonal conditions drawn from agency publications and community knowledge.
Where satellite imagery and topographic maps suggest a promising outcrop, gravel bar, or fossil exposure, we cross-check against trail descriptions, park pages, and local reporting before a listing goes live. We prioritize accuracy over volume: if access is uncertain, if fees are unverified, or if coordinates are missing, we say so on the page rather than guess.
Natural places change. Roads wash out, parking rules tighten, weather and accesss swing with rain and snowmelt. We update listings when readers report corrections and as source data is refreshed. If something looks wrong, tell us — specific links help us fix things faster.
Our values
Responsible tourism
Respect for nature, private property, and surrounding communities. Leave no trace, follow posted rules, and know when a spot is better admired than crowded.
Environmental conservation
Clean water and intact habitat matter. We encourage low-impact visits and awareness of sensitive shorelines, wildlife, and seasonal closures.
Accessibility
Clear notes on access difficulty, facilities, and fees help visitors of different abilities decide whether a site is right for them — before they arrive.
Community driven
The best field intelligence comes from people who have just been there. We welcome corrections, closure reports, and safety updates from collectors on the ground.
Who builds this directory
Rockhounding Sites
Independent editorial directory
Rockhounding Sites is built to give collectors one trustworthy place to discover natural collecting sites across the country — with honest access notes, specimen context, and respect for the landscapes we visit.
Listings are researched from public geographic data, land-management sources, and community corrections, then written and reviewed for clarity on the ground. If you spot outdated access, fees, or safety information, reach out through our contact page.
What we don't claim
Rockhounding in the field carries real risks. Unstable slopes, heat, sharp rock, submerged hazards, and field conditions can change hour to hour. There are rarely rangers or land managers at these sites, and phone service is often limited. You are responsible for your own safety.
Listing information — including fees, parking, access routes, and legality — can become outdated without notice. Always verify current rules with the managing land agency before you travel. Respect private property, tribal lands, posted closures, and seasonal restrictions.
Rockhounding Sites provides information for planning purposes only. We do not guarantee that any location is open, safe, or permitted for collecting on the day you visit. See our terms of use and disclaimer for full limitations.
Start exploring
Browse 11620 natural rockhounding sites across the United States — find the perfect spot for your next adventure.