9 Best Sights in New York, USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in New York - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Jones Beach State Park

Fodor's Choice

Eleven miles east of Long Beach, this 6½-mile-long expanse of white sand is one of the best-known and most popular of Long Island's beaches. The 2,500-acre park is loaded with facilities and activites to keep locals and visitors busy day and night. A 1½-mile-long boardwalk has deck games (fee), mini-golf, a pool, playgrounds, picnic areas, and two surf-casting areas (by permit), and hosts special summer events like live music at the bandshell. Lifeguards are on duty from late May to mid-September. The park can be reached from the Wantagh and Meadowbrook parkways (head south). Be prepared for crowds on weekends. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; showers; toilets. Best for: surfing; swimming; walking; windsurfing.

1 Ocean Pkwy, Wantagh, NY, 11793, USA
516-785–1600
Sight Details
Parking $10 late May–early Sept., weekdays 8–4, weekends and holidays 7–6; $8 early Apr.–mid-May and Sept. 13–Nov. 16, weekends and holidays 8–4

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Rockaway Beach and Boardwalk

Rockaway Beach Fodor's Choice

Stretching almost the entire length of the peninsula, this beach is separated into sections according to and labeled with the nearest cross street. In order to prevent erosion that worsened after Hurricane Sandy, certain sections of the beach are closed on various days, so check the website for details. The adjoining concrete boardwalk becomes a see-and-be-seen bazaar in the height of summer. Bikers, strollers, joggers, and rollerbladers all share space with day-trippers trying to spot their friends on the sand. There are also plenty of eateries and some swimsuit and surf shops for browsing. Amenities: food and drink; toilets; lifeguards (in season). Best for: swimming; walking; surfing; partiers.

Brighton Beach

Brighton Beach

Just steps from the subway, this stretch of golden sand is the showpiece of Brooklyn's oceanside playground. Families set up beach blankets, umbrellas, and coolers, and pickup games of beach volleyball and football add to the excitement. Calm surf, a lively boardwalk, and a handful of restaurants for shade and refreshments complete the package. That spit of land in the distance is the Rockaway Peninsula, in Queens. Amenities: toilets. Best for: people-watching; sunsets.

Brightwater Ct., Brooklyn, NY, 11235, USA

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Coney Island Beach

Coney Island

This 2½-mile beach, flanked by the Riegelmann Boardwalk and the amusement park rides beyond, has become an essential part of New York legend. Although open (and visited) year-round, the beach really heats up in summer, when it can feel like the entire population of New York is out sunning and swimming. In winter, you'll see Russian, Eastern European, and Central Asian inhabitants of neighboring Brighton Beach strolling the boardwalk in their Sunday best. Moreover, the annual Polar Bear Plunge on January 1 sees thousands of revelers greet the new year by diving into the frigid waters of the Atlantic. Run by the Coney Island Polar Bear Club ( www.polarbearclub.org), a winter bathing club founded in 1903, it's free and open to everyone as long as they've registered on the website—although donations are highly encouraged at registration, to benefit local nonprofits and the community. Amenities: toilets; food and drink. Best for: swimming; people-watching.

Brooklyn, NY, 11224, USA

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Coney Island Beach

Coney Island
Just west of Brighton Beach, the Coney Island beach shares many of its neighbor's assets: a gentle surf, golden sand, the famous boardwalk, and plenty of restaurants. The now-defunct Parachute Jump is a great photo op.

Fleets Cove Beach

stretches for 1,600 feet on Northport Bay and includes a boardwalk, playground, and summer lifeguards.

Off Fleets Cove Rd., Centerport, NY, 11743, USA
631-351–3000
Sight Details
$25 Memorial Day–Labor Day
Daily 9–7:30

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Fort Tilden Beach

Rockaway Beach

A former military site, this section of the Rockaway peninsula is still dotted with intriguing detritus. Two brutalist concrete batteries—Battery Harris West and Battery Harris East—are covered in graffiti and overgrown plant life, making for astonishing sights and choice photo backdrops. There are also two other batteries buried beneath the sand, as well as an underground missile silo, but you'll largely have to imagine what those looked like as they're blocked by a tall chain-link fence. Thanks to its relative inaccessibility (you really need a car, or be prepared to take a long subway ride followed by a bus), the beach itself remains blissfully empty for much of the year. Amenities: toilets. Best for: swimming; solitude.

Gold Star Battalion Beach

The 400-foot with a playground, beach house, and summer lifeguards, faces Huntington Bay.

Browns Rd., Huntington, NY, 11743, USA
631-351–3089
Sight Details
$25 Memorial Day–Labor Day
Daily 9–7:30

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Ocean Beach Park

Sun seekers throng this beach park, which stretches for 5 miles on the barrier island's south side, to play volleyball, surf, swim, and sunbathe—all under the watchful eyes of lifeguards (on duty weekends late May to mid-June, daily mid-June to early September). While well known as a summer haven, the 2-mile boardwalk attracts walkers, runners and cyclists year-round. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; showers. Best for: surfing; swimming; walking.

Magnolia St., Long Beach, NY, 11770, USA
516-447–3031
Sight Details
$12 late May–early Sept., other times free
Daily 9–6

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