Superlift ORV Park
Superlift ORV Park is a 1,300-acre commercial off-road facility on the outskirts of Hot Springs in Garland County, Arkansas — the city famous for the historic hot springs at Hot Springs National Park and one of Arkansas's most-visited tourism destinations. The park's position directly adjacent to Hot Springs combines OHV riding with an established tourism infrastructure that few other Arkansas parks can match: visitors can combine riding weekends with the Oaklawn Park thoroughbred racing, the Bathhouse Row historic district, Lake Ouachita water recreation, and the broader Hot Springs dining and lodging scene. The terrain at Superlift occupies the transition zone between the Ouachita Mountains to the west and the West Gulf Coastal Plain to the south — forested ridges of shortleaf pine and oak-hickory on the higher ground, creek drainages cutting through the rolling topography, and the rocky sandstone and novaculite outcroppings that characterize the Ouachita geology. The 100+ miles of trail cover beginner through expert terrain with purpose-built features throughout: mud pits and water crossings on the drainage bottoms, rock gardens and technical climbs on the harder sections, and the sandy trail corridors that make Superlift one of the full-spectrum Arkansas OHV destinations. ATVs, UTVs, dirt bikes, and 4x4 trucks are all accommodated on appropriately rated trails. The park hosts a robust event calendar — organized races, manufacturer demos, and major rallies that draw riders from Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, and the broader mid-South. Camping and RV hookups are available on-site. Contact the park (501-262-2411) for current event schedule and gate hours.
- Website
- www.superliftorvpark.com
- Phone
- 501-262-2411
- Hours
- Open year-round; check website for current hours, event schedule, and gate access times. Day-use fees apply.
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Byrd's Adventure Center
Byrd's Adventure Center is a 500-acre private adventure resort and off-road park along the Mulberry River in Franklin County, Arkansas — near Ozark in the Boston Mountains of the Ozark National Forest region, combining whitewater paddling access, OHV trail riding, camping, lodging, and on-site dining into a full-spectrum outdoor recreation destination that sets it apart from the single-discipline OHV parks elsewhere in Arkansas. The Mulberry River frontage is the defining feature: the property sits along a scenic stretch of the Mulberry, one of Arkansas's premier whitewater rivers during spring runoff season, and the river access makes Byrd's a shared destination for paddlers, riders, and riverside campers — the multi-activity mix produces a more social and mixed-use atmosphere than a pure riding park. The OHV trail system covers 30+ miles of designated routes on the property and links into broader Ozark National Forest access on the adjacent federal land. The Boston Mountains terrain is characteristic Ozark highlands: sandstone bluffs, mixed hardwood forest of oak, hickory, and maple, steep creek drainages cutting through the ridge topography, and the dramatic topographic relief that distinguishes the Boston Mountains from the rolling Ozark Plateau to the north. ATVs, UTVs, dirt bikes, and 4x4 trucks are all accommodated on appropriate trails. Full-service camping with hookups, RV sites, and cabin rentals operate year-round; the on-site restaurant and general store support the multi-day destination character. Contact Byrd's Adventure Center (479-667-4066) for current lodging availability and river/trail conditions.
Hot Springs Off-Road Park
Hot Springs Off Road Park is a 1,254-acre commercial off-road riding facility near the city of Hot Springs, Arkansas, approximately 5 miles from downtown Hot Springs on the edge of the Ouachita Mountain foothills. The park's proximity to one of Arkansas's most popular tourist destinations — the Hot Springs National Park corridor — gives it unusual visibility among the state's OHV venues. Over 100 miles of marked trails traverse the property across a full difficulty spectrum from easy gravel-based family paths to extreme technical routes. The park holds the distinction of hosting three official Jeep Badge of Honor trails — the only Arkansas park with this designation, which draws the significant Jeep community that follows the Badge of Honor program across its national portfolio. Side-by-side and ATV rentals are available on-site for visitors who arrive without machines. Full-service camping and RV hookups support multi-day stays. Vehicle types accommodated include full-size Jeeps and 4x4 trucks, UTVs, ATVs, and dirt bikes across corresponding designated trail networks. The park hosts organized events throughout the year, including Jeep-specific rallies and trail ride gatherings. Located on AR-270 west of Hot Springs, the park draws from the Little Rock metro and the broader mid-South OHV market.
RATS ATV & Off-Road Park
RATS ATV Park — Ride All Terrain Safely — is a 1,880-acre commercial off-road riding facility in Ouachita County near Camden, Arkansas, on Highway 79N approximately 10 miles north of downtown Camden in south-central Arkansas. The park occupies private timberland with a varied trail system covering 30+ miles of marked routes through mixed terrain including pine forest, creek drainages, open clay-soil play areas, and bottomland sections that produce natural mud conditions year-round in the Arkansas climate. Trail difficulty is rated easy through difficult to accommodate the full range of rider experience. ATVs, side-by-sides, and dirt bikes are all permitted; the trail network is laid out to minimize conflicts between vehicle classes at speed. On-site camping accommodates 100+ primitive sites alongside bathhouse facilities — the campground scale supports large group rides and organized events. RATS's location in south-central Arkansas puts it within reach of Little Rock, Shreveport, and Monroe markets — geographic coverage not well served by the Ouachita Mountain parks to the northwest. Weekend event days and seasonal gatherings draw riders from across the Gulf South.
Wolf Pen Gap Trail Complex
Wolf Pen Gap ATV Trail was the first designated ATV trail system built in the Ouachita National Forest, opened in the 1980s and managed by the Mena-Oden Ranger District in Polk County, Arkansas, approximately 5 miles north of Mena near the Arkansas-Oklahoma state line. The system offers 41 miles of looping routes through quintessential Ouachita Mountain terrain — sandstone ridges, hardwood-pine forest, and creek drainages that have shaped the character of this range since the Arkansas River carved its valley to the south. Trails are designed to accommodate a wide range of age and ability levels, with connector loops allowing riders to customize trip length from short family outings to full-day explorations. Surfaces alternate between hard-pack dirt and gravel forest road with seasonal mud sections in low-lying areas. ATVs, UTVs, and motorcycles are all permitted; width restrictions apply on some narrower loops. Trails close temporarily after heavy rain to prevent erosion on the sensitive Ouachita sandstone soils — trail closure notices are posted at trailheads. A National Forest OHV permit is required. Primitive camping is available at the trailhead and at dispersed sites in the surrounding national forest. The Mena-Oden Ranger District office in Mena (479-394-2382) handles current conditions.