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SAN FRANCISCO · PRESIDIO COAST

Baker Beach

Also known asBaker Beach Presidio
Coast · Beach · Presidio · Golden Gate Bridge · Iconic

The postcard view of the Golden Gate, with a mile of sand and a row of cypress between you and the rest of the city

What to expect at a glance
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You may see a few photos from nearby locations here. Many shoots span multiple spots in the same session.

$950 – $1,950

Ready when you are

Baker Beach

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Often paired with

Hop next door for a different mood

Sutro Baths

Sutro Baths

Coast · Ruins

The 1896 ruins on the cliffs at the western tip of the city.

Lands End

Lands End

Coast · Cliffs

The Coastal Trail along the northwest cliffs with bridge overlooks.

Golden Gate Overlook

Golden Gate Overlook

Bluff · Golden Gate Bridge

The Langdon Court plaza with the two cypress framing the bridge.

Batteries to Bluffs Trail

Batteries to Bluffs Trail

Coast · Trail

The 470 stairs down to Marshall's Beach, tide-dependent.

Layout

Where we shoot, on a map

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1 min · 390 ft from parking
From the photographer
Chris Schmauch
by Chris Schmauch, owner of GoodEye Photography

Baker Beach is the mile-long stretch of sand on the Pacific side of the Presidio with the most photographed Golden Gate Bridge view in San Francisco. Free parking, easy walk, serpentine cliffs at the south end, the bridge tower close enough to feel personal at the north end. It is the most accessible "real beach" in the SF cluster and the natural anchor for a same-day rotation through the Presidio coastline.

Baker Beach is the easy starter for a San Francisco shoot. A mile of sand on the Pacific side of the Presidio, free parking that's actually free, a short flat walk through cypress to the water, and at the north end of the beach the Golden Gate Bridge framed about as cleanly as it gets anywhere on the city side. You can hand-hold a long lens and have the south tower fill the frame.

What to expect

The lay of the land

Footwear
Sand-friendly shoes or barefoot work best. Heels sink; long bridal trains pick up sand. Flats are great for the walk down and back.
Best Time of Day
Golden hour, about 45 minutes before sunset. The west-facing coast catches direct, warm low light that flatters skin and water alike. Midday and overcast sessions still work — softer light, less depth.
Best Season
Year-round. Winter and spring produce the cleanest light; summer marine layer adds atmosphere rather than killing sessions.
Weather
Coastal fog can linger from June through August but softens midday light rather than ruining it. Light rain, mist, and wind don't stop us.
Privacy
Public access — expect other people around. Long open stretches let us settle apart from foot traffic; weekday or off-peak sessions are noticeably quieter.
From the field

The Baker Beach story I tell most often is the August fog one. Couple flew in from Texas for an engagement weekend, Baker was on the list as the headline location, and the morning of the shoot the marine layer was completely socked in from the bridge all the way south past Land's End. I texted them at noon saying it didn't look great but we'd give it the full window. We met at the north lot at five, walked down to the sand, and the fog was so thick you couldn't see the south tower from a hundred yards out. They were trying to act fine about it. I told them to walk the beach with me anyway, that we'd shoot the serpentine cliffs at the south end where the fog doesn't matter, and we'd just see what the bridge end did. About forty minutes in, with maybe twenty minutes of light left, the marine layer lifted off the water in a single push, like a curtain pulling back. The bridge came in clean, the sky behind it went peach, and we ran north along the sand and got fifteen minutes of the cleanest compression frames I've ever shot at Baker. Those were the gallery. Lesson I pass on now: at Baker in summer, don't bail on the shoot because of fog. The marine layer here moves on its own clock, and the cliffs and the cypress and the sand all work regardless of whether the bridge cooperates. You only need ten minutes of clear sky to get the shot.

Stay & eat

Make a trip out of it

Where to stay

Where to eat

Murray Circle (Cavallo Point Lodge)
Modern Northern California
10 min · 4 mi
Sociale
Italian
8 min · 2 mi
Arguello (Presidio Officers' Club)
Mexican
5 min · 1 mi
Lokma
Cal-Turkish
15 min · 4 mi
Drive times

Getting here

Downtown SF15 min
Sutro Baths12 min
Lands End14 min
Golden Gate Overlook6 min
Batteries to Bluffs Trail5 min
Approximate, off-peak driving.
Worth knowing

A few things about Baker Beach

  • Burning Man was born here. On June 22, 1986, Larry Harvey and Jerry James burned an 8-foot wooden man on Baker Beach with about a dozen friends. By 1990 the crowd had grown big enough that park police intervened, and the burn moved to the Black Rock Desert.

    Burning Man Project / Presidio blog
  • The Sand Ladder at the north end of the beach is a wooden staircase that connects Baker to the Batteries to Bluffs Trail. From the top of the Sand Ladder, you can hike north along the bluffs to Marshall's Beach and on to the Golden Gate Bridge without ever crossing a road.

    Presidio.gov / NPS
  • The gray-green cliffs at the south end of Baker Beach are serpentine, California's state rock. The rock formed on the deep ocean floor 150-200 million years ago and was scraped onto the continent as the Pacific Plate slid under North America.

    NPS Baker Beach page
  • Baker Beach is part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, which means it's federal park land managed by the National Park Service. Commercial photography technically requires a permit from the GGNRA Office of Special Park Uses, with a minimum 15 business days of lead time.

    Presidio.gov / NPS / SF Rec & Parks
  • Battery Chamberlin, the concrete gun emplacement above the beach, holds a working 95,000-pound disappearing-rifle gun from 1904. The Presidio's volunteer corps demonstrates the gun's recoil-driven raise-and-lower mechanism on the first weekend of every month.

    NPS Baker Beach page
  • The marine layer that fogs Baker Beach in summer is called Karl by locals, after the misunderstood giant in the 2003 film Big Fish. August is the foggiest month, often called Fogust.

    Wikipedia: San Francisco fog / SF Jeep Tours
Also known as

Baker Beach also appears as Baker Beach Presidio.