James Island County Park (nearby)
Details- Season
- Open year-round.
- Sites
- Developed tent and RV sites and cottages, southwest of downtown Charleston.
- The closest developed camping to the Fort Sumter ferry docks.

National Park Service · South Carolina
The sea fort in Charleston Harbor where the first shots of the Civil War were fired, reachable only by a concession ferry, so booking that boat is the entire plan.

Field briefing
Fort Sumter National Monument starts with access, not mileage.
Before you go
There is no separate park entrance fee, but the ferry runs around $40 per adult and sailings sell out in spring and summer, so reserve ahead. The full round trip is about two and a quarter hours, with roughly an hour on the island. Fort Moultrie, reachable by car on Sullivan's Island, is part of the same monument.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Warm, pleasant, and breezy on the harbor, the most comfortable time to visit.
Pack Sun protection and a light layer for the open ferry deck and fort.
Hot and humid, with strong sun and frequent afternoon thunderstorms.
Pack Water, a sun hat, and an earlier ferry to beat heat and storms.
Warm, easing humidity, and steady harbor breezes; an excellent season.
Pack Sun protection and a light jacket for breezy boat rides.
Mild but cool and windy on the water, with the smallest crowds and a reduced ferry schedule.
Pack A warm layer and windbreak for the harbor crossing.
The ferry crossing
A narrated 30-minute boat ride across Charleston Harbor from Liberty Square or Patriots Point, with skyline and harbor views. It is the only public way to reach the fort.
The fort and ranger talk
About an hour on the island for a ranger program and self-guided exploration of the gun emplacements and ramparts where the war began.
Fort Sumter museum
Exhibits and the original flag, at both the harbor education center and on the island, framing the bombardment of April 1861.
Put the timed or highest-demand stop first, then keep the rest of the day close and low-friction. For one day in Fort Sumter National Monument, time The ferry crossing first, then keep The fort and ranger talk and Fort Sumter museum close enough that the visit still feels relaxed.
Turn Fort Sumter's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.
Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.
Kit Authority
Fort Sumter National Monument packing list
0 of 10 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
10 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Fort Sumter asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
There is no lodging on Fort Sumter; you cannot stay overnight on the island. Base in Charleston, which has the full range of hotels from the historic downtown near the Liberty Square ferry dock to Mount Pleasant near the Patriots Point dock. For camping, James Island County Park southwest of downtown has the closest developed sites, and state and county parks ring the area. Most visitors simply day-trip the ferry from a Charleston hotel.
Camping reservations
Fort Sumter is a ferry-access island with no camping and no overnight stays. The reservation that matters is the concession ferry from Liberty Square or Patriots Point, which sells out in peak season. For tents, base at a Charleston-area campground.
Reviewed June 11, 2026
Booking window
Reserve the Fort Sumter ferry in advance, especially March to August. James Island County Park is the nearest camping.
Where to book or verify
The official NPS concession ferry from Liberty Square and Patriots Point.
The closest developed campground to downtown Charleston.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Campgrounds to know

Make the transfer plan before the trail plan.
Weather windows, boat schedules, flight buffers, and backup days shape what is realistic.
Getting there
Transfer plan
Fort Sumter sits on a man-made island in Charleston Harbor and is reachable only by the official concession ferry.
Transfer plan
Boats leave from two docks: Liberty Square at the Fort Sumter Visitor Education Center in downtown Charleston, and Patriots Point in Mount Pleasant.
Local movement
Both have parking.
Pair this with lodging: the best base is the one that protects the departure window, pickup point, or weather buffer.
Only by the official concession ferry. Boats depart from Liberty Square in downtown Charleston and from Patriots Point in Mount Pleasant. There is no bridge, and private boats cannot dock, so booking the ferry is the whole plan.
There is no separate park entrance fee, but the round-trip concession ferry costs around $40 per adult, with lower rates for children and seniors. The ferry ticket is your access and includes time on the island.
Budget about two and a quarter hours round trip: roughly 30 minutes each way on the narrated ferry plus about an hour on the island for the ranger talk and self-guided exploration.
Yes, especially in spring and summer when sailings sell out. Reserve through the official concessioner in advance and arrive early at the dock for your scheduled boat.