San Onofre State Beach consists of 3,000 acres of the Southern California coastline between San Clemente and Camp Pendleton. San Onofre offers beachgoers a chance to experience what Southern California’s coast may have looked like a hundred years ago.
With its natural beauty and pristine waters, it’s no wonder why San Onofre Beach and the surrounding area are the fifth most visited parks in California. The park includes San Onofre Bluffs, San Onofre Beach, and San Mateo Campground.
San Onofre Bluffs
San Onofre Bluffs stretches along Old Highway 101, offering day-use parking and camping. Popular with swimmers and surfers, the bluffs feature camping areas located along old highway 101. These sites are primitive and can be pretty noisy with passing trains and nearby freeway traffic.
There are three miles of beach fronting San Onofre Bluffs State Campground. Trailheads at six access points lead down to the beaches below the bluff. There are day-use parking lots at the north and south ends of the bluff camping areas.
At one time, there was a nude beach at the south end of San Onofre beach, reached by Trail number 6. Rangers now ticket folks for bare buffs, dramatically curtailing the activity.
San Mateo Campground
San Mateo Campground is about 1.5 miles inland from the beach. A trail connects the campground to Trestles Beach, a world-class surfing site. San Mateo Creek flows east of the campground outward towards the ocean, creating wetland habitats that host rare and endangered species.
San Onofre Beach – Day Use
Surf beach is day use only, but visitors can park right next to the beach along a rather bumpy dirt road. During the summer, arrive early at surf beach parking is limited and fills up quickly. This beach is very popular with locals and has a long surfing history.
Old Man’s Beach
San Onofre State Beach is also called Old Man’s. This beach earned its reputation when heavy wooden longboards required rolling, flowing waves, which still provide a popular surf spot for grommets and seasoned surfers.
Old Man’s lies just north of the now-decommissioned nuclear plant. Surfers who have swarmed to this spot for decades swear the water at Old Man’s is warmer, claiming that since it was used to cool the plant’s reactors, it returned to sea hotter than it entered.
But the waters at San Onofre State Beach are not radioactive, and in fact, the tales told by local surfers are speculated to have spawned as a way to keep their break from being encroached on by outsiders.
Trestles Beach
Trestles Beach is north of Old Man’s, situated near the San Mateo Creek river mouth, and is a world-famous surf break where many pro surfers have plied their skills. Trestles can be reached by a scenic hiking trail that starts at the San Mateo Campground.
San Onofre State Beach Getting There
San Onofre Beach is located just a few miles south of metropolitan Orange County and north of the urban sprawl of San Diego on I-5. San Onofre is perfect for a day trip or overnight camping adventure.
Nearby camping spots include San Clemente State Beach and Doheny State Beach. Camping reservations for all three beaches can be made on this website.