Go to the Beach

Go to the Beach

Trails
Last Updated: June 2026

Overview

About This Trail

Olympic's beaches offer multiple frontcountry experiences from easy walks to serious coastal hikes, but every route demands one critical skill: tidal awareness. Rising water traps hikers against cliff walls with zero escape. Rip currents pull swimmers offshore. Driftwood logs shift with storm surge. Know your tidal window before you leave—a 200-foot descent means you're committed to a plan. Summer offers stable windows; winter is a serious play for veterans only.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Easy to Moderate (varies by beach: Kalaloch/Ruby are walks; Second/Third Beaches are easy hikes; Ozette Loop is solid moderate effort)

Trail Highlights

Explore the Pacific Coast in multiple modes—from casual beach strolls to extended coastal hikes. Every beach offers sea stacks, tide pool exploration, and dramatic ocean vistas. The Tree of Life at Kalaloch is a genuine landmark. Hole-in-the-Wall arch at Rialto is the payoff at mile 1.5. Ozette transitions from temperate lake to open beach. Sunrise without crowds is rare magic.

Insider Tips

• Check NOAA tides 48 hours before departure—set a phone alarm for your window's end time. • Visit multiple beaches in one trip—they're only 5–15 miles apart on Highway 101. Combine Kalaloch + Ruby in one morning. • The Tree of Life at Kalaloch is a genuine photo landmark and meditation spot. Early sunrise visits (6–7 AM) are crowd-free. • Hole-in-the-Wall at Rialto (1.5 miles round-trip) is the payoff—the arch frames the ocean. Worth the extra effort. • Off-season visits (October–April) offer the same raw beauty with 90% fewer people. Bring weather-resistant gear. • Ranger stations are staffed sporadically; carry printed tide charts from home, not from ranger stations which may be unstaffed.

Best Season to Hike

Summer (June–August). Fall and spring are possible for experienced hikers. Winter is feasible only for coastal veterans aware of unpredictable tidal surge.

Hiking Tips

  • Carry a printed tide chart—don't trust a phone app with no signal. Check NOAA tides in real time 48 hours before departure.
  • Rip currents are real and they kill. Know how to escape them or don't enter the water.
  • Driftwood logs weigh tons and shift with surge. Never play on them or let kids climb them.
  • Bring minimum 2L water. Sun reflects off sand and stone—you'll dehydrate faster than you think.
  • Layers are non-negotiable. Pacific wind sucks heat. Bring a shell jacket even in summer.
  • Accessible restrooms at Ruby Beach, Rialto, Kalaloch Lodge, Ozette—use them before the beach.

Family Info

Kalaloch and Ruby Beach are family-friendly with easy access and amenities. Second/Third Beaches require kids to manage 200–270 ft elevation loss on uneven forest footing—suitable for kids 8+. Rialto short walk and Hole-in-the-Wall extension manageable for families. Tide pools are engaging for kids under supervision. Watch children around driftwood (logs shift) and water (rip currents). Accessible restrooms at multiple beaches.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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