Towns & Areas · Nevada North Shore

Incline Village

Our home base —” pine-shaded streets between the mountains and the clearest water on the lake.

The Lay of the Land

Quiet Luxury, Outdoors First

Incline Village fills the lake's northeast corner on the Nevada side —” a low-key resort town of pines, trails and two golf courses, with no casino strip and no boardwalk bustle. It's where this site is based, and the best jumping-off point for the East Shore's famous water: Sand Harbor is 4 miles down NV-28 and Hidden Beach is walkable via the East Shore Trail.

In winter the town runs on Diamond Peak, the community-owned ski hill with the lake-view runs, with Mt. Rose fifteen minutes up the highway. In summer it's beach mornings, bike rides on Lakeshore Boulevard and long dinners.

East Shore gateway Diamond Peak Golf & trails
Good to Know

The Incline Essentials

Beaches

The Private-Beach Rule

Incline's in-town beaches (Incline Beach, Ski Beach and Burnt Cedar) are reserved for property owners and their guests with an IVGID pass —” visitors staying in local lodging often get access through their host; ask when booking. Everyone else: Hidden Beach and Sand Harbor are the public options, and they're better anyway.

Do

Trails, Golf & the Lake

Walk or ride the paved East Shore Trail, climb to Monkey Rock, tee off on the Championship or Mountain golf courses, or rent a kayak and paddle the boulder coves. Winter adds sledding hills and two ski areas within 15 minutes.

Eat

From Rotisserie to White Tablecloth

T's Mesquite Rotisserie and Austin's for casual; Bite for small plates; Le Bistro for French; Lone Eagle Grille on the water for the sunset splurge —” all in our Food & Drink guide.

Stay

Hyatt to Hideaways

The lakefront Hyatt Regency anchors the high end; condos and cabins in the pines (like our own creekside condo) suit longer stays. See Places to Stay.

Nightlife

Crystal Bay Next Door

For a bit of neon, the state-line casinos of Crystal Bay —” including the Crystal Bay Club's storied showroom —” are five minutes west.

Getting around: Everything in town is a 10-minute drive, but summer parking at the public beaches goes early —” bike or walk the East Shore Trail when you can. Reno's airport is ~45 minutes over the Mt. Rose Highway (NV-431), the highest year-round pass at the lake; check chains in storms.
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