There is a moment, somewhere around the halfway point of Surfside Beach Pier, when the shore behind you starts to look like a postcard. The pastel rooftops, the pale sand, the families dotting the waterline — it all shrinks into this perfect, unhurried tableau. You are standing over open Atlantic water, the boards warm underfoot, a saltwater breeze doing exactly what a saltwater breeze is supposed to do. That moment alone is worth the short drive down Highway 17 Business to this quietly beloved stretch of the Grand Strand.
Surfside Beach sits just a few miles south of the main Myrtle Beach strip, in a community that proudly calls itself “The Family Beach.” The pier extends more than 800 feet into the Atlantic from Surfside Drive, putting you well out over the water and away from the crowds that tend to cluster closer to the city center. The atmosphere here is genuinely relaxed — think retired couples with fishing rods, kids chasing pelicans, and couples watching the horizon change color at golden hour. Nobody is in a rush, and that energy is contagious.
Speaking of fishing, the pier is a working angler’s destination in the best possible sense. You can rent rods and tackle right at the pier house, pick up a daily fishing license, and drop a line without any prior experience or equipment. The staff are remarkably helpful and will gladly point you toward the best spots depending on the season and the tide. King mackerel, Spanish mackerel, flounder, and red drum are all regulars depending on the time of year. But even if you have zero interest in fishing, just watching the regulars do their thing — the easy camaraderie, the friendly arguments about bait — is its own form of entertainment.
The pier house at the landward end stocks snacks, drinks, and basic beach supplies, so you are not scrambling for provisions. Nearby, the town of Surfside Beach itself offers a handful of casual, genuinely good local eateries within easy walking distance. This is not a place ringed by chain restaurants and souvenir shops. It feels like an actual beach town, which, if you have spent time in the more commercial parts of Myrtle Beach, is a breath of genuinely fresh air.
Sunrise visits are something special here. The pier faces due east, which means the first light of morning hits the water in long golden ribbons right in front of you. Photographers make the drive down specifically for this. Bring a coffee, arrive about twenty minutes before sunrise, and find a spot along the railing. You will not regret it.
Parking is straightforward and affordable, the vibe is welcoming to everyone from solo travelers to large families, and the pier itself is well-maintained. Surfside Beach Pier is the kind of place that reminds you why you came to the coast in the first place — not for the spectacle, but for the simple, irreplaceable pleasure of standing over the ocean with nowhere else you need to be.