You've scored tickets. You've told everyone you know. You've probably already picked out an outfit. Now here's the part that makes the difference between walking out of Red Rocks thinking "that was amazing" and walking out thinking "that was the greatest night of my life."
Red Rocks isn't like other venues. It's an outdoor amphitheatre carved into ancient sandstone at 6,450 feet elevation, 15 miles west of Denver, in a park where dinosaurs once roamed. The experience is extraordinary—but it rewards those who come prepared.
Here are the tips that first-timers actually need.
Before You Go
Download the Red Rocks App
The official Red Rocks app has maps, weather alerts, event info, and your digital tickets all in one place. Download it before you go, especially since cell service can be spotty in the foothills. Have your AXS ticket pulled up and ready before you arrive.
Check the Weather—Then Prepare for It to Be Wrong
Colorado mountain weather is legendarily unpredictable. At 6,450 feet, you can experience 75°F sunshine at doors and 45°F with rain by the encore.
Non-negotiable packing list:
- Layers (hoodie or light jacket, even in summer)
- A poncho or packable rain jacket (umbrellas are prohibited)
- Sunscreen (the altitude intensifies UV—you will burn faster)
- Sunglasses (for shows that start before sunset)
Summer rule of thumb: If the show starts at 7 PM, expect warm temps at arrival, comfortable during the show, and cool to cold by 10 PM. Always have a layer ready.
Dress for a Mild Hike, Not a Night Out
This is the #1 mistake first-timers make. Red Rocks insiders say you can spot the newcomers instantly because they show up in heels and dress shoes.
The venue involves significant stair climbing, potentially uneven terrain walking from parking lots, and hard bleacher seats. Think of it as attending a concert on a mountain—because that's essentially what you're doing.
Wear:
- Comfortable, closed-toe shoes with good grip (sneakers or hiking shoes)
- Clothes you can layer
- Nothing you'd be upset about getting rained on
Skip:
- Heels of any kind (the stairs are steep and the steps are not uniform)
- Brand-new shoes (you'll walk more than you expect)
- Anything you can't sit on a bench in comfortably
Eat Before You Arrive
While there are concession stands inside the venue, the lines can be long and the options are standard venue fare. Many experienced Red Rocks goers eat a full meal before arriving and bring their own snacks.
You can bring food in—but it must be in a clear plastic bag (one gallon or less), with fruit and vegetables pre-sliced, and plastic utensils only.
Getting There
Timing Is Everything
Arrive 90 minutes to 2 hours before doors. This isn't overcautious—it's the sweet spot. Here's why:
- Parking lots open 2 hours before door time
- The best parking lots (Upper North) fill first
- For GA shows, the best seats go to early arrivals
- Traffic on the mountain roads can back up significantly as door time approaches
- Tailgating is allowed and encouraged—make the pre-show part of the experience
The Drive
Red Rocks is about 25 minutes from downtown Denver via I-70 West (Exit 259, Morrison Road). The drive is beautiful—winding through the foothills with the Rocks visible in the distance. But it's also a two-lane mountain road that becomes a parking lot when 9,500 people all try to arrive at the same time.
Navigation tip: Don't rely solely on GPS. Follow the Red Rocks directional signs once you're in the Morrison area. Some GPS apps will try to route you through residential neighborhoods that don't actually have venue access.
Parking Strategy
There are five main parking lots, each with trade-offs:
| Lot | Best For | The Catch |
|---|---|---|
| Upper North | Easiest venue access, least stairs | Fills up first |
| Lower North | Larger capacity, moderate walk | Steep stair climb to venue |
| Upper South | ADA accessible | Limited spaces, construction |
| Lower South (1 & 2) | Best tailgating scene | Longest walk to venue |
| Top Circle | Limo/shuttle drop-off only | Not for personal vehicles |
First-timer recommendation: Arrive early and aim for the Upper North Lot. It connects to the top entrance near the Visitor Center and requires the least walking. If it's full, the Lower North Lot is larger but involves the famous Red Rocks staircase climb.
The Better Option: Don't Drive
Honestly? The single best tip for first-timers is to let someone else handle the transportation.
Between the unfamiliar mountain roads, parking lot confusion, post-show traffic, altitude-enhanced effects of any drinks, and the fact that you'll be physically tired from the stairs—having a designated driver (professional or otherwise) transforms the experience.
Options include public shuttle services, rideshare (pickup is in the Jurassic Lot near Entrance 2), or a private car service that drops you at the Top Circle Lot and picks you up at the same spot after the show.
Inside the Venue
Navigating the Amphitheatre
Once you're through security (have your bags open and ready—single-pocket bags only), you'll enter from either the top or bottom of the venue depending on your parking lot.
From the top (Upper North Lot / Visitor Center): You'll enter near row 70 and walk down to your seat. This is the easier entry.
From the bottom (Lower lots): You'll enter near the stage and walk up to your seat. Prepare your calves.
Claim Your Seat Early (for GA Shows)
For general admission shows, seating is first-come, first-served within your designated rows. Once you're inside:
- Scope out the section you want (see our Best Seats at Red Rocks guide for row-by-row advice)
- Lay down a blanket or sit down to claim your space
- You can leave and come back—but don't expect your exact spot to be held unless someone in your group stays
Best all-around seats for first-timers: Anywhere in the row 25–35 range, center. You'll get the full acoustic experience, a clear view of the stage, and the Denver skyline behind it.
Hydration Is Non-Negotiable
The altitude (6,450 feet) causes faster dehydration than you're used to, especially combined with physical activity (all those stairs), alcohol, and sun exposure.
- Bring an empty reusable water bottle (32 oz or less)—refill stations are located throughout the venue
- Hydration packs (CamelBak, 2L or smaller) are allowed but must be emptied before entry
- Drink water before you feel thirsty
- Alternate between alcoholic drinks and water if you're drinking
Restrooms
There are permanent restrooms and portable facilities throughout the venue. Lines get longest during intermissions and between the opener and headliner.
Pro tip: The restrooms nearest the top of the venue (by row 70 and the Visitor Center) typically have the shortest lines.
Concessions
Standard venue fare: beer, wine, cocktails, sodas, water, hot dogs, pretzels, etc. Prices are venue-standard (expect $10–15 for drinks). The Ship Rock Grille restaurant is on-site but typically closed during events.
After the Show
The Exit Strategy
This is where first-timers get caught off guard. When the show ends, 9,525 people all start moving at once, and the parking lot exit can take 30–45 minutes.
Option 1: Leave during the encore. You'll beat the rush but miss the finale. Some people are okay with this trade-off.
Option 2: Hang back. Stay in your seat for 10–15 minutes after the show ends. Enjoy the afterglow, let the initial rush clear, and then make your way out. The venue is beautiful under the stars.
Option 3: Have your ride handled. If you've got a private car waiting at the Top Circle Lot, you walk straight to your vehicle and roll out while everyone else is still trying to find their car in the Lower South lot in the dark.
Remember Where You Parked
This sounds obvious, but it's the #1 post-show frustration. The parking lots look very different in the dark, and when you're tired, slightly dehydrated, and surrounded by thousands of people all walking in different directions, it's easier than you'd think to get disoriented.
Take a photo of your parking spot (include any nearby landmarks or lot signs) and drop a pin on your phone's map app.
Rideshare Pickup
If you're using Uber or Lyft, all rideshare pickups happen at the Jurassic Lot near Entrance 2. Follow the Will Call Trail from the Trading Post area. Expect long wait times for rideshare—surge pricing is common and demand massively outstrips supply after big shows.
The First-Timer Checklist
Before you leave home:
- [ ] Tickets loaded in AXS app
- [ ] Red Rocks app downloaded
- [ ] Weather checked
- [ ] Comfortable shoes on
- [ ] Layers packed (jacket/hoodie)
- [ ] Poncho or rain jacket
- [ ] Sunscreen applied
- [ ] Reusable water bottle (empty, 32 oz or less)
- [ ] Snacks in clear plastic bag (optional)
- [ ] Small seat cushion (optional, must be under 18" wide)
- [ ] Single-pocket bag only (13" x 15" x 8" max)
- [ ] Phone charged + portable charger
- [ ] Transportation planned
When you arrive:
- [ ] Photo of parking spot
- [ ] Bags open for security
- [ ] Water bottle filled at refill station
- [ ] Seat claimed (for GA shows)
- [ ] Deep breath. Look around. Take it in.
The Easiest Way to Do Your First Red Rocks Right
There's a lot to coordinate for your first time—parking, navigation, timing, weather prep, exit strategy. Or you can simplify all of it with one decision: let someone else drive.
Because you matter—and so does your first time at the Rocks.
For the complete picture, see our The Complete Guide to Colorado Concerts (2026 Edition).
Make the whole night effortless.
Door-to-door luxury transportation to Red Rocks and beyond. No parking stress. No rideshare surge. Because You Matter.
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