
The deaths of at least six foreign nationals in a fiery van crash in eastern Idaho are a reminder that the visitors who throng to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks from around the world travel on scenic byways that can be as dangerous as the regionās grizzly bears and boiling hot pools.
The van collided with a pickup truck Thursday on a highway just west of Yellowstone. Both vehicles caught fire, and the survivors were taken to hospitals with injuries, according to police. The tourists who were killed were from Italy and China, officials said.
The Chinese Consulate General in San Francisco said eight Chinese citizens were injured in the crash. The accident comes after a crash in 2019 of a bus from Las Vegas carrying Chinese tourists that rolled over near southern Utahās Bryce National Park, killing four people and injuring dozens more.
WhereĀ theĀ vanĀ inĀ Thursdayās accident was coming from and going was unknown. SomeĀ YellowstoneĀ roads, includingĀ theĀ one south of Old Faithful āĀ theĀ parkās most famous geyser āĀ wereĀ still closed afterĀ theĀ snowy winter.
TheĀ highway whereĀ theĀ accident happened south of WestĀ Yellowstone, Montana, offers a wayĀ toĀ get betweenĀ YellowstoneĀ and Grand Teton at this time of year, before a north-south route is plowed andĀ theĀ park fully opens for summer.
National parks including the world’s first, Yellowstone, draw visitors from worldwide
According to the most recent data from the International Trade Administration, 36 per centĀ of international visitors who arrived to the U.S. by air listed visits to national parks and national monuments as their top leisure activity while in the U.S.

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Seventeen percent of Yellowstoneās visitors came from other countriesĀ inĀ 2016, accordingĀ toĀ a park visitor use study withĀ theĀ most recent comprehensive data available.
Visitors from Europe and Asia accounted for the majority of travelers from outside the U.S., with 34 per cent from China, 11 per cent from Italy and 10 per cent rom Canada.
TheĀ COVID-19 pandemic changed those numbers significantly, said Brian Riley whose Wyoming-based business, Old Hand Holdings, marketsĀ theĀ YellowstoneĀ regionĀ inĀ China and runs tours.
āEvery Chinese is taught how greatĀ YellowstoneĀ isĀ inĀ their elementary school,ā Riley said Friday.
TheĀ pandemic put a sharp brake on tourism of all kinds but especially from China, which has yetĀ toĀ recover, Riley observed. Now, visits by people already livingĀ inĀ theĀ U.S. account for most visits by Chinese, he said.
āForeignersĀ inĀ general they donāt feel safe over here like they did before,ā Riley said Friday. āTheĀ Chinese are kind of preaching that behindĀ theĀ scenes.ā
TheĀ U.S. tourism industry expected 2025Ā toĀ be another good year for foreign visitors. But several monthsĀ in,Ā internationalĀ arrivalsĀ have been plummeting.Ā Angered by President Donald TrumpāsĀ tariffsĀ andĀ rhetoric, and alarmed by reports ofĀ touristsĀ beingĀ arrested atĀ theĀ border, some citizens of other countries are staying away fromĀ theĀ U.S. and choosingĀ toĀ travel elsewhere.
Riley, who grew upĀ inĀ Jackson, Wyoming, just south of Grand Teton and livedĀ inĀ China for a timeĀ toĀ learn Mandarin and why Chinese wantedĀ toĀ visitĀ theĀ U.S., is more focused of late on getting themĀ toĀ visit Hawaii, a state perceived as less dangerous.
International visitors are all ages
Yellowstoneās crowds peakĀ inĀ theĀ summer, butĀ internationalĀ tourism peaksĀ inĀ spring and fall, accordingĀ toĀ Riley and WestĀ YellowstoneĀ Mayor Jeff McBirnie.
Many foreign visitors are parents ofĀ internationalĀ students at U.S. colleges and universities.
āTheyāre like, āHey letās drop our kid off and go on vacation for a week.ā Or kidās graduating, letās get them through college and go on vacation,āā said McBirnie, who owns a pizza placeĀ inĀ town. āThey really bring a huge economic impactĀ toĀ this town.ā
YellowstoneĀ suffered a one-two punch betweenĀ theĀ pandemicĀ andĀ devastating floodsĀ inĀ 2022 that cut off accessĀ toĀ parts ofĀ theĀ park for months.
Tourism rebounded with 4.7 million visitors last year, Yellowstoneās second-busiest on record.
A ālegionā of road deaths over the past century
Winding roads and natural distractions help fuel numerous accidentsĀ inĀ and aroundĀ theĀ park.
TheĀ first death involving a passengerĀ vehicleĀ inĀ YellowstoneĀ came just a few years afterĀ theĀ park was completely motorized and a fleet of buses replacedĀ theĀ stage coaches and horses used for transportĀ inĀ theĀ parkās early years.
InĀ 1921, a 10-passenger bus went offĀ theĀ roadĀ inĀ theĀ Fishing BridgeĀ areaĀ ofĀ theĀ park and down an embankment, killing a 38-year-old Texas woman when her neck was broken, accordingĀ toĀ park historian Lee Whittlesey.
WhittleseyĀ inĀ his book āDeathsĀ inĀ Yellowstone.ā chronicles deaths by all means ā- from drowningsĀ inĀ hot springs,Ā toĀ bear maulings, airplane crashes and murders. Auto deaths, Whittlesey wrote, are ālegionāĀ inĀ theĀ park,Ā toĀ theĀ point that he felt them too ordinaryĀ toĀ includeĀ inĀ his tally of fatalities.
Another accounting ofĀ deathsĀ inĀ YellowstoneĀ says at least 17 people died insideĀ theĀ parkĀ inĀ motorĀ vehicleĀ crashes since 2007, ranking itĀ theĀ second most common cause of deaths behind medical issues.
Whittlesey presagedĀ theĀ chapter of his book covering road deaths with a quote attributedĀ toĀ theĀ 15th century soothsayer Mother Shipton: āCarriages without horses shall go, And Accidents fillĀ theĀ world with woe.ā
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