Convoy Point Boardwalk
A short boardwalk near the visitor center through mangroves, one of the few walkable trails not requiring a boat. No permit.
Florida · Stamp 49 / 63
Ninety-five percent water, protecting one of the largest coral reef tracts in North America just south of Miami.
Biscayne is roughly 95 percent water, and it shows: aside from a short boardwalk and mangrove trail near the visitor center, nearly everything worth seeing in this park is reachable only by boat. Beneath the surface lies part of the Florida Reef, the third-largest coral reef tract on Earth and the largest in North America, along with more than 40 documented shipwrecks scattered across the bay from four centuries of maritime traffic.
Boca Chita Key, a small island with an ornamental 1930s lighthouse built by a wealthy Standard Oil executive, is the park's most-visited destination for boaters and tour groups, offering a short loop trail and a lighthouse climb when it's open. Elliott Key, the park's largest island and the northernmost of the true Florida Keys, protects a rare stretch of tropical hardwood hammock forest.
Come for the reef and the history beneath the water. Stay for how different this park feels from any land-based national park you've visited. Read the story, book a boat tour if you don't have your own, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
As 95 percent of Biscayne National Park is water, the best way to appreciate it is to take a boat trip out to one of its keys.Adapted from visitor accounts of touring Biscayne National Park by boat
Six ways to spend your time, nearly all of them starting with a boat leaving the visitor center dock.
The park's most popular destination, with an ornamental 1930s lighthouse and a short loop trail.
The signature trip · book aheadPart of the third-largest coral reef tract on Earth lies within the park, with guided snorkel trips departing from the visitor center.
Half day · guided trips availableExhibits on the park's marine ecosystems and maritime history, plus a boardwalk through mangroves.
Everyone · 45 minA guided paddling area with clear water, sea turtles, rays, and abundant marine life.
Half day · guided toursThe park's largest island, with a rare tropical hardwood hammock forest, reachable only by boat.
Half day · boat access requiredSeveral accessible shipwrecks are marked for snorkelers and divers along a self-guided underwater trail.
Divers & snorkelers · guided recommendedAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every route rated honestly, with a clear note on how much of this park genuinely requires a boat to reach.
A short boardwalk near the visitor center through mangroves, one of the few walkable trails not requiring a boat. No permit.
A short loop around the small island, with picnic spots along the seawall and a climbable lighthouse when open.
A trail through rare tropical hardwood hammock forest on the park's largest island. No permit beyond boat access.
A guided kayak or paddleboard route through clear, calm water rich with marine life.
A guided snorkel trip out to the coral reef, part of the third-largest reef tract on Earth.
A self-guided underwater trail connecting several accessible historic shipwrecks, for experienced snorkelers or divers.
No permit for the Convoy Point boardwalk · nearly everything else requires a boat, either your own or a booked tour · free park entry
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
A large marine snail found in the park's seagrass beds and reef areas, protected from harvest to allow population recovery.
A federally threatened species using the park's mangrove shoreline habitat, distinct from and less commonly seen than alligators.
Nests on some of the park's keys, part of a broader effort to protect sea turtle populations throughout the Florida Keys.
A distinctive pink wading bird found in the park's mangrove and shallow water habitats.
One of the largest reef fish in the Atlantic, found around the park's coral reef structures.
An endangered dwarf subspecies found in the nearby Florida Keys, though not typically within Biscayne's boundaries.
Present in serious numbers near the park's mangrove shorelines, a a real and often-underestimated part of trip planning here.
Lines much of the park's shoreline, its tangled roots providing critical nursery habitat for young fish and invertebrates.
Common in the tropical hardwood hammock forest on Elliott Key, identifiable by its distinctive reddish, peeling bark.
Common along the park's coastal areas, tolerant of salt spray and sandy soil.
Forms extensive underwater meadows throughout the bay, critical habitat for numerous marine species including sea turtles.
Found in the tropical hardwood hammock on Elliott Key; contact with its sap can cause a severe skin reaction, worth learning to identify.
Numerous coral species make up the reef structure within the park, part of the third-largest coral reef tract in the world.
Biscayne National Park is approximately 95 percent water, one of the highest proportions of any U.S. national park.
The park protects part of the Florida Reef, the third-largest coral reef tract on Earth and the largest in North America.
More than 40 documented shipwrecks lie within the park's waters, spanning roughly four centuries of maritime history.
Boca Chita Key's ornamental lighthouse was built in the 1930s by a wealthy Standard Oil executive as a private estate feature, never used for actual navigation.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Biscayne deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
Further into the water, near the very tip of the Florida Keys: another park reachable only by boat or plane.
Open Stamp 50 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Biscayne into a trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.