SANDY POINT STATE PARK

Park Status Information

Highlights

​​​​​​​​​​​Playground outside of Sandy Point Nature Center

Park Rese​rvations
Day Use Reservations
1-888-432-2267 (Toll Free)
En español

​​View of the park from a drone, beaches, wooded trails and marina

Sandy Point State Park
1100 East College Parkway
Annapolis,​ MD 21409​

View the DNR Ev​ents Ca​lendar

View the Sandy Point Events Calendar!



​​Lighthouse off Sandy Point with Bay Bridge in the background

​​Information: ​410-974-2149 (Office)
E-mail Sandy Point State Park
Hours: 7 a.m. to sunset​, year-round
(excluding Christmas Day)

7 a.m. to 4 p.m., Mid-November - January 2
(due to "Lights on the Bay" program)

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​​Welcome

Kites flying on the beach over the bay  

This 786-acre Maryland State Park is located along the northwestern shore of the majestic Chesapeake Bay. The park’s beaches and picnic areas are well known for their breathtaking scenic water views that overlook one of Maryland’s true treasures, the Chesapeake Bay. The park was first opened on June 25, 1952 and has provided its guests with various activities and services ever since. Sandy Point State Park offers accessible food and beverage at its Concession Stand, fishing, picnic areas, shelters, bathhouses and playgrounds. For additional accessible amenities in Maryland State Forests and Parks, visit the Accessibility for All section of this website. The park is open year round.​​

Picnics & Pavillions: Sandy Point State Park provides multiple picnic areas throughout the park: Tollgate Area, South Beach Area and East Beach Area.

For family reunions, group picnics and large group gatherings, a more sheltered outdoor picnic experience is available. The park has twelve rental pavilions located at the East Beach area of the park. Nine shelters accommodate up to 140 people, two shelters accommodate up to 180 people, and one shelter accommodates up to 300 people.

Beaches: The park’s one mile sandy beach provides plenty of room for enjoying a variety of beach activities. Swimming is permitted only in designated swimming areas. A bathhouse is located near the beach and provides park users with restrooms and showering facilities.

Boating: Sandy Point’s staff is very proud of the park’s marina facility, which includes 22 launching ramps and six finger piers for temporary day use docking on a first come first served basis. The marina’s boat pump-out station is available April through October. The facility is certified as a Clean Marina​.



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Details about the Park

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Mansion with two wings from the front with driveway and fountain

Other Things to Check Out!

​​The Sandy Point Mansion
​​The Sandy Point Mansion, someti​mes called “Sandy Point Farmhouse,” ”Tryall” or “Scotland,” is the park’s last vestige of its agricultural past. From the mid-1600s to the early 1800s, the lands in and around Sandy Point were used primarily to grow tobacco, which was exported to domestic and foriegn markets by way of the Chesapeake Bay. Tobacco, a difficult plant to grow and harvest, was cultivated primarily by indentured servants and Black enslaved laborers.

Local planter Henry Mayer likely built the Sandy Point Mansion in the early 1800s. According to the Maryland Historic Trust, the mansion “is an excellent example of the residence of a relatively affluent Maryland farmer in the first quarter of the 19th century.” It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1972.

Today, the Sandy Point Mansion is part of the DNR Resident Curatorship program. The curator is working to restore the building to its 19th-century appearance. The mansion is a private residence and is not open to the public. It is visible from the main park road. It is occasionally opened on special occasions. Contact the park for more information.


The Sandy Point Shoal Lighthouse
From the shores of Sandy Point State Park you can see the Sandy Point Lighthouse. The Sandy Point Shoal lighthouse was built in 1883 and features a 37-foot Empire-style, eight-sided red brick tower with a white roof and black lantern, which houses a 4th order Fresnel lens. This structure replaced an earlier Sandy Point Light that had been built on land where Sandy Point State Park is located now. The original lighthouse, a brick tower constructed in 1858, (see illustration below)​ was located on shore and situated in a poor location.

The current Sandy Point Shoal Light has a wooden foundation supporting a round 35-foot-diameter cement-filled cast iron cylinder on which a 2 1/2-story brick structure rests. The structure is 24 by 24 feet with cut corners. Although not originally painted, the brick portion of the structure is now painted red. The first two stories were used as living quarters, the third level as the watch room, and the lower level within the cast iron cylinder, as a storage area for water, coal, and oil. The lighthouse was electrified in 1929 and fully automated in 1963. The lighthouse is in 5 to 7 feet of water, approximately 1000 yards east from the beach at Sandy Point State Park and approximately 1 1/2 miles north of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

Until 2019, the light station lit the way for safe passage through the perilous sand shoals at Sandy Point. An excellent surviving example of the caison-style lighthouses that were built throughout the Chesapeake Bay, the Sandy Point Shoal Light Station was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. Today the lighthouse is privately owned and is not open to the public.


People with fishing poles walking along the waterfront  

​​Visitor Tips:

  • Sandy Point fills up during summer months. Please plan ahead, arrive early,​ and check out other options to the right in case of park capacity closures. 
  • Day-use ​Admission Fee
    • May 1- September 30 - Weekends and holidays: $5/person, Weekdays: $4/person
    • October 1 - April 30 - $3 per vehicle
    • Facility service charges are non-refundable. If you leave the park, you must re-pay to re-enter.

  • The boat ramps and fishing areas are open 24 hours. Fishing after hours requires that all persons must be actively fishing including children. To learn more, check out our Boating, Fishing and Crabbing pages.
  • Pets allowed (except for sandy portion of swimming beach areas from Memorial Day weekend until after Labor Day) To learn more about the Ma​ryland Park Service Pet Policy, click here.
  • Alcohol and glass containers are not permitted on the sandy portions of the beach​​.
  • Visiting the Picnic Area
  • Lifeguards are on duty from 10 am to 6 pm, Memorial Day through Labor Day, all other times are swim at your own risk. For your safety, swim in designated areas only. To learn more, visit the beach/swimming area.
  • Visiting the Beach/ Swimming Area

Drone view the beach with the Bay Bridge in the background  

Park Highlight

The Beach
The park’s one mile sandy beach provides plenty of room for enjoying a variety of beach activities. Swimming is permitted in designated swimming areas only. A portion of South Beach is protected with lifeguards from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, weekends and holidays, Memorial Day to Labor Day.

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8 Other State Park Locations Near Sandy Point