What to See at the Golden Gate
A highlights guide to one of the country's biggest urban parks.
Golden Gate isn't one place you drive into and tick off. It's a sprawl of beaches, headlands, forts, and trails spread over 60-plus miles on both sides of San Francisco. You can't see all of it, and you shouldn't try. Here's how to pick the parts that matter.
Start at Crissy Field and Fort Point
If you only have a half-day, spend it on the San Francisco waterfront under the bridge. Crissy Field is a flat, grassy former airfield with a wide promenade, big bay views, and the Golden Gate Bridge looming overhead. It's stroller-friendly, dog-friendly (on leash), and an easy win with kids who don't hike.
Walk west and you reach Fort Point National Historic Site, a Civil War-era brick fortress tucked directly under the bridge's south anchorage. It's open Friday through Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Check before you go, because the schedule is limited and it closes on major holidays. The view straight up at the bridge from the fort is one of the best in the city, and it's free.
- Crissy Field Birdwatching: the restored marsh draws egrets, herons, and shorebirds. Quietest early morning.
- Bike the Golden Gate Bridge: rent near Fisherman's Wharf, roll across to Sausalito, and ferry back. A classic, but expect crowds and wind.
The Marin Headlands
Cross the bridge to the north side and the landscape flips from city to wild coastal hills in about ten minutes. The Marin Headlands give you those postcard shots of the bridge framed by golden grass and fog. Rodeo Beach, a dark-sand cove, anchors the area, and the trails here suit families well, with short legs and big payoffs.
- Hawk Hill Birdwatching: in fall this overlook is one of the best raptor-migration spots on the West Coast. There's accessible parking and toilets at the top; the trails past the tunnels get steep and narrow.
- Rodeo Lagoon Birdwatching: an easy flat loop where the lagoon meets the ocean.
- Nike Missile Site SF-88: a restored Cold War missile base, open Thursday through Saturday for demonstrations. Genuinely strange and memorable for older kids.
One catch: Conzelman Road, the cliff-edge route with the famous viewpoints, is narrow and one-way in stretches. Go slow, and don't expect to park easily on a clear weekend.
Lands End and the western edge
On the ocean side of San Francisco, Lands End offers a rugged coastal trail past cypress groves, shipwreck remains at low tide, and the ruins of the Sutro Baths. It's open from 6 a.m. until an hour after sunset. Pair it with nearby China Beach or Sutro Heights Park for a quieter afternoon away from the bridge crowds. This stretch is more about the walk than any single landmark. Bring layers, because the fog out here means business.
The Presidio and Alcatraz
The Presidio is a former military post turned park, an "outdoor museum" of brick barracks, forested trails, and overlooks. It's an easy add-on to a Crissy Field morning.
- Presidio Birdwatching: warblers and woodland species in the restored forest and creek areas.
- Torpedo Wharf Fishing: a pier near Fort Point with bridge views and no license needed for the public pier.
Alcatraz Island is part of Golden Gate too, but it's a separate trip: ferry-only, tickets sell out days to weeks ahead, and you book through the official concessioner. Don't show up at the dock hoping to walk on.
Up in the Marin forests
The park stretches well north into redwood country. The Cross Marin Trail is a flat, paved former rail grade along Lagunitas Creek, good for easy walks and strollers. For more of a workout, the Bolinas Ridge Trail runs along a high ridge with Pacific panoramas and is popular with both hikers and mountain bikers. These sit far from the bridge, so treat them as their own day rather than a quick detour.
A few notes: there's no entrance fee for most of Golden Gate, parking lots generally close at sunset, and the fog can erase a view in minutes. Summer is the foggiest stretch. September and October bring the clearest skies. Pack a jacket no matter the month.
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