The top 10 most-visited US national parks and memorials

Deep South, North Carolina, Southern Appalachians, Asheville, Blue Ridge Parkway. (Dukas/Christian Heeb/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Nearly 312 million people visited national parks and memorials last year, up more than 5% over 2021.

Attendance at the most popular ten sites nearly accounted for a third of all foot traffic, according to the National Park Service.

Great-Smoky-Mountains-Tennessee.jpg

FILE-Views of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park are seen in Tennessee, United States on November 10, 2018. (Patrick Gorski/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Here is a list of the national parks and memorials that topped the list. 

  1. Blue Ridge Parkway, 15.7 million
  2. Golden Gate National Recreation Area, 15.6 million
  3. Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 12.9 million
  4. Gateway National Recreation Area, 8.7 million
  5. Lincoln Memorial, 7.8 million
  6. George Washington Memorial Parkway, 7.4 million
  7. Natchez Trace Parkway, 6.5 million
  8. Gulf Islands National Seashore, 5.7 million
  9. Lake Mead National Recreation Area, 5.6 million
  10. Vietnam Veterans Memorial, 4.9 million
Lincoln-Memorial-DC.jpg

Visitors at the Lincoln Memorial during unseasonably warm weather in Washington, DC, US, on Thursday, Feb. 23, 2023. (Anna Rose Layden/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

2022 National Site Visitor Rankings

National-Park-Service-survey.jpg

Popular parks like Yosemite and Yellowstone came in at numbers 20 and 25, respectively. 

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK WARNS OF DANGERS AFTER FIRST GRIZZLY BEAR SIGHTING OF 2023

San-Francisco-Golden-Gate-bridge.jpg

FILE-View of the Golden Gate Bridge from Marine Headlands with San Francisco, California, USA in the background. (Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Weather causes problems at the parks

Yellowstone National Park may have ranked in the top 25 most visited, but catastrophic flooding forced one of the main entrances to the parks to close for four months.

On the morning of June 13, 2022, flooding and rockslides forced the closure of the main roadway near Yellowstone National Park's North Entrance.

Roads and bridges inside the United States' oldest national park were destroyed, as well as surrounding communities.

Engineers and workers with state and federal groups came together and worked seven days a week to clear debris and rebuild roads, eventually leading to the reopening in late October. 

More recently, weather forced the closure of Yosemite National Park.

WATCH: ROCKFALL IN YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK CRASHES DOWN THE SIDE OF EL CAPITAN

Park officials first closed Yosemite National Park at the end of February when a barrage of storm systems dumped over 15 feet of snow, overpowering crews working hard to remove snow and keep the national park open for visitors.

Yosemite remained closed into mid-March as more powerful storms impacted California

Get the latest updates on this story at FOXWeather.com.