Beaches & Watersports

Kayak & Paddleboard

Sixty feet of visibility under your hull —” paddling is the single best way to experience Tahoe's famous water.

Why Paddle Here

Flying Over Boulders

With clarity running 60 —“70 feet, paddling Tahoe feels like low-altitude flight: granite boulders slide beneath your hull, trout flicker in the shallows, and in the coves the water goes a turquoise that looks rented from the Caribbean. Kayaks and paddleboards also reach the shoreline cars can't —” hidden coves, boulder gardens and beaches with no road access.

Rentals line the busy beaches (Sand Harbor, Kings Beach, Zephyr Cove, Tahoe City) by the hour or half-day, and guided tours —” including popular clear-bottom kayak trips out of Incline Village —” handle the logistics if you'd rather just paddle. The 72-mile Lake Tahoe Water Trail maps launch and landing points the whole way around for the ambitious.

Rentals at major beaches Clear-bottom tours 72-mi Water Trail
Where to Paddle

Our Favorite Routes

Classic

Sand Harbor Boulder Coves

Rent right on the beach and thread the granite boulders that made Sand Harbor famous —” sheltered, photogenic and perfect for first-timers. Go before 10 am for glass-calm water.

Bucket list

Emerald Bay & Fannette Island

Paddle into Tahoe's most famous view and circle its only island beneath the tea-house ruins. Launch from the beaches near the bay's mouth and give yourself half a day —” see our Emerald Bay guide.

Quiet water

East Shore Coves & Skunk Harbor

From Sand Harbor or Hidden Beach, work south past Secret Cove toward Skunk Harbor —” mile after mile of boulder gardens and coves most visitors never see.

Mellow

Tahoe City & Commons Beach

Easy launches, a gentle shoreline and lunch a short walk from the sand —” the friendliest option for kids and SUP learners. Boards rent right in Tahoe City.

Stay Safe

Cold Water, Real Rules

Water temperatureEven in August the open lake runs in the 60s °F, and colder off the beaches in early summer —” falling in is a shock. Wear the leash on a SUP; consider a wetsuit early season
Life jacketsA wearable PFD is required aboard for every paddler (kids must wear theirs); paddleboards count as vessels
WindThe famous afternoon westerly builds fast and pushes offshore on the East Shore —” paddle mornings, stay within a comfortable swim of land, and head in when whitecaps appear
Invasive speciesClean, drain and dry your own kayak/SUP before launching —” Tahoe runs a strict aquatic-invasive-species program, and arriving with a wet, dirty boat can get you turned away
WeatherSummer thunderstorms build over the crest by early afternoon; off the water at the first rumble
The golden rule of Tahoe paddling: mornings are for the water, afternoons are for the beach. Launch by 9, and you'll get mirror-flat conditions and empty coves; launch at 2 and you'll get wind chop and a workout you didn't order.

More Ways to Play

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