One Day in Biscayne National Park

A focused plan for the national park that's 95% water.

Two snorkelers diving over a coral reef in the clear aquamarine water of Biscayne National Park
The reefs sit offshore, reachable only by boat. Photo: NPS image by Shaun Wolfe

Here's the thing nobody tells you about Biscayne: most of the park isn't somewhere you can walk to. It's "within sight of Miami, yet worlds away": a combination of aquamarine water, emerald islands, and coral reefs that's roughly 95% water. The land-based visit is short and pleasant; the real park requires a boat. One realistic day means deciding which version you're doing.

First, the big decision: land day or water day

Biscayne is unusual among national parks. The mainland piece (the Dante Fascell Visitor Center and Convoy Point) is small, free, and walkable in an hour or two. Everything that makes Biscayne famous (the reefs, Boca Chita Key, the snorkeling) sits miles offshore and is reachable only by boat.

So before you go, pick a lane:

If you only have a few hours and didn't book ahead, the land day is genuinely fine. Just don't expect to touch a reef.

Morning: the visitor center and Convoy Point

Start at the Dante Fascell Visitor Center (open daily 9 a.m.–5 p.m.). There's a museum, a park film, an art gallery, and a wide view across Biscayne Bay, a good orientation and, on a hot day, blessed air conditioning. The grounds at Convoy Point open earlier, at 7 a.m., if you want to beat the heat.

Walk the Convoy Point jetty trail, a roughly half-mile out-and-back of pavement, boardwalk, and gravel that runs out along the jetty. It's level and stroller-friendly. The far end is a designated bird sanctuary where shorebirds, terns, and double-crested cormorants gather, especially in winter. Bring binoculars.

One Day in Biscayne National Park
Photo: NPS photo

Getting on the water (book this ahead)

If you want the islands and reefs, plan in advance. Your realistic options:

Fishing is popular here too. The park supports snapper, grouper, tarpon, and bonefish, but a Florida saltwater license is required for anyone 16 and older, and Biscayne's bag and size limits are often stricter than the surrounding waters. Check FWC rules before you cast.

Doing this with kids

Have them grab the Junior Ranger booklet at the visitor center. Biscayne's program teams up with Big Cypress and Everglades; finish all three and kids earn an exclusive South Florida patch, which makes for a nice excuse for a multi-park trip. The jetty walk and bird-watching keep little legs busy without much complaining, and the lawn is built for a picnic and a run-around. For a one-day land visit, budget a relaxed two to three hours and don't over-schedule.

When to go, and the verdict

Aim for winter or early spring (the January average is about 68°F). It's drier, milder, and the best birding season. Summer is hot and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, and June through November is hurricane season, so water trips get canceled when the weather turns. There are no entrance fees, and the visitor center makes a calm, low-effort stop.

Bring a dog? Be honest with yourself: Biscayne is mostly water, and the best parts are off-limits to pets. Leashed dogs (6 feet, attended) are welcome at Convoy Point and in developed areas on Elliott Key, but Boca Chita Key bans pets entirely, including on boats docked in the harbor, except service animals. So a dog can do the land day with you, not the marquee island.

The verdict: as a one-day land stop, Biscayne is pleasant and quick but easy to underestimate. You'll leave wondering where the park was. Give it a water day, even a half-day snorkel, and it becomes one of the most distinctive parks in the system. Plan the boat, or plan to come back.

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