Skip to content

The Perks of Seattle’s Parks

The city’s parks offer lush green spaces and easy access to nature, ranking it among the nation’s top park systems

By Seattle Mag August 18, 2025

Aerial view of Gas Works Park in Seattle, one of the top Seattle parks, showing pathways, grassy areas with people, water, and the historic gas plant structures.
Gas Works Park
Photo by Adobe

This article originally appeared in the July/August 2025 issue of Seattle magazine.

Seattle’s parks are not just green spaces — they’re integral to the city’s identity. With nearly 500 parks and natural areas spanning 6,500 acres, Seattle is home to lush urban sanctuaries, offering everything from towering evergreens to scenic lakes and mountain views. These parks provide residents with plenty of opportunities to connect with nature, whether by hiking trails at Discovery Park or enjoying skyline views from Gas Works Park.

Seattle ranks No. 8 on the Trust for Public Land’s 2025 ParkScore index, a testament to the city’s commitment to green spaces. According to the Trust, 99% of Seattle residents live within a 10-minute walk of a park, far surpassing the national average of 76%. These parks play a critical role in fostering a healthy, active community, offering a range of recreational options.

The average park size in Seattle is 5.4 acres, matching the national average, and providing ample space for both active and passive outdoor activities. With this abundant green space and strong commitment to accessibility, Seattle’s park system continues to be a vital resource for its residents, promoting well-being and environmental connection in one of the nation’s top big-city park systems.

Follow Us

Hives Among the Headstones

Hives Among the Headstones

Inside a north Seattle project reimagining cemeteries as sanctuaries for pollinators.

In many old stories, bees are more than just insects. They’re messengers—tiny intermediaries between the living and the dead. There was once even a custom in Europe and America known as “telling the bees:” When a family member died, or another significant life event occurred, someone would go to the hive to share the news….

Dispatches from Greenland, Part Two: Nuuk

Dispatches from Greenland, Part Two: Nuuk

An insider’s guide to Greenland’s mysterious, overlooked, and charming capital.

Greenland is too vast to take in all at once. Yet a few days in Nuuk—the island’s compact, curious capital, just a four-hour flight from Newark—offer a surprisingly complete portrait. Nuuk changes like the weather that shapes it: by turns wild and polished; intimate and bold. To Northerners, it feels as hectic as Manhattan; to…

Paddle Camping on a One-Acre Island

Paddle Camping on a One-Acre Island

Posey Island in the San Juans is Washington State Parks’ smallest marine park, where seals, tide pools, and even orcas make appearances.

Stroke after stroke, we paddled further and further away from safety. Should we be here with our two precious kids, I thought as we headed out toward open water. As we rounded the corner it became clear and I let out a sigh of relief—yes, we can do this.  Over Labor Day weekend, my wife…

Kayaking the Bioluminescent Waters of San Juan Island

Kayaking the Bioluminescent Waters of San Juan Island

Sea sparkles and glowing jellyfish turn a nighttime paddle into an unforgettable adventure.

Under the cover of darkness, our small pod of explorers expanded into the waters of Griffin Bay in search of glow-in-the-dark marine life. Home to noctiluca scintillans, or “sea sparkles,” the waters of the Salish Sea around San Juan Island were named in Lonely Planet’s 2024 list of best places for bioluminescent viewing in the…