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Places to Paddle

Paddleboarding Florida

The Hydrus Crew Updated 5 min read
4.95 average from thousands of paddlers since 2012
Key Points at a Glance
Florida paddles year-round; the Panhandle (Pensacola) and Gulf Coast (Crystal River, Weeki Wachee) work best in winter when peninsular springs draw manatees.
Key West and the Keys offer the clearest water and most reliable wildlife sightings on the Atlantic side.
Spring-fed rivers (Crystal River, Silver Springs, Weeki Wachee) require reservations because daily access is capped.
The Everglades is the most unique paddle in the state but requires a tide-window plan and a route shared with a ranger.
Almost all Florida paddling is flat-water on calm bays and spring runs; an all-around inflatable like the JoyRide is the right board.
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Florida is one of the easiest places in the country to paddleboard year-round. Warm water most of the year, calm coastal bays, spring-fed rivers with manatees, and a coastline so long that you can paddle a different launch every weekend without running out. Below is the regional breakdown of the eight best paddling spots in the state, with planning notes for each.

A paddleboarder gliding across calm Florida coastal water at sunrise

Key West

Smathers Beach in Key West with calm turquoise water and paddlers heading out

Key West gives you crystal-clear shallows, mangrove channels, and the most reliable wildlife sightings on the Atlantic side of the state. Tropical fish under the board, occasional rays gliding past, dolphins on luckier days. Smathers Beach and Higgs Beach are the two easiest launches; outfitters in town rent boards if you do not own one.

Plan for: morning paddles before the wind builds, reef-safe sunscreen (legally required in many local protected areas), and an early arrival in season because parking fills up.

St. Augustine

A paddler on an eco-tour through the Matanzas River near St. Augustine

The Matanzas River runs through historic St. Augustine, past the Castillo de San Marcos National Monument and waterfront mansions. Calmer than open ocean, with a steady current and abundant wildlife. The launches at the Vilano Beach side and St. Augustine Marina are the most accessible.

Miami

A paddler exploring Biscayne Bay around the Venetian Islands in Miami

Biscayne Bay is the headline Miami paddle. Clear water, a downtown skyline backdrop, and routes that take you around the Venetian Islands or up the Miami River into Oleta River State Park. Oleta River specifically has mangrove tunnels and protected paddling that suits beginners.

Everglades National Park

Paddlers navigating the mangrove tunnels of Everglades National Park

The Everglades is the most ecologically unique paddle on this list. Mangrove tunnels, shallow flats, alligators on the banks, wading birds in every direction. The launches at Flamingo and Everglades City are the standard starting points. This is wilderness paddling: bring a map, plan your tide window, and tell a ranger your route.

Crystal River

Crystal-clear water at Crystal River where paddleboarders spot manatees

Crystal River on the Gulf Coast has the most reliable manatee encounters of anywhere in the state. The Three Sisters Springs and Kings Bay launches let you paddle right into manatee habitat (with strict rules: no touching, no chasing, observe from a respectful distance). Best window is November through March when manatees are concentrated in the warm springs.

Silver Springs State Park (Ocala)

Silver Springs is the largest artesian spring in Florida and one of the clearest. The water is so transparent you can see fish and turtles 30 feet down. Launches inside the state park; reservations required because the park caps daily access. Glass-bottom boats run the same water, so the route is well-managed and safe.

Weeki Wachee Springs

The emerald-green Weeki Wachee River, a popular Florida spring-fed paddle

Weeki Wachee Springs State Park gives you a 7-mile downstream paddle on emerald-green water from the springs to a Gulf-side launch. Manatees in winter, fish year-round, and a current that does most of the work for you. Shuttle services run the take-out point. Reservations required during peak season.

Pensacola

White sandy Pensacola beach with the emerald Gulf of Mexico behind

The Florida Panhandle delivers the famous emerald-green Gulf water and white sand beaches. Pensacola is the easiest base camp for the region. Calm morning water, public launches at Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key, and reliable winter paddling thanks to mild Gulf temperatures even in January.

Pick the right board for Florida water

Florida paddling is overwhelmingly flat-water in protected coastal bays, spring-fed rivers, and mangrove channels. The right board is an all-around inflatable. The JoyRide at 11 feet by 32 inches is the right starting point for paddlers under 200 pounds. The wider JoyRide XL at 11 feet 6 inches by 34 inches handles heavier paddlers, family setups, and the trips where you might haul a kid or a cooler.

Inflatables also travel well, which matters in Florida: most paddlers fly in for vacation paddling and want a board that ships as airline luggage. Check local regulations before launching at any state park or wildlife area, wear a PFD, and bring more sunscreen than you think you need. For more on planning destination paddles, see best places to paddleboard across the USA and traveling with paddleboards: winter escape to the Florida Keys.

Frequently Asked

Questions paddlers actually ask about this topic.

Is it safe to paddleboard in Florida with alligators around?
Yes, with awareness. Alligators are common in freshwater rivers and the Everglades but rarely interact with paddlers who keep their distance. The rules: do not feed alligators (federal offense), keep small dogs out of freshwater paddles, paddle in the middle of the channel rather than along the bank, and avoid dawn and dusk when alligators are most active. Saltwater paddles (Keys, Gulf, Atlantic coast) are alligator-free.
When is the best time of year to paddleboard in Florida?
October through April for most of the state. Summer brings daily afternoon thunderstorms, hurricane season (June through November), and water temperatures that get uncomfortable in the high 80s. Winter (December through March) is the sweet spot: cool mornings, mild water, and peak manatee season in the spring-fed rivers.
Do I need a permit to paddleboard at Florida state parks?
Most state parks charge a per-vehicle day-use fee but do not require a separate paddling permit. The springs (Crystal River, Silver Springs, Weeki Wachee) cap daily access during peak season, so reservations are required. Everglades National Park requires a wilderness permit if you camp; day paddles do not.
Can I see manatees from a paddleboard, and is it safe to paddle near them?
Yes, especially in Crystal River and Three Sisters Springs from November through March. The federal rules: do not touch, ride, chase, or feed manatees. Observe from a respectful distance (a board's length minimum). Manatees are protected under federal law, and rangers do enforce the rules. Most paddlers see multiple manatees per session in the right season without ever needing to approach.
What kind of paddleboard works best for Florida's mix of water types?
An all-around inflatable. Florida's paddling is overwhelmingly flat-water (lakes, calm bays, sheltered springs, mangrove channels) and the inflatable format travels well for fly-in vacation paddling. The JoyRide handles most paddlers; the JoyRide XL is the heavier-paddler or family-friendly upgrade. Reserve hardboards for paddlers with permanent setups in a single Florida launch town.
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