Chris FollinBy Chris Follin

ROUNDUP

Best beach camping

Beach camping has a short grace period. The first view does a lot, then wind, sand, bathrooms, parking, permits, and shoreline access start deciding whether the trip still works. These are the coastal camps I would keep on the shortlist after the practical details have had their say.

Ocean accessPermit pressureChoose / skip notes

The beach has to carry more than the photo

The best beach camp is not always the wildest or the prettiest. It is the one where the water is easy to use, the site can survive the afternoon breeze, and the facilities are good enough that sand stays a nuisance instead of becoming the whole trip.

Fast answer: choose San Clemente for the safest Southern California all-around pick, Bellows for an easy Oahu beach hang, Hoʻokena when the Big Island water is the point, and Ahupuaʻa ʻO Kahana when the valley-to-bay setting matters as much as the sand.

Quick comparison

This is the table I would use before choosing a beach camp, because the prettiest shoreline can still be the wrong campsite.

Camp Best Use Shore Access Facilities Exposure / Pressure Why Choose It Why Skip It
San Clemente State Beach Southern California coastal weekend with comfort backup Trail from blufftop campground down to the beach Developed campground, showers, town nearby Wind, campground density, reservation competition, uphill beach carry You want the most forgiving beach-camp setup on this list You need solitude or cannot handle the climb back from the sand
Bellows Field Oahu beach day that turns into camp Wide sand and easy water access County permit campground; verify current closure windows before booking Permit demand, turtle-related seasonal closures, sun and wind exposure You want open sand, swimming, and a relaxed all-day hang Your dates are inflexible or you need guaranteed year-round availability
Hoʻokena Beach Park Big Island water-focused camp Beachfront setting with reef/snorkel appeal when conditions fit Permit camping through the Hoʻokena program; simple park facilities Heat, humidity, ocean conditions, limited infrastructure, local-use pressure The water and black-sand setting are the whole point You want a polished resort-like campground or a low-awareness tourist stop
Ahupuaʻa ʻO Kahana Windward Oahu valley-to-bay camp with cultural context Kahana Bay setting inside a living ahupuaʻa State park permit camping; basic beach/park facilities Rain, mud, mosquitoes, permit rules, and a place that asks for respect You want the beach connected to a larger landscape and story You only want a simple swim-and-sun beach campground

Choose this if, skip this if

Beach camp pays off when the shoreline is part of the day, not a technicality.

SAN CLEMENTE

Choose it for the safest all-around beach weekend

Choose: you want showers, town support, sunsets, and a developed campground that makes the coast easy. Skip: you need quiet, isolation, or a flat walk from camp to sand.

BELLOWS FIELD

Choose it for an easy Oahu beach hang

Choose: open sand and mellow water are the main plan, and you can work around permit and closure windows. Skip: your dates are fixed or you need lots of shade.

HOʻOKENA

Choose it when water is the point

Choose: you are prepared for a simple beach-park setup and want reef water, black sand, and a distinct Big Island feel. Skip: you need a polished campground or easy climate control.

KAHANA

Choose it for place, not just beach

Choose: the valley, bay, trails, and cultural landscape matter to the trip. Skip: rain, mud, mosquitoes, or permit rules will make the group resent the plan.

See the summer-escape shortlistIf you want cooler air more than coastline, the high-country escape roundup is the next smart stop.