At the edge of one of North America’s most iconic landscapes, Twelve Day Rentals in Grand Canyon Village offers a fail-safe way to outfit an overnight canyon trip without hauling gear across state lines. Located at Market Plaza near Yavapai Lodge and Trailer Village RV Park on the South Rim, this shop lets you pick up name-brand backpacking equipment—The North Face, Black Diamond, Leki—between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m., then return it the following day during the same hours. For travelers arriving with a tight pack or flying in, carrying a daypack to the rim and walking into the canyon can still require technical clothing and dependable sleep systems. Twelve Day Rentals supplies tents, four-season and three-season sleeping bags, backpacks, trekking poles, stoves, and other essentials sized for canyon routes. The Grand Canyon’s layered sedimentary rock, steep switchbacks, and sharply changing temperatures reward lightweight, tested gear; renting reduces car clutter and keeps hikers moving light on steep descents and grueling ascents. This is practical gear rental rooted in place: the Market Plaza location makes the shop a true part of South Rim logistics, steps from lodging and the shuttle network. That proximity turns what could be a logistical headache into a straightforward stop—grab last-minute snacks and maps at the Canyon Village Market, pick up your kit, and head to a trailhead like Bright Angel or South Kaibab. Returning equipment the following day between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. is simple, and the staff’s focus is on reliable, familiar brands compatible with backcountry permit requirements. Beyond convenience, renting reduces the environmental footprint of one-time gear purchases and encourages responsible packing—critical in a park where fragile desert plants cling to thin soils and trails funnel runoff into narrow arroyos. If you’re tentative about buying a high-end sleeping bag or a particular backpack volume, testing it on a canyon overnight is the smartest way to decide. Twelve Day Rentals is not a guided outfitter; it’s a rental service that makes canyon travel more accessible and safer for people who already have navigation skills. Bring your permit, plan margins for the canyon’s steep elevation changes, and know the return window. For visitors staying in Grand Canyon Village, it’s the kind of local resource that turns an ambitious overnight into a manageable, memorable trip. Plan for temperature swings: layers, a reliable headlamp, and extra water treatment are nonnegotiable when you descend. Staff can advise on common item sizes but do not issue permits or guide you; secure any backcountry permits through park channels in advance. Renting also frees space for cameras, food, or extra fuel. If you find a piece that fits perfectly, Canyon Village Market often stocks replacement items and souvenirs so you can leave the park equipped.