Sahara Woods OHV Area
Sahara Woods State Fish and Wildlife Area OHV Park near Carrier Mills in Saline County is the only state-managed OHV park in Illinois — the anchor of the Illinois DNR's OHV grant program that helps fund the state's other riding areas. The park is built on a reclaimed coal mine site, which provides the kind of varied post-industrial terrain that Illinois's otherwise flat agricultural landscape cannot produce naturally. Approximately 30 miles of trails traverse the former mine landscape, passing through areas that retain visible evidence of surface mining operations — the only place in Illinois where OHV riders can drive through an old mine area. ATVs, off-highway motorcycles, and recreational OHVs up to 64 inches wide are permitted. ROPS (roll-over protection structure) and seatbelts are required for all OHVs; helmets are mandatory for all riders regardless of age — requirements strictly enforced. The day-use fee is $20 per vehicle. An IDNR OHV usage stamp is also required. Paved parking, a visitor center, and restrooms are on-site. The facility is professionally maintained by IDNR staff rather than volunteers, producing consistent trail conditions. Contact the Illinois DNR Southern Region for hours and current conditions.
- Phone
- 618-707-1411
- Hours
- Fri–Mon 9am–5pm; open May through last full weekend of January; max 120 vehicles/day
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Little Egypt OHV Area
Little Egypt OHV Park is a 718-acre off-highway vehicle area in Williamson County east of Marion, Illinois, in the southern Illinois region historically known as Little Egypt — a coalfield and agricultural district bordering the Shawnee National Forest. The park features over 50 miles of trails across a broad difficulty range from beginner access roads to advanced single-track, augmented by hill climb areas, engineered mud pits, and two motocross tracks for competitive and practice riding. The trail network and motocross infrastructure make Little Egypt one of the more comprehensively equipped commercial OHV parks in the region, catering to both recreational trail riders and motocross-focused visitors. Dirt bikes, ATVs, and side-by-sides are permitted on the main trail network; helmets are required for all riders. Day-use fees apply. Camping is available with 12 electric sites and a shower house — a genuine amenity for multi-day visitors from the St. Louis and Memphis markets. The park office is staffed on weekends only; weekday visitors should have current information before arriving. Located approximately 2 miles east of Marion off US-13.
South Fork Dirt Riders
South Fork Dirt Riders OHV Park is a 436-acre off-highway vehicle facility near Taylorville in Christian County, central Illinois, established in 2000 and developed through Illinois DNR grant assistance. The park was built specifically to serve the central Illinois OHV community, which had essentially no dedicated riding venue between the Chicago-area parks to the north and the southern Illinois coal country parks to the south. Over 400 acres of wooded trails, bottomland routes, mud bogs, and multiple motocross tracks provide terrain variety for a facility of this size. Dirt bikes, four-wheelers, and UTVs are all permitted across the riding areas. Camping facilities include approximately 40 total sites, with 9 full hook-up sites alongside standard electric and primitive options — a campground scale that supports club events and organized ride weekends. A shower house and dump station round out the overnight facilities. The central Illinois location puts South Fork within reach of Springfield, Decatur, Champaign, and Peoria markets — a significant under-served population for OHV access. Contact the park management for current operating hours and event schedules.
The Cliffs OHV Park
Cliffs Insane Terrain is a 270-acre Illinois DNR grant-assisted off-highway vehicle park in LaSalle County, near the Illinois River in northeast Illinois. The facility offers some of the most technically demanding terrain in the Illinois OHV system: rocky creek crossings over exposed dolomite and limestone bedrock, engineered deep water holes, mud bogs, open field sections for higher-speed ATV riding, forested trail corridors, and rock crawling sections that exploit the natural Illinois River valley geology. The combination of surface types in one park is unusual for Illinois, where most other grant parks emphasize either trail riding or motocross rather than technical obstacle terrain. Dirt bikes, ATVs, and UTVs are all permitted; full-size jeeps and trucks are explicitly not permitted per the IDNR grant conditions governing the property, which distinguishes it from the southern Illinois parks. Day-use fees apply; an IDNR OHV sticker is required. Located in the Illinois River valley corridor northwest of Ottawa and northeast of Peru, Cliffs Insane Terrain serves the Joliet, Rockford, and Chicago southwest suburb markets alongside riders from the greater LaSalle County area.