4 Most Relaxing Beaches on Florida's Panhandle

From east to west, we've selected the Panhandle's most alluring and lesser-known locales.
 'Family walking to beach'

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'Family walking to beach'

Photo by: Creatas

Creatas

Planning a Florida vacation without doing your research is likely to land you in expected destinations such as packed-to-the-gills South Florida or not-so-delightfully tacky Daytona Beach.

To experience Florida's most pristine and beautiful beaches away from the masses, consider passing on the perpetually populated peninsula and set your sun-loving sights on the state's loneliest region — the Panhandle — instead.

Most people associate that northernmost thin stretch of Florida, which fronts the Gulf of Mexico, with the raucous spring break crowds of Panama City. The busy resort town is the heart of an area that has long been dubbed the Redneck Riviera, much to the chagrin of marketing types, who are hard at work rebranding the beaches around Panama City as "the Emerald Coast."

Snowbirds, most hailing from Canada and the Midwest, abound in the winter months throughout the Panhandle. However, they tend to stick to the populated communities of Fort Walton Beach and Destin. Come summertime, crowds thin out, and you'll find endless stretches of solitary sand.

From east to west, we've selected 4 of the Panhandle's most alluring and lesser-known locales.

1: Dog Island

The Nature Conservancy owns the bulk of this eastern Panhandle island, giving you an idea of just how untouched Dog Island is. For unspoiled beaches that you can enjoy largely by your lonesome year-round, few Florida islands can compare. There's only one hotel on the roughly 7-mile-long island, the loaded-with-character if lovably ramshackle Pelican Inn, where you can snag one of 8 oceanfront studios for your own private retreat. "The island that time forgot" is reached by passenger ferry from Carabelle (50 miles southwest of Tallahassee). You can't bring a car, as the roughly 100 locals who live here call it their sanctuary. But you're guaranteed quiet beaches with powdered-sugar sand, shells galore and aquamarine waters.

2: St. Joseph Peninsula State Park

Jutting out from the eastern side of the Panhandle like a delicate fishing hook, Cape San Blas — bound on three sides by the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and St. Joseph Bay — is home to one of the country's most sublime beaches. At St. Joseph Peninsula State Park, located at the tip of the coastal barrier peninsula, 10 miles of uninterrupted sugar-white oceanfront await. The spit of sand fronts the crystalline waters of the gulf, and water temperatures in the summer can reach a cozy 84 degrees. The park is a bird-watcher's paradise, with more than 240 species. And there's a full-facility campground set just back from the beach if you want to stay the night. Postcard-perfect doesn't even begin to do this place justice; if you like your beach time as close to nature as possible, you'll be in heaven.

Florida's Best-Kept Secret
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3: Grayton Beach

Bypass the nearby Truman Show-esque resort towns of WaterColor and Seaside and head to the artsy community of Grayton Beach — a funky little beach burg with heaps more character and equally stunning sands. Hemingway-style wooden homes are tucked down side streets "paved" with crushed oyster shells, conjuring up Florida beach towns of yesteryear. Come sundown, head to the Red Bar for some local color and live jazz; the bar is a longstanding institution, Grayton Beach's version of Key West's Sloppy Joe's. Nearby, the Topsail Hill Preserve State Park is a can't-miss natural attraction, with beaches that are more secluded still and unusual maritime lakes that dot the undulating dunes.

4: Blue Mountain Beach

A blip on the radar between the popular resort communities of Destin and Seaside, Blue Mountain Beach is a residential community with a slew of private beach homes available for rent by the week or season. Save for a few health-food stores and gourmet grocers, there's not much of a commercial presence in town — and that's just how locals like it. Regional lore says that the beach gets its name from a blue cast that a native wildflower, lupine, gives the dunes. But more obvious are the powdery quartz sands, backed by the Gulf of Mexico, which is constantly fading between turquoise and sapphire. When you've had your fill of lounging on the beach, rent a bike to pedal along the 19-mile, paved Timpoochee Trail, which skirts the sea along the scenic County Road 30A.

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