Beach Guide
Dogs, parking, lifeguards and the walk down for all five beaches — plus the honest word on Doheny's water quality.
Five very different beaches in about eight miles — and almost none of them are run by the city. Each entry below says who actually manages the sand, what parking really costs, and what the rules are, checked against the agencies' own pages. The one thing this page can't show is today's water quality — for that, check ocbeachinfo.com or call the county hotline before you swim.
Check the water before you swim — especially at Doheny
Doheny State Beach
The classic family state beach at the mouth of San Juan Creek: a campground, a five-acre picnic lawn, a gentle longboard wave at the north end, and a visitor center with ocean tanks (weekends 10am-4pm). Run by California State Parks, not the city or county.
This is the only Dana Point beach where fires are allowed — in the designated state-park fire rings only, first-come first-served, 6am-10pm. Water quality is Doheny's known weakness: bacteria counts near the creek mouth exceed state standards often enough that the State Water Board wrote a dedicated cleanup plan for this beach. Check ocbeachinfo.com or call 714-433-6400 before swimming, and stay out of the ocean for 72 hours after rain.
- Dogs
- Not allowed on the sand or in the water (service animals excepted). Leashed pets are fine on the multi-use trail and in the parking lots.
- Parking
- Day-use lot $15 per vehicle, $20 on summer weekends and holidays. Park hours 6am-10pm daily.
- Toilets
- Restrooms and outdoor showers in the day-use area.
- Lifeguards
- Patrolled year-round; towers staffed roughly Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend.
- Food & drink
- Doho Cafe inside the park.
Salt Creek Beach
The surf beach below the Monarch Beach resorts, with the Bluff Park lawn up top. Wide sand, consistent waves, and a real walk between the parking lot and the water. Run by OC Parks (county).
Budget energy for the walk: the path down is easy, the climb back up with chairs and a cooler is not. All fires are prohibited. Beach hours 5am-midnight.
- Dogs
- Not permitted on the beach. Allowed on a 6-foot leash on the paved walkways and at Bluff Park, the grass area above the beach.
- Parking
- Pay-and-display, $1 per hour year-round; the lot fills on summer mornings. An annual parking card is sold through the OC Sailing & Events Center (949-923-2215).
- Toilets
- Restrooms with outdoor showers.
- Lifeguards
- OC Lifeguards territory; no published tower schedule when we checked — swim near an open tower.
Strands Beach
The quieter stretch below Strand Vista Park, between Salt Creek and the Headlands. The sand is county territory (Salt Creek's rules apply); the blufftop park, stairs and ramp belong to the city.
Residents have long reported that the funicular (inclined elevator) down the bluff is frequently out of service — plan on the stairs or the long switchback ramp, and pick a different beach on days when stairs are a problem.
- Dogs
- Same as Salt Creek: not on the sand; on leash on the paths and blufftop above.
- Parking
- Free public lot off Selva Road at Strand Vista Park — one of the few free beach lots in town. (Reported consistently by visitor guides; the city's own page blocked our check this run.)
- Toilets
- Restroom buildings at the blufftop park and beach level (resident-reported).
- Lifeguards
- OC Lifeguards territory; no published tower schedule when we checked.
Baby Beach (Dana Point Harbor)
A small, calm beach inside the harbor breakwater — flat water, no surf, the spot for toddlers, first paddleboard sessions and kayak launches. County harbor property, currently mid-rebuild.
Calm water is not the same as clean water — enclosed harbor beaches get advisories too. Check Baby Beach on ocbeachinfo.com the same way you would the ocean beaches.
- Dogs
- Harbor rules keep dogs leashed; signs posted at the beach govern the sand — check on arrival. (The harbor operator's rules page blocked our check this run.)
- Parking
- Harbor parking, including the new parking structure; lots and traffic flow keep shifting with construction phases — follow the posted signs. Harbor grounds close midnight-5am.
- Toilets
- Restroom locations are moving with the construction — follow posted signs near the beach.
- Lifeguards
- We could not verify any lifeguard service at Baby Beach — treat it as unguarded and watch children closely. OC Harbor Patrol non-emergency: 949-248-2222.
Capistrano Beach (Capo Beach)
The narrow neighborhood beach along the coast highway toward San Clemente — and the hardest-hit erosion site on this coast. Storms destroyed the boardwalk and basketball court, and sand placed in 2024 washed away within a year; replenishment keeps cycling. Run by OC Parks.
The beach can all but disappear at high tide — check the tide page before planning a walk here.
- Dogs
- Allowed on leash — except June 15 to September 10, when dogs are banned from the beach between 9am and 6pm.
- Parking
- Lot at the beach park, open 6am-10pm. OC Parks did not list current rates online when we checked — bring a card just in case.
- Toilets
- Portable restrooms only since the storm damage.
- Lifeguards
- OC Lifeguards territory; check for an open tower before swimming.