There is a moment, somewhere along the bluff trail at Discovery Park, when the trees part just enough and the whole of Puget Sound opens up before you — water stretching west toward the Olympic Mountains, a lighthouse standing white and resolute on the rocky point below, and the kind of silence that cities are not supposed to offer. That moment is why I keep coming back, and it is exactly why you need to put this place on your itinerary the next time you find yourself in Seattle.
Discovery Park sits on Magnolia Bluff on the western edge of the city, occupying nearly 534 acres of former military land that was handed back to Seattle in the 1970s. It is the largest park in the city, and unlike the manicured lawns and paved paths you might expect from an urban green space, this one feels genuinely wild. Towering Douglas firs, open meadows, sand dunes, sea cliffs, and two miles of protected beach make it less a city park and more a small wilderness tucked inside the urban grid.
The West Point Lighthouse, built in 1881, anchors the northern beach and is worth every step of the trail it takes to reach it. You can walk down from the South Bluff Trail — a moderate descent that rewards you with sweeping views of the Sound the entire way — and arrive at a stretch of cobbled beach where harbor seals occasionally haul out on the rocks and great blue herons stalk the shallows with magnificent patience. There is nothing performative about this park. It does not try to impress you. It simply is.
The Loop Trail, about 2.8 miles in total, winds through most of the park’s major ecosystems and is well-marked enough for first-timers but varied enough to stay interesting for regulars. Spring brings wildflowers to the open meadows and the meadow areas near the south parking lot are a reliable spot for birders — over 270 species have been recorded here. If you visit between November and April, keep your eyes open for migrating birds moving through the Pacific Flyway.
The park also honors the Indigenous history of the land. The United Indians of All Tribes Foundation operates the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center within the park’s boundaries, a beautiful facility that hosts art exhibitions and community events and is worth a thoughtful visit during your time there.
Parking is available at both the north and south lots, and the park is served by King County Metro bus routes if you prefer to arrive without a car. Gates open early — around 4 AM — which makes it a spectacular choice for sunrise seekers. Bring layers. Puget Sound mornings are reliably cool, even in summer, and the wind off the water has opinions.
Discovery Park is free, open every day, and genuinely one of the finest urban natural spaces in the entire country. Seattle residents know this, which is why you will sometimes have to share the trail — but the park is large enough that solitude is always findable if you wander just a little off the main loop. Go on a Tuesday morning in October when the fog sits low on the water and the maples are turning gold, and you will understand exactly why people move to this city and never leave.