A high-desert outpost on the Colorado River that grew from uranium boomtown to the front door of two national parks and the spiritual home of mountain biking.
Destination Leader
Online tier, provisional until field audit
A Destination Leader that turned collapse into a global brand: after uranium busted, Moab rebuilt itself around two national parks and one improbable motorcycle trail, and now hosts roughly 1.5 million visitors to Arches alone for a town of 5,366 residents.
Pop. 5,366 (2020 Census), ZIP 84532, Utah. U is the Unique Hook multiplier, then seven components. Framework VIS v1.0, online tier.
| Category | Name | Grade | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| U | UNIQUE HOOK | multiplier | 1.2x |
| W | WEB | C+ | 78 |
| B | BRAND | B+ | 88 |
| A | ANCHOR | A+ | 97 |
| D | DOWNTOWN | C- | 72 |
| C | CURB | C | 74 |
| S | STAY | B- | 80 |
| R | RETURN | B+ | 88 |
Moab’s peak-season crush strains both the parks and the community, which is why Arches now runs a timed-entry reservation system in its busy months. The clearest opportunity is to deepen the shoulder seasons so demand smooths out across more of the year (The Times-Independent).
Local tourism officials have openly grappled with softening visitation and the risk of losing relevance to flashier destinations. Widening the narrative beyond the two or three photos everyone already has makes the visitor economy steadier and gives the parks room to breathe (The Times-Independent).
Grand County counts fewer than 10,000 residents, so nearly all demand is imported from Salt Lake City, Grand Junction, and Denver. The upside is turning that drive-market reach into longer, lower-season stays rather than relying on peak-season day trippers, lifting per-visitor value (Salt Lake Tribune).
Population 5,366 residents (2020 census), in a Grand County of fewer than 10,000.
Situation A century-old boomtown that chased uranium until the price collapsed and the mill went quiet, leaving Moab to find a future it could not mine out.
Action The town built its reinvention on one trail, two tireless park advocates, and a community that chose hospitality over extraction, turning slickrock into a global mountain-biking brand.
Result Roughly 1.5 million visitors to Arches alone and a regional parks economy worth more than $486 million a year, supporting thousands of jobs for a town of 5,366.
Drive into Moab today and the story it tells you is one of permanence: red cliffs that look five thousand years old because they are, a tidy main street, a steady current of Sprinter vans and gravel bikes. The truth underneath is far less settled. For most of its history Moab was a town that boomed, busted, and held its breath waiting for the next thing to come along.
The first attempt to plant a town here failed outright. Latter-day Saint settlers rode in to establish a trading fort at the Colorado River crossing, the Elk Mountain Mission, in April 1855, and abandoned it by late September after conflict with the region’s Ute inhabitants left three men dead and their crops destroyed (Wikipedia). A second wave of settlers stuck it out in the late 1870s, and the town finally incorporated on December 20, 1902 (Wikipedia). For half a century after that it was a quiet ranching and farming valley, beautiful and broke and a very long way from anywhere.
Then came the atom. In the 1950s Moab earned the nickname “Uranium Capital of the World” after a geologist named Charles Steen reached a rich ore body southeast of town (Wikipedia). On July 6, 1952 Steen hit his Mi Vida claim, a strike that made him a multimillionaire dubbed the “Uranium King” and set off a prospecting rush across the Four Corners that historians compare to the California Gold Rush (Wikipedia). Moab’s population more than tripled in a decade. The nation’s second-largest uranium mill rose just outside town. And then, as every boomtown eventually learns, the price collapsed, the mill went quiet, and Moab was left holding a half-built future with no obvious way to pay for it.
Charles Steen was a broke, college-trained geologist working out of a tar-paper shack when he bet on a theory most established prospectors dismissed: that uranium would be found in deep geologic structures, not just the surface outcrops everyone was scratching at. He was nearly out of money and ridiculed locally as “Madman Steen” when his drill finally pulled up high-grade ore at Mi Vida in 1952. The fortune that followed, estimated near $130 million at its peak, evaporated when the uranium market turned later in the decade (Wikipedia). His story is the whole arc of Moab in one man: a spectacular bet on the ground beneath the town, and a hard lesson about depending on any single boom.

When the uranium money left, Moab faced the question every resource town eventually faces. What do you sell when the thing you were selling runs out? The valley still had everything that had made prospectors fall in love with it, just none of the reasons to dig. It had the Colorado River. It had two of the most photogenic landscapes in North America sitting at its doorstep. And it had a strange, grippy, petrified-dune surface that locals called slickrock and treated mostly as an obstacle.
The challenge was that natural beauty, on its own, does not make a payroll. Arches and Canyonlands were spectacular but remote, and through the mid-twentieth century they saw a trickle of visitors rather than a flood. Turning Moab from a place people drove through into a place people planned a trip around would require three things at once: protected landscapes worth the drive, a distinct activity that belonged to Moab and nowhere else, and a town willing to rebuild its identity around hosting visitors instead of extracting ore.
Moab’s geographic luck is hard to overstate. The entrance to Arches National Park sits just 4 miles north of town on US 191 (Wikipedia), and Canyonlands spreads out to the southwest. Arches alone protects the densest concentration of natural stone arches on the planet, crowned by Delicate Arch, the free-standing 52-foot span that became the state symbol of Utah and rides on the state’s license plates (Wikipedia). You cannot manufacture that kind of front yard. Moab simply had to decide to build a town worthy of it.
The pivot did not arrive as a grand plan. It arrived as a motorcycle trail. In 1969 a local named Richard R. Wilson laid out a looping route across the petrified dunes northeast of town for Honda Trail 90 dirt bikes, years before the mountain bike was even invented (Wikipedia). That 10.5-mile loop, the Slickrock Trail, turned out to be the single most consequential piece of recreation infrastructure in Moab’s modern history. When the mountain bike emerged in the 1980s, riders discovered that the same grippy sandstone that made the route fun on two motorized wheels made it transcendent on two human-powered ones.
The timing was almost poetic. Moab’s uranium processing plant closed in 1982. The very next year, Bill and Robin Groff opened Rim Cyclery, the town’s first mountain-bike shop, and a brand-new recreation economy began to take root in the cracks the old one left behind (Hazard County Shuttle). Word spread the way it does among riders: if you only ride one trail in your life, ride Slickrock. By the 1990s Moab had a global reputation as the place mountain biking went to define itself.

Trails draw riders, but parks draw everyone, and Moab’s parks did not protect themselves. The towering figure here is Bates Wilson, superintendent of Arches and Natural Bridges from 1949 to 1972, remembered across southeast Utah as the “Father of Canyonlands” (Friends of Arches and Canyonlands Parks). Wilson spent years exploring the backcountry by jeep and lobbying for protection, famously hosting government officials at campfire dutch-oven dinners deep in the canyons. One of those guests, Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, came away convinced, and on September 12, 1964 President Lyndon Johnson signed Canyonlands National Park into existence (Moab Museum).
Just as important was the town’s decision to organize around its visitors rather than resent them. Civic leaders chartered what is now the Moab Museum back in 1958 to keep the valley’s layered story alive, from its first inhabitants through the uranium years (Moab Museum). Today tourism makes up roughly three-quarters of Moab’s employment, a near-total reinvention from the extraction economy that came before (Hazard County Shuttle).
Slickrock is a bit of a misnomer. The Navajo sandstone around Moab is anything but slick to a rubber tire. The fossilized dunes give modern bike tires extraordinary grip, letting riders climb and descend pitches that would be unthinkable on dirt. That single quirk of geology is why a trail originally cut for lightweight Honda motorcycles in 1969 became, two decades later, the proving ground for an entire sport (Wikipedia). It is also a reminder that Moab’s brand was not invented in a marketing meeting. It was carved into the ground 200 million years ago and simply waited for the right wheels to find it.
The numbers tell the story of a reinvention that worked. Arches National Park drew roughly 1.5 million visitors in 2023, and those visitors spent an estimated $283 million in the gateway communities around the park, supporting 3,650 jobs and generating $346 million in total economic output (National Park Service). Widen the lens to the full Southeast Utah Group of parks, which includes Canyonlands, and the picture grows larger still: 2.4 million visitors in 2023 spending $397.6 million, supporting 5,122 regional jobs, and delivering a cumulative benefit to local economies of $486.1 million (National Park Service).
For a town of just 5,366 people, that is a staggering ratio of visitor value to resident headcount (Census). Grand County logged roughly $456.6 million in direct visitor spending in 2024, and about 3,500 jobs in the county are tied to travel and tourism (Salt Lake Tribune). Tourism tax revenue, in turn, quietly funds county services that residents rely on year-round, a direct line from the visitor on the trail to the road getting paved (The Times-Independent).
The biggest opportunity for Moab is not getting noticed. It is getting balanced. The town has a documented dependence on a short list of marquee draws and a peak-season crush that strains both the parks and the community, which is exactly why Arches now runs a timed-entry reservation system in its busy months (The Times-Independent). Local tourism officials have openly grappled with softening visitation and the risk of “losing relevance” to flashier destinations (The Times-Independent). The public-facing opportunity is clear and ownable: spread demand across more of the calendar, deepen the shoulder seasons, and broaden the story beyond the two or three images everyone already has, so the visitor economy becomes steadier and the parks get room to breathe.
Moab spent its first hundred years digging for value and its second hundred discovering that the value was never underground. It was the red rock itself, the river, the parks, and one improbable motorcycle trail that turned out to be a global brand. The town did not get lucky so much as it got clear: it identified the one thing it could offer that nowhere else could, then organized an entire community around delivering it well.
That is what a high Visitor Impact Score reflects. Not just beautiful scenery, which plenty of places have, but a town that has converted a singular identity into a working visitor economy with real jobs, real revenue, and real civic pride behind it. Moab scores a 99 and lands in the Destination Leader band because it figured out its ownable story and then actually built the town to match. Most places are sitting on a story just as strong. They simply haven’t said it out loud yet.
Moab anchors a small but high-spending feeder base. Grand County itself counts fewer than 10,000 residents, so nearly all demand is imported. The nearest major metro is Salt Lake City, roughly a 3.5 to 4 hour drive northwest, with Grand Junction, Colorado about 1.75 hours east and Denver within a long day’s drive. The opportunity is to convert that drive-market reach into longer, lower-season stays rather than relying on peak-season day trippers, smoothing the calendar and lifting per-visitor value.
On the Visitor Impact Score curve, Moab lands in the Destination Leader band at 99, a snapshot of how much of its raw potential is currently built for visitors.
Park superintendent, 1949 to 1972
Known as the “Father of Canyonlands,” Wilson spent two decades exploring and championing southeast Utah’s red rock, and his campfire lobbying helped persuade Congress to create Canyonlands National Park in 1964 (Friends of Arches and Canyonlands Parks).
Slickrock Trail founder
In 1969 Wilson laid out the 10.5-mile Slickrock Trail across the petrified dunes near Moab for motorcycles, inadvertently creating what became the most famous mountain-biking route in the world (Wikipedia).
Rim Cyclery founders, 1983
The year after the uranium mill closed, the Groffs opened Moab’s first mountain-bike shop and helped seed the recreation economy that now supplies roughly three-quarters of the town’s jobs (Hazard County Shuttle).
Community institution, est. 1958
Chartered by civic leaders in 1958, the museum collects and shares the valley’s full story, from its first inhabitants through the uranium boom, giving visitors a reason to understand the place and not just photograph it (Moab Museum).
Read the method. The VIS framework scores eight categories, one multiplier (Unique Hook) and seven components (Web, Brand, Anchor, Downtown, Curb, Stay, Return). Online-tier scores are derived from desk research; audit-tier categories require a physical visit and shift the composite once a field trip is logged.
Image credits. Hero: “Arches National Park, Moab – Utah” by Janusz Sobolewski, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Section 1: “Main Street of Moab” by David Hiser, U.S. National Archives (NARA 545610), public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Section 3: “Aerial of White Run and Grandview Point in Canyonlands National Park, town of Moab on the Colorado River” by David Hiser, U.S. National Archives (NARA 553059), public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Divider artwork: Creative City Developments.
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