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Places to Paddle

Paddleboarding Austin

The Hydrus Crew Updated 4 min read
4.95 average from thousands of paddlers since 2012
Key Points at a Glance
Lady Bird Lake is the most accessible Austin paddle: downtown, calm, no-motor, with public launches and rentals.
Lake Austin and Lake Travis offer wider open water but allow motorboats; pick morning paddles to beat the chop.
Barton Creek is the secluded option, paddleable when winter and spring rain bring water levels up.
Spring Lake in San Marcos (45 minutes south) has the clearest water in the region and requires a reservation.
Almost all Austin paddling is flat-water on lakes; an all-around inflatable like the JoyRide is the right board for the region.
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Austin sits on more paddleable water than most paddlers realize. The downtown Lady Bird Lake is the headline launch, but Lake Austin, Lake Travis, Barton Creek, and the spring-fed lakes around San Marcos all reward a short drive. Below is the breakdown of the six best paddling spots in and around Austin, with launch and timing notes for each.

Aerial overview of paddleboarders on calm Austin lake water with downtown skyline behind

Lady Bird Lake

Paddleboarders on Lady Bird Lake with the Austin skyline rising behind

The most popular paddleboarding spot in Austin and the one most paddlers start with. The lake runs through downtown, motorized boats are not allowed, and the water stays calm year-round. Public launches at Festival Beach and Holly Shores. Rentals available at Texas Rowing Center and Rowing Dock if you do not own a board.

Plan for: morning paddles to beat the summer heat (90+ degree afternoons are normal May through September), no-motor regulations enforced, and weekend parking that fills by 9am.

Lake Austin

Calm reservoir paddleboarding on Lake Austin with riverside homes lining the bank

The reservoir on the Colorado River upstream of Lady Bird. Scenic, calm, and lined with riverside homes and lush vegetation. Wider open water than Lady Bird, and motorboats are allowed, so plan around boat traffic. Public launches at Walsh Boat Landing and Mary Quinlan Park.

Lake Travis

Paddleboarders on Lake Travis, the larger reservoir northwest of Austin

The biggest of the three Austin reservoirs and the most popular for general water recreation. Lake Travis is wide enough that wind can build real waves and chop in the afternoon, so morning paddles work better. Multiple public parks ring the lake (Mansfield Dam, Pace Bend, Hippie Hollow), each with launches and parking.

Barton Creek

A paddler on Barton Creek, the spring-fed Austin tributary winding through limestone banks

Barton Creek feeds into Lady Bird Lake and offers a quieter, more secluded paddle than the lake itself. The creek is paddleable when water levels are high enough (usually after winter and spring rain). Limestone banks, shaded sections, and almost no boat traffic. Best window: November through May.

Spring Lake (San Marcos)

Crystal-clear Spring Lake at the Meadows Center in San Marcos, Texas

About a 45-minute drive south of Austin, Spring Lake in San Marcos is a clear, spring-fed lake at the Meadows Center for Water and the Environment. Glass-clear water (the visibility is the headline), endemic wildlife, and a managed environment that makes it one of the most beautiful paddles in the region. Reservations required; the Meadows Center caps daily access.

Brushy Creek Lake Park

Brushy Creek Lake Park north of Austin, a quieter paddling option

About 25 minutes north of downtown Austin in Cedar Park. Smaller and quieter than the downtown lakes, with a paved trail around it and good parking. A solid weekday paddle when you want to avoid the Lady Bird crowd. The lake is no-motor, so you get the calm-water experience without the boat traffic of Lake Travis.

Pick the right board for Austin water

Austin paddling is overwhelmingly flat-water on lakes and slow creeks. The right board for almost every paddler in this list is an all-around inflatable. The JoyRide at 11 feet by 32 inches handles paddlers under 200 pounds; the wider JoyRide XL at 11 feet 6 inches by 34 inches is the better call for heavier paddlers, family setups, and dog paddles. Both pack into a backpack-sized bag, which matters in Austin: the parking situation at most launches rewards being able to walk in from a few blocks away.

Wherever you launch, wear a PFD, paddle in the morning during summer, and check Lake Travis wind forecasts before driving out. For more on planning your Austin paddle, see our companion guides on where to paddleboard near me and best places to paddleboard across the USA.

Frequently Asked

Questions paddlers actually ask about this topic.

Where are the best beginner paddleboarding spots in Austin?
Lady Bird Lake is the easiest start: calm water, no motors, public launches downtown, and rental shops on the bank if you do not own a board. Brushy Creek Lake Park in Cedar Park is the quieter beginner-friendly alternative when downtown is crowded. Both let you stay close to shore and build confidence without dealing with boat wakes or chop.
Do I need a permit to paddleboard on Austin lakes?
No permit for Lady Bird Lake, Lake Austin, Lake Travis, or Brushy Creek. Spring Lake in San Marcos does require a reservation through the Meadows Center for Water and the Environment because daily access is capped. Some Lake Travis parks charge a day-use vehicle fee.
When is the best time of year to paddleboard in Austin?
March through November covers the bulk of the paddling season. Summer afternoons (June through September) get hot enough that morning paddles before 10am are the smart play. Late October through February is paddleable on warm days and reliably calm; you may want a wetsuit top on cooler mornings when the water dips into the 50s.
Can I rent a paddleboard in Austin?
Yes, several rental shops operate around Lady Bird Lake, including Texas Rowing Center, Rowing Dock, and SUP ATX. Rentals run hourly or by the half-day. Pricing varies by location and season. If you paddle more than once a month, owning your own inflatable usually pays for itself within a season.
Is it safe to paddleboard alone in Austin?
Yes on Lady Bird and Brushy Creek, where the water is calm, the shore is close, and other paddlers are usually nearby. Less so on Lake Travis, where wind can build chop quickly and the lake is large enough that you can find yourself far from a launch. Always wear a PFD, tell someone your plan, and consider a leash matched to the water type (coil leash for flatwater, never an ankle leash on moving water).
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