← Arizona

Coronado National Memorial

National Memorial · Cochise County

62
Fair
CampTow Safety Index · /100
Photo: NPS Photo / D. Bly
50
Crime score
428.9 / 100k · elevated
70
Hazard score
Cochise County · 2024
0
Direct deaths
From recorded 2024 events
0
Direct injuries
From recorded 2024 events
Safety briefing

Violent crime in Cochise County — where Coronado National Memorial sits along the U.S.-Mexico border — is the sharpest risk families should understand before arriving, with a rate of 428.9 incidents per 100,000 residents recorded in 2023, well above national averages. The memorial's remote location and border-adjacent terrain mean law enforcement response times can be lengthy, and the area sees regular activity unrelated to typical park visitors.

Park in designated lots rather than pulling off onto unmarked dirt roads, and avoid hiking solo on backcountry trails, especially near the southern boundary fence line. Keep valuables out of sight in locked vehicles and plan to be back at camp before dark — the combination of poor cell coverage and limited staffing after hours makes nighttime incidents harder to resolve quickly. Download offline maps before you go, since reliable signal drops out across much of the memorial.

Top recorded hazards in Cochise County

County data

From NOAA Storm Events (2024). Counts of recorded incidents — not all occurred at this park.

  • Thunderstorm Wind 14
  • Flash Flood 5
  • Hail 2
  • Tornado 1

Gear keyed to this park's risks

Recommendations driven by the actual hazards above. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

For owners & operators

Own this campground? Get featured.

Premium listing slots for verified owners — show photos, amenity details, and direct booking links above the standard data card. Drop your contact info and we'll reach out.

Get featured on CampTow

Tell us about your campground. We'll review and reply within 3 business days.

No spam. We'll only use this info to follow up about a featured listing on CampTow.

About Coronado National Memorial

It was a journey of conquest filled with exploration, wonder - and cruelty. Inspired by tales of vast cities of gold, 339 European soldiers and over a thousand Aztec allies embarked on an epic journey through arid deserts and rugged mountains. They encountered rich traditions and brought new technologies. The resulting collision and combination of cultures reverberates today.

Weather

Though the park shares a border with our southern neighbors, the elevation and the mountain ecosystem keep Coronado National Memorial relatively cool in the summer, and winter can bring snow. Summers are warm, with daytime temps in the 90s F (32-37 C) and low humidity in May, June, and July. The summer rainy season (monsoon) is between late June and early September. Monsoon thunderstorms can cause flash floods. Winter temps can fall below freezing at night, with highs 40-60 F (4-15 C).

National Park Service → · Open in Maps →

Other Arizona parks

See all Arizona →