Los AngelesPart of California

Where to stay

Venice Beach

Boardwalk, canals, and skate culture

A 2.5-mile boardwalk lined with muscle beach, street performers, and graffiti walls, with quiet 1905 canals just one block inland.

About Venice Beach

A 2.5-mile boardwalk lined with muscle beach, street performers, and graffiti walls, with quiet 1905 canals just one block inland. As one of the most distinctive neighborhoods in Los Angeles, Venice Beach is the kind of stop most first-time visitors build a half-day around — and that returning travelers keep finding new angles on. Boardwalk, canals, and skate culture.

Los Angeles itself sets the tone: equal parts beach town, movie set, and sprawling suburb. LA rewards travelers who pick two or three neighborhoods and skip the rest. Venice Beach fits squarely into that story, which is why it lands on almost every shortlist of things to do in Los Angeles, United States.

What to see at Venice Beach

Most visits to Venice Beach center on a handful of set-pieces. Don't try to rush through all of them — pick two or three and give them real time. The highlights worth pacing yourself for include abbot kinney blvd boutiques, the venice canals, and skate plaza at sunset.

Each one rewards a slower look. The first visit tends to be about taking in the scale; the second is when you start noticing the details that make this neighborhood feel like Los Angeles and nowhere else.

Insider tips for Venice Beach

A few practical notes that locals and repeat visitors tend to repeat: walk the canals at golden hour for the best photos, eat on abbot kinney, not the boardwalk, and keep valuables hidden — petty theft happens.

These aren't rules — they're just the kind of small choices that turn a decent visit into a memorable one. If you only follow one piece of advice, make it the first.

When to visit

Venice Beach is open year-round, but timing your visit to Los Angeles well makes a real difference to what you'll experience. March–May and September–November have warm days, cool nights, and the lightest crowds.

Within the day, early morning and the hour before sunset are almost always the best windows — fewer crowds, softer light, and a better chance of catching Los Angeles at its calmest. Midday in peak season is the trade-off worth avoiding when you can.

Getting to Venice Beach

Reaching Venice Beach is straightforward once you get the hang of moving around Los Angeles. You'll want a car. The Metro covers Hollywood, downtown, and Santa Monica, but neighborhoods are spread out.

Most visitors fold Venice Beach into a longer day in this part of Los Angeles, so leave time on either side to walk the surrounding blocks. The approach is part of the experience.

Where it fits in your Los Angeles trip

Venice Beach pairs naturally with the other headline stops in Los Angeles. A common rhythm is to combine it with Griffith Observatory, Santa Monica Pier, and The Getty Center — either across one packed day or split between two slower ones depending on your pace.

If this is your first trip to Los Angeles, treat Venice Beach as an anchor and plan the rest of the day around it. If it's your second or third visit, use it as a reason to explore the streets and food spots nearby that you skipped the first time.

Beyond Los Angeles

Los Angeles sits in California, and a visit to Venice Beach is a natural starting point for a wider trip through the state. Coast, mountains, deserts, and three world cities. 1,100 km of Pacific coast, the Sierra Nevada, Yosemite, Death Valley, the redwoods, and the country's two largest urban regions — all in one state.

If you have a few extra days, the California guide is the best place to see what else is within reach — including which cities are worth a detour from Los Angeles.

Planning your visit

If you're putting together a trip to Los Angeles and trying to work out where Venice Beach fits, the short answer is: near the top of the list. Most travelers give it between an hour and a half day depending on how deep they want to go, and it sits comfortably alongside the rest of the things to do in Los Angeles, United States.

Build in a buffer for queues in high season, and don't underestimate how much time you'll want to spend just being in the surrounding area. Boardwalk, canals, and skate culture, but Venice Beach also doubles as a useful orientation point for the wider neighborhoods and streets that define this side of Los Angeles.

Pair this guide with our full Los Angeles city guide for context on neighborhoods, getting around, and where to stay, and with the United States country guide if you're considering more than one stop. Between them you'll have enough to put together a confident itinerary without over-planning a single visit.

What to see

Insider tips

  • Walk the canals at golden hour for the best photos.
  • Eat on Abbot Kinney, not the boardwalk.
  • Keep valuables hidden — petty theft happens.

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