Beach vacations have gotten obscene. Airfares are crushing. Hotels run $400 a night for a glorified Holiday Inn. And parking at the best beaches now costs more than dinner.
But here’s something useful. Dr. Beach — the country’s most-cited beach ranker — just dropped his 2026 top 10 list. Buried in it is a bargain so good it almost looks like a typo.
Six bucks. That’s what one of America’s best beaches charges to park a carload of up to eight people. Cram in a full crew and your share is 75 cents.
For 35 years, coastal scientist Stephen P. Leatherman has evaluated 650 of America’s major public beaches across 50 criteria — sand, water, safety, management, the works. His annual ranking, released just before Memorial Day weekend, is the gold standard. I went through last year’s list too.
Here’s the full 2026 top 10, with the one detail nobody else is publishing: what it’ll actually cost you to set foot on each.
1. Poipu Beach, Kauai, Hawaii
A crescent of golden sand on Kauai’s sunny south shore, protected by an offshore island that calms the swimming area into a kiddie pool. Monk seals and sea turtles haul out in the afternoon to nap on the sand.
Cost reality: The beach is free. Getting there isn’t. Round-trip airfare from the mainland runs $300 to $900 per person, and a week of mid-range lodging averages $4,700 for a couple. Total damage tops $5,000 easily — though a few smart travel moves can shave hundreds off that.
2. St. Andrews State Park, Panama City, Florida
Sugar-white sand, emerald Gulf water, and snorkeling on two sides — the Gulf and St. Andrews Bay. Big jump from No. 7 last year. Bird-watching and shelling are world-class.
Cost reality: $8 per vehicle (up to 8 people). $4 for solo drivers. $2 for walk-ins and cyclists.
3. Caladesi Island State Park, Dunedin/Clearwater, Florida
A barrier island reachable only by ferry or boat. Quartz sand so soft it feels like cake flour, mangrove kayak tunnels, and water clear enough to count the freckles on your foot.
Cost reality: $8 per vehicle at Honeymoon Island, plus a $20 round-trip ferry per adult. For a couple, around $48 — unless you paddle your own kayak across.
4. Wailea Beach, Maui, Hawaii
A crescent fronted by Maui’s most upscale resorts. Calm water, soft sand, and snorkeling reefs close to shore.
Cost reality: The beach is free thanks to Hawaii’s public-access law. The flights and resorts aren’t. Maui airfare runs $400 to $1,000 or more per person, and the hotels fronting Wailea routinely charge $600 and up a night.
5. Main Beach, East Hampton, New York
The bucolic Hamptons stunner. Towering dunes, soft sand, a village vibe, and the kind of summer crowds that send parking rates into orbit.
Cost reality: $50 per day for a non-resident parking permit. A full-season pass runs $750. Yes — $750 just to park your car.
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6. Delnor-Wiggins Pass State Park, Naples, Florida
Here’s the one. A mile-long stretch of white sand on a barrier island in North Naples. Clear Gulf water, pine trees that throw real shade, and wildlife so dense you’ll spot manatees, ospreys, and bald eagles in the same morning.
Cost reality: $6 per vehicle with up to 8 people. $4 if you drive in alone. $2 if you bike or walk. That’s it.
The Gulf is just as clear as Hawaii’s. The sand is just as white. And the sargassum seaweed that knocked Cape Florida State Park off this year’s list hasn’t reached this stretch of coast.
7. Beachwalker Park, Kiawah Island, South Carolina
The only public access point to Kiawah’s 10 miles of pristine coastline — the rest is locked behind a gate for residents and resort guests. Live oaks, palmettos, and dolphins offshore.
Cost reality: $15 per vehicle on summer weekdays. $25 on summer weekends and holidays. Drops to $5 in January and February.
8. Kaunaoa Beach (Mauna Kea Beach), Big Island, Hawaii
A perfect half-moon of white sand inside the Mauna Kea Beach Resort. Hawaii law guarantees public access, but parking is sharply limited and fills up by mid-morning.
Cost reality: Beach access is free. Getting to the Big Island for a week? Plan on $3,000+ for a couple, easy. Watch out for the airline tricks that quietly inflate that number even more.
9. Lanikai Beach, Oahu, Hawaii
A half-mile of sand so fine it squeaks underfoot, facing the iconic twin Mokulua islets. Postcard material.
Cost reality: Free beach. Residential street parking only — limited, stressful, and they ticket aggressively. Overall Oahu trip costs match the other Hawaiian islands.
10. Coast Guard Beach, Cape Cod, Massachusetts
A National Seashore beauty with bluffs, an old lifesaving station up top, and a growing seal population. The lot near the beach is residents-only, so most visitors park at Little Creek and shuttle in or bike from the visitor center.
Cost reality: $25 per vehicle per day in summer. A Cape Cod National Seashore annual pass costs $60.
The verdict: This one is the smart money
Add it up. The four Hawaii beaches will cost you $3,000 to $5,000 or more for a couple. Main Beach in the Hamptons charges more for a season parking pass than I paid for my first car. Cape Cod’s Coast Guard Beach dings you $25 just to park near it.
Then there’s Delnor-Wiggins Pass.
For $6 you can drive in, walk out onto the sand, and watch a manatee swim by. If you live anywhere within driving range, you can probably get there in a day. No flights. No resort fees. No $50 parking permit you need to win a lottery to even buy.
This is the kind of math I love. A top 10 beach at a bottom-tier price. Bring sunscreen, a chair, and a cooler. That’s the whole list.
Looking for more cheap vacation ideas? You’ll find that the smartest travel value in this country usually isn’t where the influencers are pointing you. It’s a $6 carload away.
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