
Fisher Beach
Truro, MA

Provincetown, Massachusetts · Atlantic Ocean
The Cape's Atlantic tip with sunset over the ocean
The very tip of Cape Cod where the Atlantic meets Cape Cod Bay. Whales surface offshore, and the sunset happens over the ocean — rare on the East Coast. Worth the drive to the end of Route 6.
Race Point Beach is the geographic apex of Cape Cod — the place where you can stand on an east-facing Atlantic beach and watch the sun set over the ocean to the west, an inversion that happens nowhere else on the East Coast. The beach itself is seven miles of pristine national-seashore dune-back sand running from the Race Point Light at the tip down to Hatches Harbor, much of it accessible only via Provincetown's permitted oversand-vehicle program. The swimming section in front of the parking lot is lifeguarded and has the full National Seashore bathhouse setup, but the real Race Point experience is walking ten minutes north or south of the lifeguard zone and finding yourself essentially alone on one of the wildest beaches in the lower forty-eight. Whales — humpbacks, finbacks, the occasional right whale — surface within sight of the beach all summer; gray seals haul out on the bars; great white sharks are present and the patrol is active. The light at the Race Point Lighthouse at dusk is among the most photographed scenes in New England.
History
More than 1,000 ships are recorded as wrecked off Race Point since colonial times; the U.S. Life-Saving Service built a station here in 1872.
Photo spot
Race Point Light at sunset with the dune grass in foreground
Birds you may see: piping plover, American oystercatcher, northern gannet, common tern, least tern, roseate tern
Things to know
National Seashore pass or $25/day
Dogs allowed on-leash outside lifeguarded swim sections.
Photo by Doug Campbell via Google Places
Late June through Labor Day, 9am–5:30pm
Race Point Beach snack bar at the bathhouse in season

Truro, MA

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