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America’s Longest Beach Shoreline Is in Alaska

While many people think of California or Florida when thinking of beaches in America, the country’s longest coastline is much farther north. Not only is Alaska by far America’s largest state (more than twice as large as second-place Texas), it boasts the nation’s longest coastline at 33,904 miles. Florida is way behind in second place at 8,436 miles.
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This Florida Beach Has The Most Shark Attacks In The World

While shark attacks are exceedingly rare, they happen more in the United States than any other country. And the beach that lays claim to the dubious honor of hosting the most shark attacks in the world is New Smyrna Beach near Daytona, Florida, known as “the world’s shark bite capital.” In Volusia County, where the beach is located, there have been at least 320 confirmed shark bites since 1882.
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America’s First Public Beach Dates Back to 1896 Massachusetts

It is perhaps unsurprising that America’s first public beach is just 5 miles from downtown Boston in a town named after Paul Revere. But it’s true. Revere Beach, in the town of Revere, lays claim to the honor of “America’s First Beach.” The 3-mile beach was founded in 1896, one year after a rail link to the beach was established along the Boston, Revere Beach, & Lynn Railroad.
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There’s a Green Sand Beach In Hawaii, One of Only Four in the World

On the southern tip of the Big Island of Hawaii, Papakolea Beach is one of only four green sand beaches in the world. The sand gets its unique coloring from crystals created by the mineral olivine, which can be found in the surrounding volcanic rock — with the beach itself carved into a 49,000-year-old volcano.
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There Are Dozens of Nude Beaches In More Than 22 States

While nude sunbathing is still not as commonplace or socially acceptable in America as compared with Europe, there are still dozens of beaches in the States where it is legal to strut your stuff in the buff. Haulover Beach near Miami is one of the country’s most popular nude beaches, while Black’s Beach near San Diego is one of the most beautiful. Just remember to wear sunblock.
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This Indiana Beach Is One Of America’s Newest National Parks

In 2019, Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore became America’s 61st national park when it was renamed Indiana Dunes National Park. Hugging 15 miles of the southern shore of Lake Michigan less than 50 miles from downtown Chicago, the national park boasts more than 50 miles of trails across 15,000 acres. You can even explore the dunes on horseback.
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There’s a UFO on this Oregon Nude Beach

No, it’s not an actual UFO. But the 31-foot oddity known as the “UFO Boat” on the quirky nude beach of Collins Beach near Portland is certainly one of America’s more unique beach attractions. Covered in graffiti, the washed-ashore “UFO” is a popular photo-op spot on Sauvie Island, along the Columbia River.
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This California Beach Is on the Edge of a Toxic Lake

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You Need to Sign a Waiver to Visit the Beaches of This Remote California Island

Just 12 miles off the coast of Southern California at its closest point, Channel Islands National Park is one of America’s most underrated destinations. Its farthest and most remote island, San Miguel Island, features stunning beaches but — with the island once used as a former bombing range by the U.S. Navy — you need to sign a waiver before visiting due to the possibility of encountering unexploded land mines. (Want to catch a glimpse of the Channel Islands from the comfort and safety of home? Be sure to check out National Park Webcams Where You Can See the Wilderness from Home.)
Florida’s Sanibel Island Boasts Some of the Finest Shelling in the World

While the beaches along Florida’s eastern shore get most of the attention (and tourists), Florida’s lesser-visited Gulf Coast contains a wealth of natural gems such as Sanibel Island near Fort Myers. The beaches are known for some of the finest shelling in the world, with the “Sanibel Stoop” a popular phrase depicting the hunched-over posture of beachgoers combing the sand for shells.
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Wild Horses Roam the Shores of This Maryland Beach

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There’s an Annual Music Festival on This Beach

The beautiful beaches of Gulf Shores, Alabama, across the state line from Florida’s more heavily visited Pensacola, are some of the most underrated in America. Yet their profile has been raised in recent years thanks to the presence of the annual Hangout Music Festival, which welcomes a variety of rock acts across several beachfront stages.
‘Surf City’ Is in California, Not Hawaii

While surfing in America originated in Hawaii, the title of “Surf City USA” is claimed by Huntington Beach, California. One of America’s most popular beaches known for its terrific year-round surf conditions, Huntington Beach is home to the International Surfing Museum and hosts the annual U.S. Open for Surfing every summer.
You Can Legally Drink on This Nevada State Park Beach

While drinking is legal on a number of beaches in America, few are more beautiful than Sand Harbor perched on the shores of picturesque Lake Tahoe. Also known as Lake Tahoe Nevada State Park, this gorgeous stretch of paradise is known for its crystal clear waters shimmering against a glorious backdrop of alpine trees and mountains. Crucially, you can also buy booze from a concessionaire just off the beach.
There’s a Waterfall Flowing Into the Ocean at This Spectacular California Beach

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Myrtle Beach Is America’s Most-Visited Beach

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The Strange Sea Stacks on This Oregon Beach Were Seen in Several Movies

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You Can Get a Serious Workout on This California Beach

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Tree-Sized Fossils Have Been Found on This Florida Beach

Within Big Talbot Island State Park near Jacksonville, Florida, Boneyard Beach is known for its vast accumulation of bleached oak tree skeletons that can be found all over its sand. The beach is also home to a number of tree-sized fossils recently discovered by park archaeologists.
There’s a Stunning Glass Beach in California

One of the most stunningly unique beaches in all of America owes much of its fame to trash. In Northern California’s Mendocino County near Fort Bragg, MacKerricher State Park was once the site of a garbage dump. Today it is home to the iconic Glass Beach, where colorful glass fragments from broken bottles dot its one-of-a-kind landscape.
There’s a Red Sand Nude Beach in Hawaii

It’s Illegal to Take Rocks From This Spectacular Wisconsin Island Beach

North of Green Bay on the remote Washington Island in Door County, Wisconsin, you’ll find a beautiful beach. But you won’t find sand. Instead, you’ll find the shores of Schoolhouse Beach populated by smooth limestone rocks, one of only five beaches like it in the world. As much as you may be tempted, don’t try to take a souvenir rock with you: it’s illegal.
This Beach Has a Huge Music Venue On It

On some beaches, you can find a guy with an acoustic guitar. At Jones Beach on New York’s Long Island, you can find the full-service Jones Beach Amphitheater. Recently renamed Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater, the Live Nation-operated venue welcomes major touring acts each summer in a spectacular setting overlooking the water from the popular Jones Beach. Several shows are already scheduled for this year.
Michigan Boasts America’s Longest Freshwater Coastline

When it comes to beaches in America, Michigan is often overlooked. But it shouldn’t be. With 3,228 miles of coastline, the Wolverine State boasts the longest freshwater coastline in the country thanks to its shared border with four of the five Great Lakes. The state is also home to some of the most stunning beaches in the country, including Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore.
The Sand at This Massachusetts Beach ‘Sings’

About 30 miles north of Boston in the town Manchester-by-the-Sea, Singing Beach is one of America’s more curious beach attractions. While the beach doesn’t exactly sing as the name suggests, the sand does often emit a notable squeaking sound when stepped on dry during the right conditions. The sound is believed to be caused by friction between grains of sand.
The Finest Black Sand Beach on the Mainland Hides in California’s Lost Coast

This Beach Looks Like It Was Invaded by Bowling Balls

Near the northern terminus of the iconic Highway 1, beach seekers will find a most unusual sight at Bowling Ball Beach in Point Arena, California. at the northern edge of Schooner Gulch State Beach, the beach is named for the giant bowling ball-shaped rocks that can be seen off its coastline at low tide.
You Can Find Plenty of Shark Teeth on This Florida Beach

In a town known as “The Shark Tooth Capital of the World,” it makes sense that you can find shark teeth on its beaches. And one of the most popular spots to dig up the remains of fossilized shark teeth is Caspersen Beach in Venice, Florida. The town’s location makes it an ideal end point for prehistoric shark teeth washing onto shore.
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There’s a 19th Century Fort on This Florida National Park Beach

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There’s a Medieval Tower on This California Beach

You Can Check Out Ancient Rock Petroglyphs at This Washington Beach

Within the stunning Olympic National Park near the westernmost point of the continental U.S., Cape Alava is a remote wilderness of rugged beaches, unspoiled forests, and rocks that contain an unusual beach sight: ancient petroglyphs. Dating back to roughly 10,000 to 14,000 BC, the petroglyphs can be found in coastal areas of the cape such as Wedding Rocks.
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This Beach Is Surrounded by Massive 350-Foot Redwoods

Northern California’s Redwood National Park is of course known for its namesake trees, the tallest and some of the oldest on Earth. But just a mile from its shady redwood forests, visitors will discover the hidden gem of Enderts Beach. Stop by for sunset, play around in its tidepools, or just marvel at the magnificent views all around.
You Can Explore the ‘Edge of America’ at This South Carolina Beach

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A Purple Sand Beach Is Hidden Near Big Sur, California

Not to be confused with nearby Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, Pfeiffer Beach in Los Padres National Forest near Big Sur hides a most unusual sight for beachcombers: purple sand. At the end of an unmarked road, this easy-to-miss spot gets its purplish hue from manganese minerals in the surrounding cliffs. The purple coloring is not always visible and best viewed at sunset just after it rains.
There’s an Enormous Natural Sinkhole on This Oregon Beach

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There’s a Bar That Straddles Two States on This Florida/Alabama Beach

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You Can Drop Letters in a Mailbox on This North Carolina Beach

A beach isn’t the first place you’d expect to find a mailbox. But at Sunset Beach on North Carolina’s Bird Island, you will find just that. Known as the Kindred Spirit Mailbox, the mailbox has been collecting letters from locals and visitors for decades. According to legend, handwritten letters from locals even helped stop a planned development on the pristine island.
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Cannibalism Was Reportedly Practiced on This Maine Island

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‘Planet of the Apes’ Was Filmed on This Iconic Malibu Beach

Malibu’s Point Dume State Beach is easily one of the most beautiful beaches in America … and one of its most cinematic. Not only does the gorgeous rock bluff at the end of the beach make a great spot for whale watching; it was the filming location for the 1968 classic “Planet of the Apes” and its famous scale replica of the Statue of Liberty buried in the sand.
The Beaches on This Remote Hawaiian Island Have Been Forbidden to Outsiders

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There Are Birding Trails and Sand Dunes at a Chicago Beach Near Downtown

Chicago may be known for deep-dish pizza and Michael Jordan, but America’s third-largest city also quietly hides some of the most unique beaches in America. With many of its Lake Michigan beaches just steps from the city’s urban core, it looks as if some of the downtown high-rises come close to even touching the sand. On the city’s North Side, Montrose Beach includes birding trails and sand dunes.
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Fire Dancers Perform Nightly on This Florida Beach

If you thought native fire dancing was a thing of the past, you clearly haven’t been to Marco Island. The popular Florida family vacation destination is world-renowned for its white sand beaches and gorgeous sunsets off the Gulf Coast, but the sand outside the JW Marriott Marco Island Beach Resort is also where you can find nightly fire shows performed on the beach by hotel entertainers.
Several American Beaches Boast Full-Scale Amusement Parks

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You Can Drive a Car on Many Beaches

In a country as in love with the automobile as America, it is perhaps unsurprising that you can drive a car on many of its beaches. Hard-partying Daytona Beach is likely its most famous example, but auto access is also allowed on a number of additional beaches from South Padre Island, Texas, to the Outer Banks, North Carolina. Just be sure to gas up first.
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New Hampshire Contains America’s Shortest Coastline

New Hampshire may not be the first state that comes to mind when you think of beaches, but the Granite State does contain a number of lovely beaches along its short 18-mile seacoast. Hampton Beach State Park is the most popular, with a number of additional state park beaches dotted along the coast from approximately Hampton to Portsmouth.
There’s a Giant Food Festival Every Year on This Glitzy Miami Beach

No doubt most beach seekers have heard of (and likely visited) Miami’s world-famous South Beach. In addition to the beautiful people and raging dance clubs, South Beach is also home to the annual South Beach Wine & Food Festival, one of America’s largest and most important culinary events. The event takes place at several locations across Miami Beach, including on the beach itself.
New York Is the Only State With Both Ocean and Great Lakes Beaches

Malibu Is Home to America’s Most Expensive Beachfront Real Estate

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The Farthest Beach From the Mainland Is Nearly 8,000 Miles From Washington D.C.

There’s a Strange Gray Sand Beach Along the Gulf of Alaska

In the Ocean Cape Area of Alaska near the town of Yakutat, beachgoers will find a strange metallic-hued beach that also makes an excellent surfing area. The beach is near Glacier Bay National Park & Preserve, with gray-colored beaches not an uncommon sight along the Gulf of Alaska. The color is believed to be caused by the friction between the area’s strong waves and extremely rocky waters.
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America’s Last Beach Sunset Takes Place on Alaska’s Adak Island

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Virginia Beach Claims the Longest Beach in the U.S.

While the 70-mile Padre Island National Seashore is technically longer, the 35-mile Virginia Beach is the longest uninterrupted single beach in the U.S. (and seventh-longest in the world.) It is also listed as the world’s “longest pleasure beach” by the Guinness Book of World Records. This despite the fact that the 28-mile Long Beach Peninsula in Washington state claims to be the longest beach in the U.S. — or at least the longest driveable one.
The Smallest Beach in the U.S. Is Outside This Private Home

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California Towns Spend Nearly $500 Million a Year to Keep Beaches Clean

Local California communities spend roughly $428 million a year to keep trash and plastic out of waterways that could pollute the ocean and its beaches. A reported 95 communities around the state, ranging in size from 700 residents to 4 million, spend around $10.71 per resident on litter management and debris reduction.
Americans Make an Estimated 2 Billion Visits to the Beach Every Year

Beaches are a large driver of the U.S. economy, with research in 2008 that around 180 million Americans making an estimated 2 billion trips to the beach each year. It is estimated that coastal states bring in around 85% of U.S. tourism revenue, contributing more than $320 billion to the annual economy. By comparison, this is more than 25 times the revenue brought in by U.S. national parks with twice the visitation to U.S. beaches versus national parks.