Best Beaches in the
South Okanagan
From Peachland to Osoyoos, the South Okanagan has more warm-water beaches per kilometre than anywhere else in British Columbia. Five lakes. Four distinct lake personalities. One very good reason to move here.
๐ง Know Your Lakes
Five Lakes. Zero Bad Options.
The South Okanagan sits in one of the sunniest corridors in Canada, and the lakes that stretch through the valley each have their own character. Okanagan Lake is big and scenic; Skaha runs warmer; Tuc-El-Nuit is intimate and motor-free; Vaseux is a birding sanctuary; Osoyoos Lake is Canada’s warmest. Here’s how they stack up.
BC’s largest lake. Deep, clear, and dramatic. Runs 135 km from Vernon to Penticton. Best swimming JulyโAugust. Beaches at Peachland, Summerland, and Penticton.
Smaller and shallower than Okanagan Lake, so it warms up faster. Calm, family-friendly water with excellent sandy beaches in Penticton and Okanagan Falls. Great from June.
Small, quiet, and motor-free โ tucked into the vineyards and bluffs of Oliver. Rotary Beach is the only public access point. Perfectly peaceful on a weekday morning.
Canada’s warmest freshwater lake. Often swimmable by late May. Shallow, calm, and surrounded by desert hills. Multiple public beaches in town, plus sแบiแบs Provincial Park.
๐ Peachland
Okanagan Lake Peachland
Peachland stretches along 11 km of Okanagan Lake’s west shoreline, with a walkable waterfront promenade connecting most of the town’s beaches. It’s quieter than Penticton but punches above its weight โ including the only lifeguarded freshwater beach in the entire South Okanagan.
The only lifeguarded freshwater beach in the South Okanagan โ and it earns the crowd. A zipline, rope swing, diving board, and dock make this the most action-packed beach in the valley. Pebble bottom (bring water shoes), concession stand, washrooms, and a fully accessible ramp into the water. Lifeguards on duty roughly 12:30โ5:45 PM from late June to late August.
A wide pebble beach on the south end of Peachland, right off Highway 97 โ it’s a natural pull-over on any drive through the valley. Sheltered from the highway by a stand of Ponderosa pines. Picnic tables, a dock, vault toilets, and sweeping lake views. Less crowded than Swim Bay, better for skipping rocks and quiet afternoons. The trailhead to Hardy Falls is directly across the highway.
๐ธ Summerland
Sandy Shores & Sunny Okanagan
Summerland’s beach game is legitimately excellent. The town sits on Okanagan Lake with a south-facing shoreline that gets the best of the afternoon sun, and Sun-Oka is regularly cited as one of the top public beaches in all of BC โ not just the Okanagan.
The crown jewel of South Okanagan beaches. Nearly 1 km of sandy shore, 90 picnic tables, a playground, change rooms, boat launch, and a concession stand in summer. The name is short for “Sunny Okanagan” โ and it lives up to it. There’s also a separate dog-friendly beach east of the main area, accessed via a 200 m trail through cottonwood trees to where Trout Creek meets the lake. One of the most visited public beaches in the Okanagan Valley.
Minutes from downtown Summerland, this is the locals’ everyday beach. Sandy shores, a shaded Spirit Square with a gazebo, floating dock, volleyball courts, playground, and a boardwalk along the water. Washrooms on-site. It’s dog-friendly and has a boat launch โ making it practical as well as beautiful. A great spot for evening strolls after dinner on Summerland’s main street.
A busy, well-loved beach on Lakeshore Drive in the heart of Summerland. Popular with locals for its easy downtown access, docks, and the historic Kiwanis Pier just steps away. Clean and shaded, with grassy areas to spread out. Less sandy than Sun-Oka but a great everyday option when you just want a quick lake dip after work or dinner.
๐ด Penticton
Between Two Lakes
Penticton has a rare geographic distinction โ it sits between two large lakes, with Okanagan Lake to the north and Skaha Lake to the south. Both have public beaches. All are free. Combined, you’re looking at nearly 2 km of maintained sandy beach within city limits.
Nearly 1 km of premium sandy beach on Lakeshore Drive โ this is Penticton’s flagship. Rest rafts, kiddie slides, shade trees, fire pits, and washrooms nearby. The wide, flat beach and easy lake entry make it ideal for families. Free parking. The views across the water to the mountains are legitimately spectacular on a clear morning.
Located just east of the Penticton Lakeside Resort at 45 Lakeshore Dr E, this beach has a small sandy swim area plus a dedicated fenced off-leash dog area right at the water. It’s one of three official dog beaches the City maintains โ the fenced section extends into the lake so dogs can actually swim. Penticton Creek meets the lake at the eastern edge of the park. Washrooms, lights, and parking on-site.
A long sandy stretch along the north shore of Skaha Lake with warm, calm water that’s particularly good for swimming. The adjacent Skaha Lake Park is a full destination: water park, playground, volleyball and tennis courts, a waterfront promenade, and shade trees. One of BC’s most beautiful urban beaches. Mobi-mats and mobi-chairs available seasonally for accessible lake access. The off-leash dog beach is separately located near the boat launch at the south end of Skaha Lake Park.
Directly west of Skaha Beach on Skaha Lake Road and regularly overlooked because of its famous neighbour โ which means it’s often less crowded. A huge beach area with rest rafts, slides, volleyball courts, a concession stand, fire pits, and washrooms. Mobi-mat accessible. Solid choice if Skaha Beach is packed on a long weekend.
๐พ Penticton dog beach locations: Okanagan Lake Park (fenced, off-leash at water), Three Mile Beach boating area (802 Three Mile Rd โ off-leash on boating beach only), and Skaha Lake on Lakeside Road (4851 Lakeside Rd โ east shore, not fully fenced). Always check the City of Penticton website for seasonal rule updates.
๐ Kaleden & Okanagan Falls
South Skaha Lake Beaches
Follow Skaha Lake south past Penticton and the beaches get quieter, the communities get smaller, and the pace slows down considerably. Kaleden’s Pioneer Park sits beside the ruins of an early-1900s resort hotel; Okanagan Falls has one of the best dog beaches in the region and a KVR trestle bridge right next door.
A quietly beautiful little sandy nook on the west bank of Skaha Lake, situated beside the ruins of the historic Kaleden Hotel โ one of the Okanagan’s early-1900s resort properties. The KVR Trail runs directly through, and the beach sits at the midpoint of a spectacular 13 km shoreline ride. It’s the kind of spot you discover by accident and come back to on purpose.
Okanagan Falls’ main beach and a genuinely great one โ over an acre of soft sand on the south shore of Skaha Lake with volleyball courts, picnic tables, washrooms, change rooms, and one of the best enclosed dog swim areas in the region. The KVR trestle bridge is right next door for a post-swim walk. Named after RCAF Pilot Officer Robert G. Christie, killed in action in World War II.
Located on a peninsula that divides the two main beach areas in Okanagan Falls, Kenyon Park is the family-focused half of the waterfront. Home to the John Bell Playground and a spray park that kids absolutely destroy on hot days. The shallow, calm water of south Skaha Lake is ideal for little ones. Combined with Christie Memorial next door, you have a full day’s worth of beach and activities without moving your car.
๐ท Oliver
Tuc-El-Nuit Lake โ The Quiet One
Oliver is wine country through and through โ it’s not primarily a beach town. But tucked beside the vineyards and bluffs is Tuc-El-Nuit Lake, a small motor-free lake with warm, clean water and one of the most scenic views in the entire South Okanagan. When you’re done your tasting at the Golden Mile, this is where you end up.
Oliver’s only public swimming area, and it earns its reputation. A sandy beach on the southwest corner of Tuc-El-Nuit Lake with warm, calm water โ motorized watercraft are completely prohibited, so it stays peaceful. Sitting on the beach you see McIntyre Bluff (nสaylintn) framed by mountains and vineyards behind it. Picnic tables, seasonal washrooms, change room, playground, and the adjacent Okanagan River Trail for a post-swim walk or ride. It hosts Oliver’s Half Ironman Triathlon and the annual Polar Bear Swim.
โ๏ธ Osoyoos
Canada’s Warmest Lake โ Osoyoos
Osoyoos Lake averages 24ยฐC in July and August โ the warmest freshwater lake in Canada. Combined with the town’s desert climate, that means you’re swimming from May to October and spending every summer weekend on the water. The town itself wraps around the lake with multiple beach parks within walking distance of the main street.
โ ๏ธ Osoyoos seasonal dog rules: Dogs are not permitted on Osoyoos beaches or in parks during June, July, and August. Outside those months, dogs on leash are welcome throughout. Year-round, there are four designated dog swim areas: Goodman Park (Lakeshore Dr at Bayview Crescent), Gyro Park (behind the Museum), Legion Beach (designated area), and Lions Park (north end). sแบiแบs Provincial Park also has a dog swim area east of the day-use area.
Osoyoos’s largest and most central beach, right at the bottom of Main Street. A narrow sandy strip with shade trees, grassy areas, washrooms, and a cafรฉ nearby. Summer evenings bring outdoor concerts to the park. The Wibit inflatable water park sets up seasonally for kids. Dogs are not permitted on the main beach JuneโAugust, but there’s a designated dog swim area tucked behind the Osoyoos Museum on the park grounds.
A sandy beach with a large grassy area, playground, picnic tables, and washrooms โ connected to Gyro Beach by a paved lakeshore walkway. Good restaurants and coffee shops are within easy walking distance. The north end of the park has a dedicated dog swimming area active June through August (leash required in all other parts of the park during those months). A solid all-rounder for families.
Known locally as Safari Beach, this sandy cove sits on the quieter west side of Osoyoos Lake โ about a 10-minute walk from downtown. Big shade trees, picnic tables, a grassy area, boat launch, and a shaded dog swim area that dog owners rave about. Less crowded than Gyro Beach, with a more private-cove feel. A great option when the main-street beaches get loud on a peak summer weekend.
A neighbourhood favourite developed and maintained by local community members, with colourful flower gardens and well-maintained landscaping that set it apart from a typical park. The lake bottom here is exceptionally shallow โ water stays shallow far out, making it the best Osoyoos beach for toddlers and young children. Wheelchair-friendly paved walkway, benches, washrooms. Note that it doesn’t have much shade in the afternoon.
A 1 km peninsula jutting into Osoyoos Lake โ one of BC’s most distinctive and popular provincial parks. The name sแบiแบs (pronounced “s-wee-yous”) is a Syilx Okanagan place name meaning “a place of shallow or narrowing waters,” reflecting its use as a lake crossing for thousands of years. Sandy beaches line both sides of the peninsula with warm, calm water and extraordinary views. Day use area with picnic tables, washrooms, change house, and a boat launch. Campsite reservations sell out months early โ day use is walk-in. Located 2 km south of Osoyoos off Hwy 97.
On the quieter east side of Osoyoos Lake at 16th Ave and 45th St โ away from the downtown beach crowds. A large sandy beach shaded by mature trees, picnic tables, washrooms, and plenty of room to spread out. Views across the lake toward the town and the surrounding desert hills are gorgeous. A solid choice if you want a full day at the lake without fighting for parking on Main Street.
โ Common Questions
South Okanagan Beach Questions, Answered
Locals ask these constantly in summer. Here are the real answers โ no fluff, no hedging.
Osoyoos Lake is the warmest freshwater lake in Canada, reaching around 24ยฐC in July and August. Its desert setting and shallow basin let it heat up quickly โ often swimmable by late May. Skaha Lake in Penticton and Tuc-El-Nuit in Oliver also run warm, typically hitting 22ยฐC at peak summer, while Okanagan Lake is slightly cooler at around 20ยฐC.
The vast majority are completely free. All City of Penticton beaches โ Okanagan Beach, Skaha Beach, Sudbury โ have free access and free parking. Osoyoos town beaches are free. Most RDOS regional parks are free. Sun-Oka Beach Provincial Park in Summerland charges a day-use parking fee during peak season. sแบiแบs Provincial Park (Haynes Point) also has a day-use fee.
Several have designated dog areas: Sun-Oka Beach (Summerland) has an off-leash dog beach east of the main beach; Christie Memorial Park (Okanagan Falls) has an enclosed dog swim area; Penticton has three dog areas โ Okanagan Lake Park, Three Mile Beach boating section, and Skaha Lake on Lakeside Road; Osoyoos has dog swim zones at Gyro Park, Lions Park, Legion Beach, Goodman Park, and sแบiแบs Provincial Park.
Swim Bay in Peachland is the only lifeguarded freshwater beach in the South Okanagan. Lifeguards are on duty approximately 12:30โ5:45 PM from late June through late August. All other public beaches throughout Penticton, Summerland, Oliver, Osoyoos, and the surrounding area do not have lifeguard services โ swim at your own discretion.
Skaha Beach is Penticton’s most complete family option โ calm, warm Skaha Lake water with a water park, playground, volleyball courts, shade trees, and a full promenade. For the smallest children, Cottonwood Beach in Osoyoos is exceptional for its very shallow water that stays shallow far out into the lake. Sun-Oka in Summerland is the best for a full day trip.
Osoyoos Lake is typically swimmable by late May โ often the first lake in the valley to warm up. Penticton’s Skaha Lake and Tuc-El-Nuit in Oliver are comfortable by mid-June. Okanagan Lake takes the longest and is best July through August. Most beach park facilities โ washrooms, concessions โ open in late May or early June and close after Thanksgiving weekend in October.
Sun-Oka Beach Provincial Park is Summerland’s standout โ nearly 1 km of sandy shore, 90 picnic tables, playgrounds, boat launch, concession, and a separate dog-friendly area. It’s consistently ranked among the top public beaches in the entire Okanagan Valley. Peach Orchard Beach in downtown Summerland is the better pick for convenience and quick access after dinner.
Yes โ Rotary Beach on the southwest corner of Tuc-El-Nuit Lake is Oliver’s only public swimming area. The small lake warms up quickly and motorized watercraft are prohibited, making for calm, clean conditions. Interior Health monitors water quality seasonally โ occasional advisories are posted. Note that pets are not permitted at Rotary Beach from April 1 to October 1.
๐ Live Here Year-Round
Ready to Wake Up Five Minutes from the Lake?
I’m Rico โ a REALTORยฎ with eXp Realty based in the South Okanagan. I help buyers find homes in Penticton, Summerland, Oliver, Osoyoos, and the communities in between. If you’ve been dreaming about a house with lake access, a vacation property near Gyro Beach, or a wine-country lifestyle you can actually afford โ let’s talk.