The Ultimate Beach Day Checklist (40+ Things We Actually Bring)

This is the list we actually use. Not a generic “don’t forget sunscreen” rundown — a real, field-tested checklist of everything worth bringing for a full beach day with family or friends. Some of it you’ve thought of. Some of it, you’ll be glad you read before you go.
Getting there: transport and haul gear
The haul from the parking lot to the waterline is where bad preparation punishes you hardest. Get this right and everything else gets easier.
- Balloon-wheel beach cart (Kahuna or similar) — non-negotiable for full family days
- Beach umbrella with screw anchor (BeachBUB recommended)
- Beach chairs — low-sling for adults, kid chairs if needed
- Cooler — Yeti Tundra 45 or Igloo Maxcold; confirm it fits your cart before buying
- Waterproof dry bags — for phones, wallets, keys
Sun protection — the stuff that actually matters
SPF 50 is the floor, not the ceiling. For kids, SPF 70+ is better — they spend more time in direct exposure and less time remembering to reapply. Two things most people don’t think about until it’s too late: first, reapplication. Even waterproof sunscreen needs to go back on every 80 minutes. Second, skin reactions. Some sunscreens cause real reactions in sensitive skin, especially in young kids. If you notice redness, irritation, or a rash that isn’t sunburn, the sunscreen is a candidate culprit.
- Sunscreen SPF 50+ (adults)
- Sunscreen SPF 70+ (kids) — Blue Lizard mineral or Banana Boat sensitive for sensitive skin
- Lip balm with SPF — consistently forgotten
- Sun hat / rashguard for kids
- Portable fan — battery or USB, makes under-umbrella time dramatically more comfortable on hot days
✎ Editor's Note
For the kids, do not go below SPF 50 — and honestly SPF 70 is better if you can find it. Keep an eye out for skin reactions: Blue Lizard is our go-to for sensitive skin, and Banana Boat Sensitive works well too. Reapply after every swim, not just once at the start. And yes — kids will fight you on it. Apply anyway.
Footwear — don't skip this
Hot sand burns. Not “uncomfortable” hot — actual skin-damage hot on a full sun day in summer. Anyone who’s had to hop and sprint back to the towel knows. Flip flops or sandals are obvious, but the type matters more than most people think.
- Flip flops or sandals for every person — including kids
- Water shoes for rocky beaches or surf entries
- Hey Dude slip-ons for all-day comfort that washes clean
Clothing & accessories — the overlooked stuff
These aren't glamorous, but they're the items you miss most when you forget them.
Sunglasses — polarized is non-negotiable on the water
Polarized lenses cut the glare off the water — regular tinted lenses just don't compare. I've been a Ray-Ban person for years, mostly the classic aviator style, and they're worth every penny.
Shop Ray-Ban on Amazon →✎ Editor's Note
My go-to is polarized aviators — they work great on the water and honestly look good everywhere else too. My wife prefers a slightly different frame style, but the key rule we both follow: always polarized. Once you've worn polarized glasses on the beach, you can't go back.
Cover-ups — essential for the walk to and from the water
A lightweight, breezy cover-up does double duty: sun protection and a layer when the breeze picks up. My wife won't beach without one. Look for quick-dry fabric you can throw on right after the water.
Shop cover-ups on Amazon →Bog bag (or mesh tote) — the rinse-and-go beach bag
A Bog bag or similar mesh-style tote is the smart move — sand shakes out, water drains straight through, and you can rinse the whole thing under a beach shower and it's ready to pack. No more sandy, wet bag smell in the car.
Shop mesh beach bags on Amazon → Shop towels at Walmart →Towels and blankets
Get bigger than you think you need. A standard bath towel at the beach is always too small once you’ve laid it down on sand. Oversized beach towels — 35×70 inches or larger — are the right call. Sam’s Club consistently carries large, absorbent beach towels at a price point that makes buying extras painless. Turkish towels are worth considering too: they dry faster, pack smaller, and feel better after the first few washes, but they’re thinner so less comfortable as a ground layer.
- Oversized beach towels (35×70" or larger) — one per person minimum
- Beach blanket — sand-resistant picnic-style for sitting, not lying on
- Small hand towel — for faces, hands, wiping down sunscreen tubes
Snacks — the underrated category
Good beach snacks share a few traits: they hold up in heat, they don’t require utensils, they’re salty enough to keep you eating (and drinking water), and they pack into a bag without crushing. Here’s the real-world list:
- Gardetto's or pub mix — durable, salty, satisfying, won't melt
- Dot's Pretzels — hold up better than regular pretzels in humidity; distinctive flavor people always ask about
- Chips — kettle-style hold up better in beach bags; get a chip clip
- Trail mix and nuts — calorie-dense and heat-stable; good for keeping energy up through a long day
- Jerky and sausage jerky — protein without refrigeration; pairs well with the cooler drinks
- Packaged cheese sticks — keep well in the cooler for a few hours; kids love them
- Fruits — grapes (cold from the cooler), watermelon slices, clementines; the cold factor matters
- Koozies — keep canned drinks cold significantly longer; bring one per person
✎ Editor's Note
The real MVP snacks at our beach setup: Gardetto's, pub mix, Dot's Pretzels, and Dot's Pretzel Bites specifically. Chips always get crushed and half of them end up feeding the seagulls. Trail mix, nuts, and jerky are the most reliable — they don't melt, don't crush, and travel well in a mesh bag. Sausage jerky and individually-wrapped cheese sticks are great when you're doing a long day and need real protein. Fruits are great too — grapes and berries travel well and feel good in the heat.
Drinks setup
A quick note on bottle openers: a good bottle opener is the most overlooked beach essential. We prefer can-twist style or a wall-mount style multi-tool, but the real priority is this — avoid glass bottles at the beach whenever possible. Broken glass in sand is a genuine hazard that stays dangerous long after cleanup. Canned beer, canned seltzers, and non-glass containers are the considerate choice for shared beach spaces.
- Water — more than you think — heat, sun, salt air, and physical activity dehydrate faster than normal
- Insulated water bottles — keeps water cold for hours; worth the bulk
- Canned beverages over glass — safety for everyone on shared beaches
- Bottle/can opener — the one thing people forget every time
- Koozies — one per person, every time
Refreezable cold packs — freeze tonight, cold again tomorrow
Loose ice is great but it melts and leaves you with a cooler full of water. Refreezable packs solve that: freeze them overnight and they keep your cooler cold longer with zero mess. Throw them back in the freezer when you get home and they're ready for the next trip.
Shop refreezable packs on Amazon →Kids gear and beach toys
Sand toys don't need to be expensive, but they do need to be purposeful. A few quality pieces beat a pile of cheap plastic that breaks on day one.
- Sand castle molds and shovels — get a set with multiple mold shapes; kids will use them for hours
- Mesh shell bags — for collecting shells and rocks; the mesh lets sand fall out automatically
- Waterproof phone case with wrist strap — for parents in the water with kids
- Rashguards for kids — reduces sunscreen surface area and keeps them covered during water time
Always bring: the cleanup kit
The cleanup kit is the most skipped category and the most appreciated at the end of the day. Pack it before you go and you’ll never regret it.
- Trash bags — always. A beach day generates more trash than you expect; having a dedicated bag means you leave nothing behind and cleanup takes two minutes instead of twenty.
- Wet wipes — for sandy hands before snacking, sunscreen cleanup, kids in general
- Small first aid kit — band-aids, antiseptic wipes, anti-itch cream (jellyfish stings happen)
- Dry bags or gallon zip-locks — for wet swimsuits, wet towels, sandy shoes on the way home
Entertainment
- Bluetooth speaker — JBL Flip 6 or W-King for sound that carries outdoors
- Power bank or Jackery — for phones, speaker charging, lights
- Books, cards, or a frisbee — the analog classics still work
- Waterproof playing cards — regular cards don't survive a beach day; get the plastic ones
The full checklist — printable summary
🕶 Sunglasses (polarized — Ray-Ban aviators)
👔 Cover-up (quick-dry for women)
👝 Bog bag / mesh beach tote
❄ Refreezable cold packs
Use our AI Packing List Generator to get a customized version of this list for your specific trip — it’ll add destination-specific items and let you check things off interactively.