
San Clemente
Spanish village by the sea with perfect surfing waves
San Clemente feels like someone dropped a slice of old Spain right onto the California coast. The red-tiled roofs and white stucco buildings aren't just for show — this town was actually designed by Ole Hanson in the 1920s to look like a Spanish village. And somehow, nearly a century later, it still works.
The surf breaks here are legendary. T-Street draws pros and groms alike, while San Onofre State Beach offers gentler waves for beginners. But San Clemente isn't just about catching waves. The beach town vibe runs deep, from the mom-and-pop shops along Avenida Del Mar to the families spreading out blankets at San Clemente State Beach.
You'll find yourself slowing down here. Maybe it's the ocean breeze or the way locals still wave from their beach cruisers. The town manages to feel both timeless and completely current — craft breweries sit next to 50-year-old taco shops, and million-dollar homes overlook the same beaches where surfers camp out in beat-up vans.
Best Months
APR – OCT
~23°C · moderate crowds
Culture & Context
SURF SHAPER CAPITAL
San Clemente calls itself the "Spanish Village by the Sea," and the Spanish Colonial architecture is everywhere — terracotta roofs, white stucco walls, bougainvillea draped over iron railings along Avenida Del Mar. But the town's real identity is surf. This place has more shaping factories per capita than anywhere else in the world.
The Surfing Heritage and Culture Center on Calle Seville is free admission and worth an hour of your time — the board collection alone spans decades of design evolution. Former President Nixon had his Western White House here (La Casa Pacifica, in Southwest San Clemente), which locals are still weirdly proud of. The surf industry runs deep: brands like Lost Surfboards, Rip Curl, and a wall of independent shapers are woven into the fabric of the town.
Pros like Kolohe Andino, the Colapinto brothers, and Caroline Marks all call this area home. And the WSL Rip Curl Finals at Trestles annually crown the world surfing champions right in the backyard. Here's the thing: the town has two personalities.
There's the old surf-gritty San Clemente — shaping bays, local surf shops, the Red Fox Lounge, guys who grew up on these cobblestones. And then there's the newer, more polished version: acai bowls, golf carts, outlet malls, remote workers from the Bay Area who want a zip code near the ocean. Both exist simultaneously.
The locals who remember the older version are not always subtle about it.
Local Customs
LOCALISM RULES WAVES
Surf localism is real at spots like Trestles Uppers and T-Street. Don't snake waves, don't drop in, and don't be loud about being a visitor. Just surf your turn and the vibe stays fine..
Bonfires are a genuine social ritual. San Clemente Pier, T Street, and North Beach all have fire rings. Locals use them on weekday evenings, not just weekends.
Bring your own wood (available at most gas stations nearby).. Everyone checks the surf report before making plans. Surfline or Magic Seaweed for Trestles conditions.
If the swell is pumping, half the town rearranges its schedule.. The Fiesta Music Festival on August 8, 2026 shuts down Avenida Del Mar entirely. Parking gets brutal by 10am.
Park up the hill near the outlets or at San Clemente High School and walk down.. Weekday mornings are when locals actually use the beach trail. Summer weekends bring the crowds from inland OC and LA, and the pier area gets packed by noon..
Dog rules are strict: most San Clemente beaches are not pet-friendly. There is one small designated dog beach, so check the map before you bring the pup.. Golf carts and e-bikes are everywhere on the streets near Trestles.
The state park trail down to the breaks is foot and bike access only — no cars.
Safety
VERY SAFE TOWN
San Clemente is genuinely safe by any reasonable measure. The violent crime rate sits around 0.15% and the overall crime rate is roughly 1.
56%. It consistently ranks among the safer cities in Orange County. The beach trail and coastal areas are well-lit and well-patrolled.
Standard city sense applies: don't leave valuables visible in parked cars, especially near popular trailheads. The one infrastructure issue worth knowing: the coastal bluffs have ongoing erosion and landslide concerns along the rail corridor. The train tracks near Mariposa Point have seen repeated emergency closures in recent years due to coastal instability.
This doesn't affect beach safety directly, but if you're staying near the cliffs, pay attention to any area closures. Rip currents can be strong at San Clemente State Beach and Trestles. Lifeguards are posted at T-Street and the pier area, but Trestles is a more remote break accessed by trail — swim and surf conditions there are on you to assess.
Getting Around
CAR ESSENTIAL HERE
Car is king here. San Clemente's walk score of 34 confirms what anyone driving around town immediately notices — the hills, the spread of the neighborhoods, and the limited grid make walking for errands mostly impractical outside the Pier Bowl. That said, Amtrak Pacific Surfliner stops at both the San Clemente Pier and North Beach stations, and Metrolink's Orange County Line connects both stops to Irvine and Los Angeles.
Day-trippers from LA can make this work without a car if they stay near the pier. OCTA buses (Routes 1 and 91) connect main corridors, and the SC RED and SC BLUE local circulators cover some neighborhood routes. Just plan around them — frequency is limited.
The Trestles surf breaks require a bike or hike from the Cristianitos Road trailhead. No cars get you to the water's edge down there. Cycling the beach trail between North Beach and State Beach is smooth, flat, and very doable.
Rideshare (Uber/Lyft) is reliable in this part of OC. Important heads-up: the rail line through San Clemente has a documented history of emergency closures due to coastal erosion. Always check Metrolink's service updates page before booking a train-dependent itinerary.
Useful Phrases
San Clemente Itineraries
Things to Do in San Clemente

San Clemente Pier
90 min
San Clemente Coastal Trail
120 min
Casa Romantica Cultural Center and Gardens
90 minMoney-Saving Tips
- 1.Park at San Clemente State Beach for $10 instead of feeding meters downtown — you get beach access and can walk to the pier in 10 minutes
- 2.Happy hour at Left Coast Brewing runs 3-6pm daily with $2 off all pints and half-price appetizers
- 3.Buy groceries at the Albertsons on El Camino Real instead of beach shops — prices drop 30-40% just two blocks inland
- 4.Metrolink day passes cost $10 and include unlimited rides to LA or San Diego — cheaper than gas and parking
- 5.Wednesday farmers market on Del Mar Street offers free samples and local produce at half the price of grocery stores
- 6.San Onofre State Beach charges $15 for parking but camping spots start at $35 — split a site with friends for cheap accommodation
Travel Tips
- •Arrive at T-Street before 8am for parking and the best waves — it fills up fast on any day with decent surf
- •Download the Surfline app to check conditions at different breaks — San Onofre and T-Street can be completely different on the same day
- •Bring layers even in summer — marine layer can keep mornings cool until 11am, then it's 80 degrees by afternoon
- •The coastal bike path connects to Dana Point and Laguna Beach — rent a cruiser and make a day of it
- •Check tide charts before planning beach time — low tide exposes tide pools at San Clemente State Beach
- •PCH traffic backs up heading north on Friday afternoons and Sunday evenings — plan around it or take side streets
- •Many restaurants close between lunch and dinner — call ahead or eat early to avoid disappointment
- •The pier gets crowded with fishermen at dawn and dusk — best photo ops happen mid-morning
Frequently Asked Questions
Explore San Clemente
BUILD YOUR
SAN CLEMENTE PLAN
Insider picks, smart timing, and a plan ready when you are.
Start Planning