The 30 Best East Coast Beach Resorts, From the Keys to Kennebunkport
Every summer, the East Coast performs one of the country’s strangest migrations. Not the people—the season itself. In June, Palm Beach valet stands sit half empty while rates at some of Florida’s finest resorts collapse to a fraction of their winter peaks. For travelers willing to exchange postcard weather for serious value, it’s one of American luxury’s best-kept arbitrage opportunities. Then summer begins its slow climb north.
By July, beach chairs start filling along the Carolinas, where long afternoons dissolve into shrimp boils, dock cocktails and marsh sunsets. A few weeks later, the Hamptons enter their annual exercise in competitive parking, ferries to Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard begin selling out and Cape Cod traffic reports become their own regional weather forecast. By August, New England has become the place Americans have spent the entire year imagining, when lobster rolls taste better simply because they’re eaten outdoors, linen jackets finally make meteorological sense and no one minds putting on a plush sweater after dinner.
The Atlantic has always offered a more varied idea of summer than its western counterpart. While the Pacific keeps much of the coastline in climatic equilibrium from San Diego to Seattle, the East Coast reinvents itself every few hundred miles. A weekend in the Florida Keys shares little with one in Kennebunkport, just as Charleston’s tidal Lowcountry has almost nothing in common with the clipped hedgerows of Nantucket or the Gilded Age porches of Watch Hill. The best hotels amplify these differences. Some preserve generations of old-money ritual, others embrace barefoot ease or crisp contemporary design, but the ones worth crossing state lines for could exist nowhere else. Here, we follow summer as it advances up the Atlantic, stopping at the resorts that define each stretch of shoreline along the way.