Beach Parking Like a Local
How to stop paying $40 to sit on free sand
Vacation Florida
Florida, United States
The most expensive part of a Florida beach day is usually the 200 feet between your car and the sand. Lot prices at the famous beaches run $20–40 in peak season — and locals almost never pay them.
The local playbook: arrive before 9am, when even paid lots are cheap or empty and street spots still exist. Look 2–3 blocks inland — most beach towns have free or metered neighborhood streets a five-minute walk from the water (read the signs; towing is Florida's other state sport). State parks are the best value in the state: $6–8 per carload for all-day parking at beaches that routinely beat the famous ones — Fort De Soto, Honeymoon Island, Grayton Beach, St. Andrews.
And if a beach's parking is legendarily bad (looking at you, Clearwater on a Saturday), that's usually your sign to swap the beach, not eat the cost. There's almost always a better one 20 minutes away with a $6 lot. This guide is full of them.
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