There is a stretch of shoreline on the west side of Tacoma that most visitors drive right past on their way to somewhere else, and I have always considered that one of the city’s best-kept secrets. Titlow Beach Park sits quietly along the Narrows waterway in the Titlow neighborhood, just a few miles from downtown, and it delivers the kind of coastal experience that makes you forget you are in the middle of a metropolitan area.
The park covers roughly 65 acres and offers something genuinely rare in an urban setting: an honest-to-goodness saltwater beach that you can walk, explore, and even dive into — literally. Titlow is famous throughout the Pacific Northwest as one of the premier shore dive sites in the region. The cold, clear waters of Puget Sound here are home to giant Pacific octopus, wolf eels, sea stars, lingcod, and a dazzling variety of nudibranchs that look like they were painted by someone with an extraordinary imagination. Certified divers regularly suit up right at the beach access and slip beneath the surface into an underwater world that rivals anything you would find on a dedicated dive trip. If you are not a diver, watching them gear up and disappear into the green water is entertainment enough.
But Titlow is far more than a diver’s paradise. The beach itself is a wonderful place to simply slow down. At low tide, the rocky intertidal zone opens up and reveals tide pools teeming with hermit crabs, anemones, and small shore fish. Kids and adults alike find themselves crouching down, completely absorbed, for far longer than they planned. Bring a field guide if you have one — you will use it.
The park also features a large grassy lawn with picnic shelters, a playground, and a restored freshwater lagoon that draws herons, kingfishers, and migratory waterfowl throughout the year. Birdwatchers will want to bring binoculars. The mature trees bordering the lagoon create a lush, almost surprising sense of wilderness this close to the city.
One of my favorite things to do here is arrive in the late afternoon when the light over the Tacoma Narrows Bridge turns golden and the mountains across the Sound come into sharp relief. The two suspension spans of the Narrows Bridge frame the view perfectly, and on a clear day, Mount Rainier floats above everything to the southeast like a painted backdrop. It is genuinely stunning.
Parking is free, the beach is open year-round, and the atmosphere is relaxed and welcoming. Tacoma locals know this place well, and once you find it, you will understand exactly why they keep coming back. Pack a thermos of something warm, wear layers, and plan to stay longer than you think you will.