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Herring Cove Beach — photo 1
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  • Piping plover nesting closure active this month — sections of the beach may be roped off.
National SeashorePark Pass RequiredBest in July

Herring Cove Beach

Provincetown, Massachusetts · Cape Cod Bay

Provincetown's iconic west-facing sunset beach

P-town's most popular beach and one of the most welcoming on the Cape. West-facing for sunsets, calmer water than Race Point, and a wonderfully inclusive atmosphere. The south end is clothing-optional.

Herring Cove is Provincetown's beach — the wide west-facing crescent on the bay side of the Cape's curled fist where the sun sets over the water rather than the dunes, where the parking lot fills with rainbow flags and beach umbrellas, and where the most inclusive crowd in New England gathers daily from mid-June through Columbus Day. The water is dramatically calmer than ocean-facing Race Point a mile away, with gentle waves and a gradual sandy bottom that's been warmed all afternoon by the late sun. The beach is divided informally: the main parking lot anchors the family section near the bathhouse and snack bar; the south end past the dune is the long-established gay men's beach, which transitions further south to a clothing-optional stretch. Lifeguards work the central section; the National Seashore manages the lot and bathhouse. At sunset the lot becomes a tailgate of cocktails and coolers, and the western sky over Cape Cod Bay puts on the show.

Photo spot

Sunset over Cape Cod Bay from the south end of the lot

Arrive
Mid-morning weekdays
Crowds
High
Dogs
Seasonal
Lifeguards
On duty
Sunsets
Great spot

Best for

Swimming

The beach

Lay of the land

Orientation
West-facing (sunset)
Length
~1.5 mi
Backshore
Dune / flat
Sand
Soft fine pale sand
Shade
none

Wildlife

Birds you may see: common tern, piping plover, American oystercatcher, northern gannet, Bonaparte's gull

Occasional whales

Things to know

  • Occasional seal haul-outs nearby — a shark factor on outer-Cape waters.
  • Jellyfish more likely July–August.

Plan your visit

Parking & fees

Lot size
Large
Enforcement
National Seashore daily fee ($25/car) or annual pass; lot fills by 10am on summer weekends.

National Seashore pass or $25/day, large lot

Getting there

From Sagamore Bridge
60 min
From Bourne Bridge
65 min
Cell signal
good

Accessibility

Beach wheelchair
Available
Mobi Mat
Yes
Accessible parking
6 spaces
Path from parking
level

Dogs

Dogs allowed on-leash in National Seashore sections outside lifeguarded swimming areas.

Pairs well with

Rules & activities

What’s allowed

UmbrellasTents / canopies · small onlyAlcoholGrillsFiresDronesSmoking

Activities

Unofficial SUP/kayak launchFishing · surfcasting

Safety & stewardship

Lifeguards on duty· Late June through Labor Day, 9am–5:30pm Shark patrol active Significant plover closures

Photo by Andrei Lazarchuk via Google Places

Today

Water60°F
Sunrise5:05 AM
Sunset8:18 PM

Conditions

WavesModerate waves
Water60-66°F (July–Aug)
TidesModerate
SharksElevated
Jellyfishlow
Length~1.5 mi

Facilities

LifeguardsRestroomsShowersChanging rooms

Late June through Labor Day, 9am–5:30pm

Herring Cove snack bar at the bathhouse in season

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