No on-site camping
- Season
- Day-use park.
- Sites
- None. Stay in San Diego and visit by day.
- Nearest camping is in the wider San Diego area, not at the monument.

National Park Service · California
A tip-of-the-peninsula monument above San Diego, with a lighthouse, big bay views, gray-whale watching, and tide pools that are best at fall and winter low tides.

Field briefing
Cabrillo National Monument changes fast with season and elevation.
Before you go
The $20 vehicle fee is good for seven days, but the experience depends on timing: the rocky tide pools are only worth it at low tides of about 0.7 feet or below, and during spring and summer those low tides usually fall outside park hours, leaving the pools submerged. Fall and winter is when the good low tides line up with the open hours, and it is also gray-whale migration season, so that is the window to plan around. The lower tide pool lots close earlier than the main monument, so check both the tide chart and the closing times before you go.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Mild and often clear, with the whale migration winding down and tide pools less reliable.
Pack A wind layer for the exposed point and sun protection.
Warm and busy, with high midday tides that often submerge the tide pools during park hours.
Pack Sun protection, water, and a plan to focus on the views rather than the pools.
Mild and clearing, with the best low tides beginning to fall within park hours.
Pack Grippy footwear for slick rocks and a layer for the breezy point.
Cool and often clear, the prime window for tide pools and gray-whale watching.
Pack A warm wind layer, binoculars for whales, and shoes that grip wet rock.
Old Point Loma Lighthouse
The restored 1850s lighthouse at the monument's high point, with sweeping views over San Diego Bay and the Pacific.
Rocky intertidal tide pools
The lower tide pool area, best at low tides of 0.7 feet or below. Fall and winter is when those low tides fall during park hours.
Bayside Trail and whale overlook
A coastal-sage trail down the bay side, and the overlook where gray whales pass on their winter migration.
Put the timed or highest-demand stop first, then keep the rest of the day close and low-friction. For one day in Cabrillo National Monument, time Old Point Loma Lighthouse first, then keep Rocky intertidal tide pools and Bayside Trail and whale overlook close enough that the visit still feels relaxed.
Turn Cabrillo's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Build around conditions
Let season, elevation, and weather set the plan.
Plan your trip
2 quick tools, already seeded for Cabrillo National Monument. Tune the numbers around temperature swings, footing, layers, and how much margin the route needs.
Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.
Kit Authority
Cabrillo National Monument packing list
0 of 13 packed. Check items as you pack, then take this list to the store, trailhead, or campsite.
Pack planning
Use this as a constraint check while you are still shaping the trip. The active checklist becomes useful once your route, dates, and sleep plan are set.
Checklist mode
13 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Cabrillo asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
There is no lodging or camping at the monument, which is a day-use park at the tip of Point Loma. Most visitors stay in San Diego, with Point Loma, downtown, and the beach neighborhoods all within a short drive. Campers look to San Diego-area options like Mission Bay's private RV resorts or the regional and state park campgrounds outside the city, since the monument itself has none.
Camping reservations
Cabrillo National Monument is a day-use park with no camping. Base in San Diego, and time the visit to the tides and the whale season rather than to an overnight.
Reviewed June 11, 2026
Booking window
San Diego-area campgrounds and lodging book directly. Reserve popular coastal campgrounds well ahead for winter and spring weekends.
Where to book or verify
Official National Park Service planning page for hours, fees, and tide pool guidance.
Official guidance on tide timing, safety, and what lives in the rocky intertidal zone.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Campgrounds to know

Plan the last mile as carefully as the destination.
Airports, roads, entrances, and local movement belong in the same plan.
Getting there
Fly in
The monument sits at the southern tip of the Point Loma peninsula, about 20 minutes from downtown San Diego and the airport.
Car strategy
A car is the practical way to reach it, and the $20 fee covers the vehicle for seven days.
Local movement
Plan your arrival around the day's tide chart and the earlier closing time of the lower tide pool lots.
Pair this with lodging: the simplest base is the one that removes a real morning problem, not just the one nearest the map pin.
Fall and winter, when low tides of 0.7 feet or below fall within park hours. In spring and summer the good low tides usually happen outside the open hours, so the pools stay submerged. Always check the tide chart before you go.
The fee is $20 per vehicle, good for seven days. National park passes are also accepted.
Yes, in winter. Gray whales pass on their migration from roughly December into March, and the monument has an overlook built for watching them, the same season as the best tide pools.
No. It is a day-use park with no camping. Stay in San Diego and visit by day, timing your trip to the tides and the whale season.