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Santa Cruz · West Side Coast

Natural Bridges

Also known asNatural Bridges State Beach · Swanton Beach · Hall's Beach · Three Bridges · Monarch Grove at Natural Bridges
Coast · Beach · Cliffs · Sandstone Arch

The signature sandstone arch — Santa Cruz's most photographed stretch of coastline.

What to expect at a glance
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Portraits

Natural Bridges is a true family-friendly shoot: easy parking, short walk down, and a wide beach where kids can be kids. Tidepools at low tide give the older ones something to explore between portraits, and the arch makes a built-in landmark. Multi-generational and large groups work especially well here.

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

Family & maternity sessions here typically
$550 – $1,850

Mini family sessions (5 files, 30 min) start at $500 weekday. Standard (25 files, ~1 hr) is $1,050 weekday / $1,350 weekend. Hang With Chris (full day, all files) is $3,250.

Ready when you are

Natural Bridges

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Portrait session here10-min call →
Elope hereGet engaged hereGet married hereBook headshots here
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Where we shoot, on a map

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9 min · 0.5 mi from parking
From the photographer
Chris Schmauch
by Chris Schmauch, owner of GoodEye Photography

Natural Bridges is the most-photographed stretch of Santa Cruz coastline for a reason — the sea arch, the cliff overlook, and an easy walk to the sand all sit in one spot. Ten minutes from downtown, paved access, a real parking lot. The coastal drama without the drive.

Santa Cruz has plenty of beaches, but Natural Bridges is the one that ends up on the postcards. A single sandstone arch sits offshore (there used to be three; storms took the others) and at sunset the light through that arch is the whole reason this place gets shot a thousand times a year.

What to expect

The lay of the land

Access
Paved path + short stairway from the parking lot
Footwear
Closed-toe or sturdy flats — sand and uneven rock around the arch
Weather
Coastal fog common in summer mornings; clears by 1–2pm
Best Season
Year-round; monarch butterflies Oct–Feb in the grove
Privacy
Popular tourist beach — weekday afternoons quietest
Best Time of Day
90 minutes before sunset
Plan your shoot

Logistics & comfort

Parking

State park lot at the end of W Cliff Dr ($10/day). On busy weekends, free street parking on Swanton Blvd or Delaware Ave is a 5-minute walk. Arrive 20 min early on summer Saturdays.

Where we meet

We meet at the cliff overlook just past the parking lot — the wooden viewing platform with the arch in front of you. I'll be the guy with the dark jacket and a Sony A1.

The walk in

Paved path from the lot, then a stairway down to the beach. The arch viewpoint is right at the top — the beach itself is the second half of the shoot. At low tide we can wade out closer to the arch; at high tide we stay up on the cliff.

Weather call

Fog is common in summer mornings — we shoot anyway, it photographs gorgeously. Heavy rain or sustained 25mph+ wind off the water is the only call to reschedule, and I'll text you by 1pm if that's the case.

From the field

The Natural Bridges story I tell most often is the monarch story. November session, mid-morning, couple wanted to incorporate the butterfly grove into the engagement shoot. We did the cliff-and-arch frames first, then walked back to the eucalyptus grove. The sun was hitting the upper canopy at exactly the right warm angle, the butterflies were waking up, and as we framed the couple under one of the cluster branches, a monarch landed on her shoulder and stayed for forty-five seconds. We got the frame. The shot still hangs in their living room. Natural Bridges rewards being there for the in-between moments — not just the sunset arch shot, but the morning monarch and the afternoon tidepool and the post-sunset walk back along West Cliff.

Stay & eat

Make a trip out of it

Where to stay

Where to eat

Jack O'Neill Restaurant & Lounge
Coastal California
8 min · 2.5 mi
Low Tide / High Tide (La Bahia)
Pacific / Coastal Californian
8 min · 2.5 mi
Crow's Nest
Seafood / Harbor Views
12 min · 4 mi
Laili
Mediterranean / Persian
10 min · 3 mi
Oswald
New American / Bistro
10 min · 3 mi
Shadowbrook
California Continental
20 min · 7 mi
Drive times

Getting here

Downtown Santa Cruz8 min
Capitola18 min
San Jose45 min
San Francisco1 hr 30 min
Monterey50 min
Carmel-by-the-Sea1 hr 5 min
Approximate, off-peak driving.
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Worth knowing

A few things about Natural Bridges

  • Natural Bridges originally had three rock arches, hence the plural name. The outermost collapsed around 1905, the middle one fell in a January 1980 storm. The last remaining arch is the one in every photograph.

    Wikipedia / coastalcare.org
  • The eucalyptus grove behind the beach is the only State Monarch Preserve in California, hosting tens of thousands of western monarchs from late October through mid-February with peak in November.

    parks.ca.gov page 541
  • Before it was a state park, the land went through three other names: Hall's Beach in the late 1800s (after Emma Stanley Pope Hall), then Swanton Beach when Fred Swanton planned a beach resort here in the early 1900s, then deeded to the state in 1933.

    Mobile Ranger / Santa Cruz County History Wiki
  • The tidepools off the south end are part of a Marine Protected Area, which means no-touch, no-take, even for shells. Rangers actually walk through and check.

    parks.ca.gov
  • Moore Creek empties onto the beach itself, which is why the sand at the north end gets a freshwater seep most of the year and why the tidepool ecosystem is unusually rich for an urban Santa Cruz beach.

    parks.ca.gov
  • The arch sits inside Natural Bridges State Marine Reserve, an overlay that protects everything offshore including the kelp forest you see waving below at low tide.

    parks.ca.gov page 26950
Also known as

Natural Bridges also appears as Natural Bridges State Beach, Swanton Beach, Hall's Beach, Three Bridges, or Monarch Grove at Natural Bridges.