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    Fire Island National Seashore

    4.3 (35 reviews)
    Open 8:00 am - 4:30 pm

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    Tata G.

    Came back this year to see the lighthouse. We enjoyed our walk .the boardwalk was not crowded on a overcast Saturday. We saw some birds & deer along the way. The light house was also historic & interesting. we check out the beach at the end & Watch some people fishing by the docks. There are bathrooms at the lighthouse & A cute shop selling books & souvenirs.

    Enjoying ice cream on the bayside of Fair Harbor.
    Gilbert G.

    In June 2020, our family enjoyed a peaceful week-long stay in the Fair Harbor neighborhood of FINS. Fair Harbor is a low-key family-friendly area located between Saltaire and Dunewood. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, masks are mandatory on the ferry ride and while walking in Fair Harbor on the pathways. However, on the oceanside beach, a lot of folks will remove their masks while social distancing. The ferry ride to FINS is delightful as you enjoy 30-40 minutes on the bay with views of the bridge and lighthouse in the distance. The absence of cars and traffic (except for a bicycle or red wagon) is a wonderful change of pace and highly therapeutic. In Fair Harbor, kids can walk to the bayside playground, get ice cream at "Unfriendly's", or watch people at sunset trying to catch a fish off the main dock. One downside of Fair Harbor is that the local Pioneer Market can be very expensive for some grocery items. Also, it's inconvenient to get to FINS because you have to lug your bags onto the ferry and find a parking spot at $20 per day (if you bring a car). That said, once you arrive in Fair Harbor, a peaceful and family-friendly vacation awaits you where kids can enjoy the beach. That said, if you don't like quiet residential areas, Fair Harbor is probably not ideal for you.

    Christy C.

    We enjoyed the walk from Robert Moses State Park Field 5 to Kismet a lot. The Fire Island National Seashore is absolutely beautiful and it was an easy walk to Kismet. We walked on the path from the entrance to the lighthouse , then walked by the beach to Kismet. I felt in love with The town of Kismet as soon as I got there. No cars / traffic at all, neither busy nor crowded. People seemed very relax there. Definitely don't feel like a town in a big city. We took the rocky path / hard pack sands path back to Robert Moses. Overall the walk was easy and relax. Love it.

    Ben H.

    There is no place like home. So happy to see my best friend get married. Fire Island is beautiful and has always had a special place in my heart. It has a traditional Long Island, quaint , beach feel to it. There are much worse spots to spend a day

    Sunset
    Robert E.

    Great place to spend the day. The public spaces are well kept and even though it can be crowded in some places one can easily walk a few yards and have plenty of space.

    615am
    Laura G.

    This place is amazing! How can you honestly not give fire island a 5 star review? Prob bc you're miserable and never satisfied ... Anyway, this place is literally made for anyone at any age.. Preferably, I choose to stick with ocean beach and ocean bay park, however, at a younger age and when my family had a boat we would stay over at Atlantique and walk over to fair harbor.. So, I am pretty much a fire island vet... Ocean beach is for all of your family oriented, bar hopping, restaurant going visitors.. Usually, everyone from Manhattan relocates here for the summer, it's a real dream :) Everything is def expensive on the beach but know that before you go... The food isn't fantastic at any restaurant by any means... I mean so seriously, if you're looking for an exquisite meal, you will not find that.. If you're looking for a good time on the beach not too far from home but will still give you the "vacation feel", this is perfect for you. Stayed in a house on ocean bay park for 4 days 3 nights over on E Cayuga and it was perfect .. $400 for 10 girls to one house and receive your safety deposit back.. House came with a washer, dryer, bbq, access to bikes, and everything else u need for a prime time weekend. Perfect for a weekend getaway or even a bachelor/bachelorette party.. We were with in a minute walk to flynns and schooners!

    Boys of summer
    anthony r.

    Do you ever wish you could magically transport yourself to a simple, easy-going beach that time slightly forgot? You don't need to find a genie to have it come true - just hop aboard the LIRR or drive an hour-ish outside the city and step aboard the Fire Island Ferry. You'll be whisked away to a skinny barrier island that is there only habited island in the US that doesn't allow cars. Bikes and wagons will be your method of travel as you experience varied beaches from quaint to serene. Deer walk by you like tourists and finding establishments that take credit cards is like winning the lottery. Sunrises and sunsets can be had daily with unbelievable views. Kids run free like you remember the suburbs you grew up in. Housing is a wonderful and wild combination of rustic, modern and original beach bungalow. The silence at night is almost eerie. Wooden walkways and bay front playgrounds deliver amazing nostalgia. If you live in NYC and don't want to get on a plane for a trip that truly can make you feel like you're hundreds of miles from civilization, make Fire Island a destination this summer.

    Awesome toddler playground by the beach!
    ROSA G.

    It's definitely a cute town but not at all the best beach ever! The waves are very rough, the water is super cold and there's tons of seaweed. It's just an average NY beach. It's fun as a one day adventure such as taking the ferry and walking through the "town". They have a ridiculously over priced Street market with handmade jewelry that is nothing special but costs an arm and a leg. You cannot bring drinks, food or alcohol to the beach. It is a pain in the butt with children because you have to walk all the way where the restaurant area is to have a drink it go to the bathroom. There are no finding it shower areas either.

    Ally K.

    I love that place, the view is just gorgeous. We climbed all the way up inside the lighthouse. All the workers provided the greatest service ever. And the ocean ... OMG ... I was speechless. The morning along the coast where the fog and mist meet with the salty spray of the seas is one of my favourite smells.

    The sun sets and the creepiness commences...
    Jia J.

    Apparently "everyone knows" that the scenic beauty of Fire Island is squandered on Long Island Trash. Well, I didn't know, and none of my friends even hinted at it before I made the long haul out there. Heart thumping at the prospect of spending time on a natural reserve of the U.S. National Park Service, I got up at 5:45 a.m. with a few good friends, took the 7:10 a.m. LIRR ($21.50 round trip - the 50-cent online discount requires several days advanced planning so your tickets can arrive via snail mail) to Babylon. From there, we transferred to a Bay Shore train. They didn't announce the stop, so we missed our destination. Luckily, we caught the opposite train by dashing across the tracks in the sketchiest way. From Bayshore, we took David's car service ($4-see separate review) to the ferry. Hoovered up a dozen clams at Nicky's Clam Bar (separate review), then hopped aboard for a 30 minute ferry ride ($17 round trip) out to Fair Harbor, Fire Island. This "barefoot community" was a place unlike any other. There really were no cars or motorized vehicles of any sort. Girls towed wagons loaded with Vera Bradley bags and 30-pack boxes of Bud Light. One guy wheeled a bunch of potted flowers and his young son at the same time. Everyone had an antique beach cruiser; no one locked anything. Endless wooden boardwalks took us straight past people's residences and rentals to the intimidatingly unspoilt beach, where swimming was constrained to 50-yard portions of water flagged off between lifeguard chairs. This was just as well, because the waves were sometimes double overhead, and the water was chilly enough to cause palpitations even in a confident swimmer. It was HOT on the sand, and we all managed to get burnt despite 90+ SPF sunscreen, black t-shirts, and umbrellas. There was one weird local grocery store charging 99 cents for a big bottle of flavored seltzer water but also 99 cents per shrivelled purple fig. The "town" was run by a few old folks, and a lot of local teens [girls with short shorts and oversized tees...skinny, self-conscious looking errand boys with baskets on their rusty bikes]. The girl working at Unfriendly's Ice Cream next door said simply that she didn't know where the public facilities were, and offered no further assistance. She may have been telling the truth, because we had to ask at least seven people before finally finding the wooden structure on a street that we only detected because we saw someone whizzing by on a bike. By the way, they completely locked the place down at 5 p.m., when the lifeguards also disappeared, leaving people to sink or swim. To sample the nightlife, my gut said to walk 15 minutes due West towards Kismet (the word means "destiny," for crying out loud), but my friend insisted that Ocean Beach was the spot that she heard was really going off. We walked into the labirynth of boardwalks through what looked just like the Others' compound from LOST, and were soon deposited onto an unmarked sand path bordered by creepy green reeds. The full moon came out, and a wild deer peeped out from the dunes as butterflies darted about. This was the only redeemable part to staying here past sunset. Finally, we hung a left (North) and ran right into the Ocean Beach strip. It was like Provincetown but with trashy heterosexuals...it was Family Guy meets Jersey Shore (and I haven't even seen the show, but I'm pretty sure this is what it is like)...Pleasantville met Stepford met the Twilight Zone...it was just plain bloody awful. After blowing dough on a burger and two frozen margs at Bocce Beach Restaurant (separate review) and listening to two douchbags "from the city" talk about how they "don't fuck ugly chicks" and how there were "no hot chicks to fuck," we ran, not walked, to the ferry station just as the last ride was departing. A couple other non-locals were shrieking, "I will NEVER come back here again!" A Holocaust-style (sorry) ride with David's car service, an hour wait at the Bay Shore LIRR station where there was no bathroom, an hour and a half long train ride to Jamaica, a transfer, and another transfer due to a fight between two assholes that brought the cops delivered me to the underground oven of Penn Station at 2 a.m. A ride on the A-train and a desperate crosstown cab trip brought me home just past 3 a.m....but anything was better than staying to witness the freakshow on the island. The moral is: if you want nature, stick to nature, especially in this place, where the social scene is a desecration of any merits that Fire Island might actually have. Sadly, even on this 26-mile preserve, there seemed to be more "look how off the beaten path we are" development than untouched peace and quiet. Still, I MAY come back here in the fall or winter strictly to camp and check out the Sunken Forest. At least then, the eerie houses will be empty of cultish vacationers and fast-talking brats extorting $7 ice cream cones from their guardians.

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    9 months ago

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    5 years ago

    Wonderful long sandy beaches which go on for miles. Sunken Forest - access by ferry from Sayville - is a peaceful beautiful get-away.

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    14 years ago

    What an awesome getaway from the city. Friendly deer, amazing beaches, and 10,000 of Snooki's cousins (in selected areas).

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    8 years ago

    No garbage can in the eating area I don't want to be bringing my trash around on my next vacation thank you very much please fix

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    10 years ago

    Secluded, no high rises, and you can walk for miles...

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    Review Highlights - Fire Island National Seashore

    Bikes and wagons will be your method of travel as you experience varied beaches from quaint to serene.

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    Sunken Forest - The way

    Sunken Forest

    4.5(25 reviews)
    9.5 km

    Really cool to get to experience this unique marine forest. Definitely bring some water, but the…read moretrees provide some welcome shade. We picked a few blackberries along the way, there's a small visitor's center where you can get a map of the trails. You want to take a water taxi to Sailor's Haven. My husband tried to walk from Ocean Beach, but was thwarted on the bayside path by the gated private Port O Woods community. Apparently, he could have walked over to the beach and continued walking, but he didn't know this, so we picked him up by water taxi in Ocean Bay Park. After the forest, we walked on to Cherry Grove, and then I continued walking to the Pines, which was a lot of walking, but a good way to see the island.

    If you come out to Fire Island you really need to make a day trip to the sunken forest. It's one of…read moreonly two marine forests in the country (the other is Sandy Hook NJ). The well-maintained and beautiful meandering wooden pathways allow you to see all of the beautiful plants and sea peaks of the Bayside as well as the ocean and the dunes. Don't go off the path as there are notices about poison ivy as well as ticks. It's recommended to wear bug lotion when you visit so you don't get bitten. We usually leave the sunken forest and visit Cherry Grove for drinks and food in town. Coming here on an overcast day is probably easier as there are sections that are out in the open and will be very hot. Make sure to bring your garbage with you and leave no trace behind while enjoying this national park treasure.

    Photos
    Sunken Forest - Ocean in the background.

    Ocean in the background.

    Sunken Forest - Kids enjoying the exploration.

    Kids enjoying the exploration.

    Sunken Forest

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    Cedar Beach - Ducklings

    Cedar Beach

    3.5(42 reviews)
    29.7 km

    I recently hosted a Christian Singles Hub event at Cedar Beach in Babylon, and I couldn't have…read morepicked a better spot! We were scheduled from 4:30-6:30pm but ended up staying until just after dusk because it was that good. The back picnic tables made the perfect setup for deep conversations, games, and even s'mores by the grill. A few of us took a walk down to the water and got in plenty of steps--it was totally worth it for the views! I'd love to come back and check out The Salt Shack next time. On a quick walkthrough, I noticed how beautifully it was decorated, and the staff I met were so friendly. Even from the picnic area, we could hear and enjoy the live music, which was such a fun bonus. I was also surprised to see their full volleyball tournament setup--it turns out a friend of mine was even competing that same day! Cedar Beach really has something for everyone, and I can't wait to return.

    This and Tobay are our favorites on Ocean Pkwy. It was such a nice day we decided to take a drive…read moreout early and go. I forgot how big Cedar Beach is. There is a long path that leads through the Salt Shack (always wanted to eat there but it was way too early to pop in for a meal) and out into the beach. The beach was quiet but the lifeguards were out. We let Bubs run around in the sand before leaving. I did see a bit of garbage on the beach...people please clean up after yourselves. But yes, we love the beaches on LI and we have our favs. This is one of them, but if you're not a resident of the town you will pay a ton to park and for a pass. I think they stop charging after a certain time. But if you want to go for a beach day, it's worth it if you pack the car and go!

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    Cedar Beach
    Cedar Beach - Cedar beach in Babylon ny

    Cedar beach in Babylon ny

    Cedar Beach

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    Fire Island National Seashore - parks - Updated July 2026

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