New York Porch

The Outdoors · Statewide

Check State Park Beach Water Status

State park beach results can change after sampling, storms, waves, or lifeguard staffing, so the status page is a same-day check.

Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026

A state park beach day should start with the park page, not just the weather. The sky can look perfect while a beach still has a water-quality, wave, turbidity, cold-water, or lifeguard issue.

State Parks says its beaches are sampled at least once a week for bacterial indicators of impaired water quality. Results are posted at the park office, at the beach when there is an exceedance, and through the beach results page. Parks can close beaches for known or anticipated public health or safety risk, including bacterial exceedance, predicted poor water quality after rain, high waves, turbidity, cold water, or no lifeguard.

Before loading the cooler, check the New York State Parks beach results map, call the park for the most current status, and have a trail or picnic backup nearby. It keeps a closed-swim day from becoming a ruined day.

This is especially useful after heavy rain, rough water, or a stretch of hot weather. A family can still enjoy the New York State Parks picnic area, trail, playground, or shade if the swim plan changes, but it helps to know that before everyone is standing at the lifeguard rope.

Filed under: The Outdoors state-parksbeachesswimmingwater-qualitystory

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New York Porch explains the useful version; official sources decide the final answer.

Last reviewed
June 23, 2026

Use this carefully: Hours, fees, forms, rules, and local conditions can change. Confirm with the official source before acting.

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