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Great Point Beach — photo 1
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Heads up

  • Piping plover nesting closure active this month — sections of the beach may be roped off.
  • High rip-current risk. Swim near a lifeguard and ask about conditions.
  • Strong currents at the tip where Sound and ocean meet; not for swimming.
DunesFree & OpenHidden gemBest in June

Great Point Beach

Nantucket, Massachusetts · Atlantic Ocean / Nantucket Sound

Nantucket's wild northeast tip — lighthouse, seals, striped bass

A remote spit of sand at the northeastern tip of the island, accessible only by 4WD. A lighthouse, incredible fishing, and seals are the only company. This is Nantucket at its wildest.

Great Point is Nantucket at its rawest — six miles of barrier dune at the island's northeastern tip, accessible only by 4WD with a Trustees of Reservations permit ($250/season). At the top stands the squat granite Great Point Lighthouse, rebuilt in 1986 after the original 1818 tower toppled in a storm. The drive itself is half the adventure: air down at the gatehouse, follow the ruts north along the beach, watch the dune line narrow until you're driving on a sand bar with the Atlantic on one side and Nantucket Sound on the other. Plover closures shift the drivable area constantly through summer; the Trustees post updates daily. Striped bass anglers work the rip off the point at dawn and dusk; gray and harbor seals haul out on the bar in big numbers. There is nothing here. That is the point.

History

The original Great Point Lighthouse, built in 1818, was destroyed by a 1984 storm; the current granite tower is a 1986 replica funded largely by Nantucketers.

Photo spot

Great Point Light with seals hauled out on the bar in the foreground

Arrive
Permit-only
Crowds
Low
Dogs
Welcome

Best for

FishingSeclusionNatureLighthouse

The beach

Lay of the land

Orientation
East-facing
Length
~6 mi
Tide flat
~100 yd at low tide
Backshore
Dune / flat
Sand
Soft sand with cobble at the wrack line
Shade
none

Wildlife

Birds you may see: piping plover, least tern, American oystercatcher, osprey, common tern

Occasional whalesSeal viewing

Things to know

  • Frequent seal haul-outs nearby — a shark factor on outer-Cape waters.
  • Jellyfish more likely July–August.
  • Greenhead flies are intense in late July through mid-August on calm, humid days.

Plan your visit

Parking & fees

Lot size
Small
Enforcement
Trustees gatehouse; permit checked at entry.

4WD permit required, $250/season from Trustees

Getting there

Ferry
60 min from Hyannis · Steamship Authority (fast ferry)
Cell signal
none

Accessibility

Beach wheelchair
Not available
Mobi Mat
No
Path from parking
soft sand walk

Dogs

Allowed on leash; restricted in plover closure zones.

Rules & activities

What’s allowed

UmbrellasTents / canopies · small onlyAlcoholGrillsFiresDronesSmoking

Activities

Unofficial SUP/kayak launchFishing · surfcastingFishing · fly

Safety & stewardship

Significant plover closures

Photo by Nicholas Boyle (Nick) via Google Places

Today

Water64°F
Sunrise5:07 AM
Sunset8:15 PM

Conditions

WavesModerate waves
Water62–68°F (July–Aug)
TidesHigh variance
SharksElevated
Jellyfishlow
Length~6 mi
Open in Google MapsOfficial town page

Ratings updated 4 days ago

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