Meredith Lodging Logo
Meredith Lodging Logo
SpecialsContact Us
Meredith Lodging

    About

  • Meet the Management Team
  • Our Brands
  • Specials
  • List With Us in Oregon

    Explore

  • Blog
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Rental Rules and Policies
  • Meredith Gives

Newsletter Signup

Sign up for Specials & News from Meredith Lodging

Contact Us

OREGON COAST HEADQUARTERS
2015 NW 39th Street
Lincoln City, OR 97367
CENTRAL OREGON HEADQUARTERS
57100 Beaver Dr Bldg 5, STE 150
 Sunriver, OR 97707
[email protected]
1-541-418-4555
FacebookInstagramXLinkedinYouTube
© 2026 Meredith Lodging. All rights reserved.|All Properties|
Powered by Flow OneFlow One Logo

Easy Oregon Coast Walks to Enjoy in March: Relaxed Strolls for Every Age

Things to Do in Oregon
March 2, 2026

March on the Oregon Coast: A Season Made for Walking

March is one of the most underrated months to explore the Oregon Coast. The summer crowds have long since gone, spring is beginning to exhale across the headlands, and the coastline takes on a raw, cinematic quality that photographers and nature lovers come back for year after year. For travelers who want to slow down and actually experience the coast, not just photograph it from a car window, March offers something genuinely rare: quiet beaches, dramatic skies, and walking routes that reward curiosity at every step.

Meredith Lodging has been connecting travelers with the Oregon Coast for decades, and March is a month our guests consistently describe as transformative. Whether it’s a family looking for a low-key spring break, a couple wanting a cozy coastal escape, or a solo traveler ready to stretch their legs along a windswept shoreline, the coast in March offers walking experiences that are unhurried and deeply memorable.

Easy Oregon Coast Walks to Enjoy in March: Relaxed Strolls for Every Age

This guide highlights the most enjoyable easy Oregon Coast walks for March, organized by region, suitable for all ages and fitness levels, and built around the actual conditions, viewpoints, and hidden spots that make this stretch of the Pacific Northwest coastline so compelling. Pack your layers, bring a waterproof jacket, and plan on discovering far more than you expected.

What to Expect When Walking the Oregon Coast in March?

March weather on the Oregon Coast is changeable by nature. Temperatures typically range from the mid-40s to low 50s Fahrenheit, with frequent overcast skies, periodic rain, and occasional bursts of brilliant sunshine that make the sea glass and wet sand absolutely glow. Rather than fighting these conditions, seasoned coast visitors lean into them, and the walking experience is all the richer for it.

The key to enjoying Oregon Coast walks in March is dressing smartly and staying flexible. Waterproof footwear, a wind-resistant layer, and quick-dry clothing make even a blustery beach walk feel comfortable. Many of the walks listed here are relatively flat and well-maintained, making them ideal for families with younger children, older travelers, or anyone who prefers walkable, accessible routes over strenuous trails.

Another March advantage worth noting: whale watching. The spring gray whale migration runs through March and into April, and many of the headlands and beach access points along the coast offer excellent vantage points. Oregon’s Spring Whale Watch Week typically falls in late March, drawing naturalists and first-time visitors alike to the shore with binoculars in hand.

Lincoln City and Surrounding Communities: Where Walkability Meets the Shore

1. Roads End State Recreation Site and the North Lincoln City Shoreline

The north end of Lincoln City is one of the most walkable coastal stretches on the entire Oregon Coast. Roads End State Recreation Site offers direct beach access at the end of Logan Road, where the sand opens into a wide, relatively sheltered cove that’s manageable even in March wind. The walk south along the waterline toward the main Lincoln City beach covers roughly two miles on firm sand and passes through a landscape of sea stacks, driftwood, and occasional shorebird gatherings that make every step interesting. Guests staying in Roads End vacation rentals are steps from this access point, making it an effortless morning or evening walk from the front door.

Lincoln City’s beach itself stretches for seven uninterrupted miles, and March is an ideal time to walk longer sections without contending with summer foot traffic. The wet sand near the waterline is firm and easy underfoot, and the backdrop of coastal bluffs and the occasional kite adds a seasonal charm that feels authentically Pacific Northwest. Keep an eye out for glass floats, which are hidden along the beach throughout the year as part of Lincoln City’s beloved Glass Float Discovery Program, March walkers occasionally find them right after a storm.

Families and groups who want to explore the broader Lincoln City area will find a thoughtful mix of beach access points, beachside neighborhoods, and easy paths that connect visitors to local restaurants and boutiques without needing a car. Meredith Lodging’s Lincoln City vacation rentals span the length of the city, putting guests within walking distance of multiple beach access points, the D River State Recreation Site, and the popular East Devil’s Lake area for calmer inland walks.

2. Olivia Beach and Bella Beach: Quiet Neighborhood Walks with Coastal Character

South of Roads End, the quiet communities of Olivia Beach and Bella Beach offer some of the most serene neighborhood-to-beach walking on the Oregon Coast. These small residential areas border the sand directly, and the transition from cottage-lined streets to open beach takes only a few minutes on foot. March light catches the dunes and sea grass in a particular way that makes a short 30-minute walk feel like an entirely immersive experience. Travelers who prefer solitude over crowded beach parking will find these communities especially rewarding. Olivia Beach offers a peaceful base that keeps guests close to the water and away from busier commercial corridors.

Bella Beach sits just south of Olivia Beach and shares the same unhurried, residential character. The beach here is wide and open, with clean sand and good sightlines toward the surf, a natural vantage point for watching winter-to-spring wave patterns and spotting shorebirds foraging at the tide line. Our Bella Beach vacation rentals place guests directly within this coastal neighborhood, making spontaneous beach walks and evening low-tide explorations part of the natural rhythm of any March stay.

3. Lincoln Beach and Gleneden Beach: Gentle Shoreline Strolls with Local Flavor

Continuing south along Highway 101, Lincoln Beach and Gleneden Beach represent some of the most accessible and low-key walking territory on the central Oregon Coast. The beach at Gleneden is wide and generally calm, protected slightly by the headlands that frame the area, and the walk along the waterline toward Salishan Spit is a March highlight for birders and nature walkers. The Salishan area in particular rewards slow exploration, the sand spit at the mouth of the Siletz Bay hosts herons, egrets, and migratory waterfowl that arrive in March as seasonal patterns shift. Our Lincoln Beach vacation rentals and Gleneden Beach vacation rentals keep guests anchored close to these quieter stretches of shoreline.

The Siletz Bay area, accessible from the south end of Lincoln City and the Gleneden corridor, offers an excellent low-tide walkabout that doesn’t require any strenuous climbing or technical footwear. The estuary edges are rich with wildlife, and the bay’s reflective surface in overcast March light creates the kind of visual that keeps photographers returning year after year. This is also a strong whale-watching window: the bay’s proximity to the open ocean means gray whales can sometimes be spotted from the shoreline during the spring migration.

Pacific City, Neskowin, and the South-Central Coast: Walking the Wild Edge

1. Pacific City and Cape Kiwanda: March’s Most Dramatic Beach Walk

Pacific City is one of the Oregon Coast’s most photographed destinations, and March is arguably the best month to walk it. Cape Kiwanda’s golden sandstone headland and the iconic Haystack Rock just offshore create a geological backdrop that feels otherworldly when March storm light rolls in from the Pacific. The beach walk from the parking area north along the shoreline to the base of the cape is approximately one mile each way on firm, damp sand, and the return leg along the cape’s lower viewpoints offers elevated perspectives of the beach, the surf, and the dory launch site below. Our Pacific City vacation rentals are close to the cape and the beach, letting guests walk out directly for a sunrise stroll before the day begins.

The broad beach at Pacific City, often called Nestucca Beach locally, extends south from the cape for several miles and is flat enough for easy walking even in wet conditions. March is dory fishing season, and early mornings will often find the flat-bottomed dories launching through the surf directly from the beach, a distinctly Pacific City experience that connects visitors to the working heritage of this small coastal town. Families, in particular, tend to find the combination of beach walking, headland views, and dory-watching deeply engaging.

2. Tierra del Mar and Neskowin: Hidden-Gem Walks Worth Seeking Out

South of Pacific City, the small community of Tierra del Mar offers one of the least-discovered beach walking experiences on the entire Oregon Coast. The beach here is long, uncrowded, and backed by low dunes and seasonal grasses that shift from winter brown to early-spring green in March. There are no commercial distractions, just sand, surf, and sky in a configuration that feels genuinely remote despite being accessible from Highway 101. Meredith Lodging’s vacation rentals in Tierra del Mar offer a quiet, immersive setting for guests who want the coast without the crowds.

Neskowin is another community that consistently surprises first-time visitors. The beach here features the remarkable Proposal Rock, a forested sea stack that rises dramatically from the sand at the north end of the beach and is accessible on foot during lower tides. Walking from the Neskowin Beach State Recreation Site south along the waterline toward the creek mouth is a March walk that combines gentle sand terrain, wildlife observation, and one of the coast’s most distinctive natural landmarks. Our Neskowin vacation rentals are ideally positioned for exploring both this beach walk and the quiet forest paths that wind through the community behind the dunes.

Oceanside, Netarts, and Rockaway Beach: Classic Walks with Coastal Character

1. Oceanside and Netarts Bay: Layered Walks on the North Coast

The small coastal village of Oceanside sits beneath a dramatic headland north of Tillamook and offers one of the Oregon Coast’s most rewarding short walks. The beach at Oceanside faces directly west into the Pacific, and the combination of Three Arch Rocks offshore, a National Wildlife Refuge protecting one of the largest seabird colonies on the West Coast, and the rugged headland above gives every walk here a sense of being in a genuinely wild place. March is peak seabird nesting preparation season at Three Arch Rocks, and binoculars are recommended for anyone walking the Oceanside shoreline. Our Oceanside vacation rentals put guests within walking distance of this beach and the village’s locally renowned oyster bars and galleries.

Netarts Bay, just south of Oceanside, offers a completely different type of coastal walk, the calm, reflective estuary environment of the bay’s eastern shoreline, where the water barely ripples and the views across to Cape Lookout are expansive and serene. The Netarts Bay loop area, accessible from the small community of Netarts, is an excellent option for families with young children or walkers who prefer flat, sheltered terrain to open-ocean beach walking. Oyster harvesting activity is often visible along the bay’s working tideflats in March, adding an authentic local layer to any walk. Netarts provide a calm, bay-side base perfect for both shoreline and estuary exploration.

2. Rockaway Beach: A Town Built for Walking

Rockaway Beach earns consistent praise from repeat Oregon Coast visitors for exactly the reason the name implies: it is genuinely built around the beach experience. The town’s commercial strip runs parallel to the water, and walking from the beach-front access points into the village for coffee, lunch, or a browse through local shops takes only minutes. The beach itself stretches several miles north and south, is flat and firm in March conditions, and has a wide, open quality that makes it ideal for long, meditative walks without retracing steps. Rockaway Beach is well-distributed throughout the town and provides easy access to both the beach and the village’s walkable amenities.

March is a particularly rewarding time for walking Rockaway Beach because the seasonal quiet means visitors essentially have the beach to themselves during weekday mornings. The twin lakes that border the town on its eastern side, Lake Lytle and Lake Rotary, add an optional inland walking dimension, and the combined beach-to-lakeside loop covers a gentle, scenic route that works well for all ages and energy levels. Storm watching from the open beach is also a genuine March draw here, with large Pacific swells and dramatic cloud formations providing a natural spectacle that requires no more effort than finding a comfortable stretch of sand.

March Walking Tips: Making the Most of Coastal Conditions

Walking the Oregon Coast in March rewards preparation and flexibility in equal measure. Conditions can shift from overcast and breezy to unexpectedly clear and still within the span of a single afternoon, and the best walking experiences often come to those willing to adapt their timing to what the weather is doing rather than fighting it.

Tide awareness is especially important for March walks. Many of the coast’s most rewarding spots, tide pools, sea stacks accessible at low water, estuary edges, reveal themselves only during minus or low tides, and checking the daily tide chart before heading out is a habit that experienced coast walkers treat as essential. The NOAA tide prediction tool provides accurate hourly forecasts for all major Oregon Coast stations.

Here are the practical items that improve nearly every March beach walk on the Oregon Coast:

  • Waterproof boots or trail shoes with good grip on wet sand and rocks
  • A wind-resistant, waterproof outer layer, rain can arrive with little warning
  • Layers underneath for temperature flexibility as conditions shift
  • Binoculars for whale watching, seabird observation, and headland scanning
  • A tide chart downloaded or bookmarked for the day
  • A day bag with snacks and water, coastal headland walks can be longer than they appear
  • A camera or phone with extra battery life, March light on the Oregon Coast is extraordinary

For families with young children, the most walkable Oregon Coast communities, Lincoln City, Pacific City, and Rockaway Beach, offer the combination of accessible beach terrain, nearby amenities, and short return distances to warm, comfortable vacation rentals that make March walking feel relaxed rather than logistically demanding.

Staying Oceanfront: The Natural Starting Point for Every March Walk

There is a meaningful difference between staying near the Oregon Coast and staying directly on it. Oceanfront rentals place guests within steps of the beach, no shuttle, no shuttle schedule, no parking lot to navigate, which fundamentally changes how much of the coast you actually experience during a stay. Early-morning low-tide walks, impromptu storm-watch sessions from a covered deck, and evening beach walks timed to the sunset all become instinctive parts of the day rather than planned excursions. Meredith Lodging’s oceanfront oregon vacation rentals span the length of the coast and are available in configurations ranging from intimate couples retreats to large family compounds.

Meredith Lodging manages a wide range of properties across the Oregon Coast and Central Oregon, each selected for location quality, property condition, and the genuine convenience they offer to guests who want to spend their time experiencing a place rather than managing the logistics of their stay. Exploring the full Oregon vacation rentals collection is a natural starting point for any trip planning, with properties organized by community, property type, and amenity profile to help guests find exactly the right match for a March coastal walk-focused trip.

Frequently Asked Questions: Walking the Oregon Coast in March

Q. Is March a good time to walk on the Oregon Coast?

Ans: Yes, March is an excellent time to walk the Oregon Coast. Beaches are uncrowded, whale migration is active, and the dramatic spring light creates exceptional scenery for photographers and nature lovers. Come prepared for cool, changeable weather with waterproof layers and flexible footwear, and most walks are very enjoyable.

Q. What are the easiest Oregon Coast beach walks for families with young children?

Ans: Lincoln City’s seven-mile beach, Rockaway Beach, and the Pacific City shoreline near Cape Kiwanda are among the most family-friendly options. All feature flat, firm sand at low tide, nearby amenities, and short distances back to parking or vacation rentals. Neskowin Beach, with its accessible Proposal Rock landmark, is another strong family choice in March.

Q. When is Spring Whale Watch Week on the Oregon Coast?

Ans: Oregon’s Spring Whale Watch Week typically occurs during the last full week of March. It is organized by Oregon State Parks and features volunteer naturalists stationed at key headlands along the coast to help visitors spot gray whales during the northward spring migration. Cape Lookout, Boiler Bay, and Depoe Bay are popular whale-watching vantage points accessible from multiple Meredith Lodging communities.

Q. What should I wear for a March beach walk on the Oregon Coast?

Ans: Dress in moisture-wicking base layers, add an insulating mid-layer, and finish with a waterproof, wind-resistant outer jacket. Waterproof footwear with grip is strongly recommended, wet sand and rocks can be slippery. Bring a hat and gloves for headland walks exposed to ocean wind, and carry binoculars if whale watching or seabird observation is part of the plan.

Plan Your March Oregon Coast Walk-Based Trip with Meredith Lodging

The Oregon Coast in March belongs to those willing to show up for it, layers on, tide chart in hand, and open to whatever the Pacific delivers. The walking experiences across this stretch of coastline are diverse enough to fill a week without repeating: quiet estuary paths at Netarts Bay, dramatic headland approaches at Cape Kiwanda, neighborhood-to-beach strolls in Olivia Beach and Bella Beach, wide open sand walks at Rockaway Beach, and the extraordinary wildlife backdrop of Oceanside’s Three Arch Rocks. Every community offers something distinct, and Meredith Lodging’s properties are positioned within each of them to give guests genuine, walkable access to the coast they came to experience. Browse Our full Oregon vacation rentals listings to find the property and community that fits your March itinerary best.

Professionally managed vacation rentals offer a meaningful advantage for March coast visits. Reliable check-in, well-maintained properties, responsive local support, and the flexibility to cook in after a long beach day or stay warm when a storm rolls through all matter more in shoulder-season conditions than they do in the predictable warmth of summer. Meredith Lodging’s regional expertise spans every community on this list, and the team’s familiarity with March conditions, what’s accessible, what’s open, where the whales are visible, translates directly into better trips for guests who book with the region’s most experienced vacation rental partner.

March on the Oregon Coast rewards the unhurried traveler. Book your stay, plan your first walk, and let the coast show you what spring at the edge of the Pacific actually looks like.

Categories

  • Things to Do in Oregon
    • Bend
      • Golf Courses in Bend
    • Bend
      • Bend Activities
    • Sunriver
      • Sunriver Activities
      • Sunriver Dining
    • Things to Do on the Coast
      • Coast Activities
      • Coast Dining
      • Coast Shopping
      • Lincoln City
        • Lincoln City Activites
        • Lincoln City Dining
        • Lincoln City Shopping
      • Manzanita
        • Manzanita Activities
        • Manzanita Dining
        • Manzanita Shopping

Latest Posts

Celebrate America’s 250th Birthday: The Ultimate 2026 July 4th Weekend on the Oregon Coast & Central OregonDeschutes River Float Trips in Bend: The Ultimate June GuideBend in June: River Floats, Patios, and Live MusicBest Bike Trails in Bend in June: 7 Routes for Every Skill Level