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Cape Disappointment Lighthouse — Attraction in Long Beach

Name
Cape Disappointment Lighthouse
Description
The Cape Disappointment Light is a lighthouse on Cape Disappointment near the mouth of the Columbia River in the U.S. state of Washington.
Nearby attractions
Deadman's Cove
244 Robert Gray Dr, Ilwaco, WA 98624
Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center
244 Robert Gray Dr, Ilwaco, WA 98624
Waikiki Beach
244 Robert Gray Dr, Ilwaco, WA 98624
Waikiki Beach
Washington 98624
Nearby restaurants
Nearby hotels
Related posts
Keywords
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Cape Disappointment Lighthouse things to do, attractions, restaurants, events info and trip planning
Cape Disappointment Lighthouse
United StatesWashingtonLong BeachCape Disappointment Lighthouse

Basic Info

Cape Disappointment Lighthouse

Cape Disappointment Lighthouse, Cape Disappointment Trail, Ilwaco, WA 98624
4.6(388)
Open 24 hours
Save
spot

Ratings & Description

Info

The Cape Disappointment Light is a lighthouse on Cape Disappointment near the mouth of the Columbia River in the U.S. state of Washington.

Outdoor
Scenic
Cultural
Family friendly
Off the beaten path
attractions: Deadman's Cove, Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center, Waikiki Beach, Waikiki Beach, restaurants:
logoLearn more insights from Wanderboat AI.
Phone
(360) 642-3078
Website
parks.wa.gov

Plan your stay

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Reviews

Nearby attractions of Cape Disappointment Lighthouse

Deadman's Cove

Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center

Waikiki Beach

Waikiki Beach

Deadman's Cove

Deadman's Cove

4.7

(250)

Open 24 hours
Click for details
Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center

Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center

4.6

(231)

Closed
Click for details
Waikiki Beach

Waikiki Beach

4.8

(182)

Open 24 hours
Click for details
Waikiki Beach

Waikiki Beach

4.7

(74)

Open 24 hours
Click for details

Things to do nearby

Astoria, OR Murder Mystery: Solve the case!
Astoria, OR Murder Mystery: Solve the case!
Mon, Dec 1 • 12:00 AM
1618 Exchange St, Astoria, 97103
View details
Clatsop-G2300: Intermediate EOC Functions  December 9-11, 2025
Clatsop-G2300: Intermediate EOC Functions December 9-11, 2025
Tue, Dec 9 • 8:00 AM
33168 Patriot Way, Warrenton, OR 97146
View details
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Posts

📍One Photo to Prove You've Been to Portland | 🚗 Short Coastal Road Trip
KizzieKizzie
📍One Photo to Prove You've Been to Portland | 🚗 Short Coastal Road Trip
Gray AkersGray Akers
As a lighthouse fangirl, I will simply counter many people’s three-word reviews of this lighthouse and say: ɴᴏᴛ a disappointment! You guys aren’t clever! We visited on a lovely Sunday morning in mid-February. It had been sunny & warm & dry for a few days beforehand, so the primary trail from the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center to the lighthouse was not as treacherous & mucky as other reviews have suggested — that said, it is not a remotely difficult mental leap to believe & imagine the level of mud that could accumulate at countless points on the trail, especially during those Pacific Northwest Winters™︎︎, which I absolutely believe would render the trail significantly less safe & far more difficult. As others have stated, the trail is indeed labeled as “difficult.” Parts of it are paved, but most of it is dirt. The walk towards the lighthouse is downhill for the most part, so just… be cognisant of your walk back. I’m 31 years old & in some pretty lousy physical shape due to a few compounding factors, but the walk (I wouldn’t even call it a hike!) was still more than manageable for me without having to stop & take any embarrassing catch-my-breath breaks around my boyfriend. The trail is also only 0.4 miles each way. Though it is generally uphill walking back, there is a nice balance of uphill & downhill grades, so it’s really not as daunting as the trailhead sign might suggest. Unfortunately, the trail to actually access the site of the lighthouse is not handicap-accessible as far as I understand, but there is a nice view of the lighthouse (plus some binoculars) from the paved sidewalk circling the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center. This is a beautiful lighthouse with some gorgeous panoramic views of various regional waterways & landmarks. Driving south to Cape Disappointment from Seattle along the coastline basically obscures the actual ocean due to, say, the Long Beach Peninsula, etc. along the Washington coast 𝘳𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘶𝘱 𝘶𝘯𝘵𝘪𝘭 entry into the park, so it’s refreshing to suddenly arrive & be surrounded by a vast berth of beautiful blue ocean, versus the greenish, stationary globs of water to the west if following stupid Google maps the whole way. 𝗦𝗼𝗺𝗲 𝗠𝗶𝘀𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗽𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀 𝘁𝗼 𝗖𝗹𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝗨𝗽: ✘︎ Some sources (including my go-to, LighthouseFriends.com) suggest that the trail to the lighthouse was closed in 2020. I see Google reviews from 2021 still indicating that the trail is inaccessible.【︎However, as of February 2022, the lighthouse trail is ᴏᴘᴇɴ.】︎ ✘︎ Having visited a very lovely lighthouse in Crescent City, CA several years ago, I luckily hit that spot at low tide, not having known in advance that that particular lighthouse is inaccessible during high tide. Since then, in my lighthouse journeys, I now make an active effort to ascertain whether tides may affect the accessibility of 𝘹-lighthouse. I read a fairly recent Google review for Cape Disappointment which asserted that the trail becomes washed over during high tide, so if one were to successfully walk to the lighthouse but somehow lollygag long enough for the tide to rise, then one would be stranded until the next low tide. I truly don’t mean to sound like a sanctimonious “well, 𝘢𝘤𝘵𝘶𝘢𝘭𝘭𝘺” Cheeto-finger Redditor, but 𝙩𝙝𝙞𝙨 𝙞𝙨 𝙣𝙤𝙩 𝙧𝙚𝙢𝙤𝙩𝙚𝙡𝙮 𝙩𝙧𝙪𝙚. I feel that it is important to distinguish this for folks who may be timing their trip based upon reviews that they may have encountered on Google. A Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center docent, as well as our own walk to the lighthouse at peak high tide, confirmed that the tides have absolutely no bearing on the functionality of the lighthouse trail. ✘︎ Accessibility: There is a large lower parking lot, where the lighthouse trailhead can be accessed directly from one corner of the lot, plus a much smaller parking lot located immediately adjacent to the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center, which offers a completely paved & handicap-accessible path to the museum & an associated set of binoculars for viewing the lighthouse from there. Please be courteous ♿️
Michailah WilliamsMichailah Williams
We were staying in Long Beach Washington for the night and decided to take a short ride to Cape Disappointments lighthouse. It took maybe 10 minutes And it was well worth it. I almost left my car without paying the $10 fee, but when I was looking at the information area where the bathrooms are before walking to the lighthouse, I noticed the fee machine. As I am buying my $10 ticket to put in the car the park ranger is looking at my car and looking around my car to find the ticket in the window and I let him know that I was just purchasing the ticket. He was super nice and doing his job, so you may want to make sure that you pay your fee. It was maybe a half mile easy walk to the lighthouse. The views are beautiful and I'm sure my camera did not do it justice. Patty who happens to volunteer in the lighthouse happened to catch us outside contemplating if we were going to climb to the top of the lighthouse and said a group just went up and that she could add us to it if wanted. We paid $3 and we went up the stairs. I'm guessing there were more than 30 stairs in total. There were four people at the top of the lighthouse with a gentleman who I forgot his name, but he is Patty's husband and he volunteers the touring part of the experience. We hung out for about 10 minutes and took a couple of pictures before heading back down. We then walked back up to the parking lot, there is a loop to walk to and from. The views were beautiful, there were people on the beach and it was a well worth hour of our time.
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Kizzie

Kizzie

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As a lighthouse fangirl, I will simply counter many people’s three-word reviews of this lighthouse and say: ɴᴏᴛ a disappointment! You guys aren’t clever! We visited on a lovely Sunday morning in mid-February. It had been sunny & warm & dry for a few days beforehand, so the primary trail from the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center to the lighthouse was not as treacherous & mucky as other reviews have suggested — that said, it is not a remotely difficult mental leap to believe & imagine the level of mud that could accumulate at countless points on the trail, especially during those Pacific Northwest Winters™︎︎, which I absolutely believe would render the trail significantly less safe & far more difficult. As others have stated, the trail is indeed labeled as “difficult.” Parts of it are paved, but most of it is dirt. The walk towards the lighthouse is downhill for the most part, so just… be cognisant of your walk back. I’m 31 years old & in some pretty lousy physical shape due to a few compounding factors, but the walk (I wouldn’t even call it a hike!) was still more than manageable for me without having to stop & take any embarrassing catch-my-breath breaks around my boyfriend. The trail is also only 0.4 miles each way. Though it is generally uphill walking back, there is a nice balance of uphill & downhill grades, so it’s really not as daunting as the trailhead sign might suggest. Unfortunately, the trail to actually access the site of the lighthouse is not handicap-accessible as far as I understand, but there is a nice view of the lighthouse (plus some binoculars) from the paved sidewalk circling the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center. This is a beautiful lighthouse with some gorgeous panoramic views of various regional waterways & landmarks. Driving south to Cape Disappointment from Seattle along the coastline basically obscures the actual ocean due to, say, the Long Beach Peninsula, etc. along the Washington coast 𝘳𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘶𝘱 𝘶𝘯𝘵𝘪𝘭 entry into the park, so it’s refreshing to suddenly arrive & be surrounded by a vast berth of beautiful blue ocean, versus the greenish, stationary globs of water to the west if following stupid Google maps the whole way. 𝗦𝗼𝗺𝗲 𝗠𝗶𝘀𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗽𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀 𝘁𝗼 𝗖𝗹𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝗨𝗽: ✘︎ Some sources (including my go-to, LighthouseFriends.com) suggest that the trail to the lighthouse was closed in 2020. I see Google reviews from 2021 still indicating that the trail is inaccessible.【︎However, as of February 2022, the lighthouse trail is ᴏᴘᴇɴ.】︎ ✘︎ Having visited a very lovely lighthouse in Crescent City, CA several years ago, I luckily hit that spot at low tide, not having known in advance that that particular lighthouse is inaccessible during high tide. Since then, in my lighthouse journeys, I now make an active effort to ascertain whether tides may affect the accessibility of 𝘹-lighthouse. I read a fairly recent Google review for Cape Disappointment which asserted that the trail becomes washed over during high tide, so if one were to successfully walk to the lighthouse but somehow lollygag long enough for the tide to rise, then one would be stranded until the next low tide. I truly don’t mean to sound like a sanctimonious “well, 𝘢𝘤𝘵𝘶𝘢𝘭𝘭𝘺” Cheeto-finger Redditor, but 𝙩𝙝𝙞𝙨 𝙞𝙨 𝙣𝙤𝙩 𝙧𝙚𝙢𝙤𝙩𝙚𝙡𝙮 𝙩𝙧𝙪𝙚. I feel that it is important to distinguish this for folks who may be timing their trip based upon reviews that they may have encountered on Google. A Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center docent, as well as our own walk to the lighthouse at peak high tide, confirmed that the tides have absolutely no bearing on the functionality of the lighthouse trail. ✘︎ Accessibility: There is a large lower parking lot, where the lighthouse trailhead can be accessed directly from one corner of the lot, plus a much smaller parking lot located immediately adjacent to the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center, which offers a completely paved & handicap-accessible path to the museum & an associated set of binoculars for viewing the lighthouse from there. Please be courteous ♿️
Gray Akers

Gray Akers

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We were staying in Long Beach Washington for the night and decided to take a short ride to Cape Disappointments lighthouse. It took maybe 10 minutes And it was well worth it. I almost left my car without paying the $10 fee, but when I was looking at the information area where the bathrooms are before walking to the lighthouse, I noticed the fee machine. As I am buying my $10 ticket to put in the car the park ranger is looking at my car and looking around my car to find the ticket in the window and I let him know that I was just purchasing the ticket. He was super nice and doing his job, so you may want to make sure that you pay your fee. It was maybe a half mile easy walk to the lighthouse. The views are beautiful and I'm sure my camera did not do it justice. Patty who happens to volunteer in the lighthouse happened to catch us outside contemplating if we were going to climb to the top of the lighthouse and said a group just went up and that she could add us to it if wanted. We paid $3 and we went up the stairs. I'm guessing there were more than 30 stairs in total. There were four people at the top of the lighthouse with a gentleman who I forgot his name, but he is Patty's husband and he volunteers the touring part of the experience. We hung out for about 10 minutes and took a couple of pictures before heading back down. We then walked back up to the parking lot, there is a loop to walk to and from. The views were beautiful, there were people on the beach and it was a well worth hour of our time.
Michailah Williams

Michailah Williams

See more posts
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Reviews of Cape Disappointment Lighthouse

4.6
(388)
avatar
5.0
3y

As a lighthouse fangirl, I will simply counter many people’s three-word reviews of this lighthouse and say: ɴᴏᴛ a disappointment! You guys aren’t clever!

We visited on a lovely Sunday morning in mid-February. It had been sunny & warm & dry for a few days beforehand, so the primary trail from the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center to the lighthouse was not as treacherous & mucky as other reviews have suggested — that said, it is not a remotely difficult mental leap to believe & imagine the level of mud that could accumulate at countless points on the trail, especially during those Pacific Northwest Winters™︎︎, which I absolutely believe would render the trail significantly less safe & far more difficult.

As others have stated, the trail is indeed labeled as “difficult.” Parts of it are paved, but most of it is dirt. The walk towards the lighthouse is downhill for the most part, so just… be cognisant of your walk back. I’m 31 years old & in some pretty lousy physical shape due to a few compounding factors, but the walk (I wouldn’t even call it a hike!) was still more than manageable for me without having to stop & take any embarrassing catch-my-breath breaks around my boyfriend. The trail is also only 0.4 miles each way. Though it is generally uphill walking back, there is a nice balance of uphill & downhill grades, so it’s really not as daunting as the trailhead sign might suggest.

Unfortunately, the trail to actually access the site of the lighthouse is not handicap-accessible as far as I understand, but there is a nice view of the lighthouse (plus some binoculars) from the paved sidewalk circling the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center.

This is a beautiful lighthouse with some gorgeous panoramic views of various regional waterways & landmarks. Driving south to Cape Disappointment from Seattle along the coastline basically obscures the actual ocean due to, say, the Long Beach Peninsula, etc. along the Washington coast 𝘳𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘶𝘱 𝘶𝘯𝘵𝘪𝘭 entry into the park, so it’s refreshing to suddenly arrive & be surrounded by a vast berth of beautiful blue ocean, versus the greenish, stationary globs of water to the west if following stupid Google maps the whole way.

𝗦𝗼𝗺𝗲 𝗠𝗶𝘀𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗽𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀 𝘁𝗼 𝗖𝗹𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝗨𝗽: ✘︎ Some sources (including my go-to, LighthouseFriends.com) suggest that the trail to the lighthouse was closed in 2020. I see Google reviews from 2021 still indicating that the trail is inaccessible.【︎However, as of February 2022, the lighthouse trail is ᴏᴘᴇɴ.】︎ ✘︎ Having visited a very lovely lighthouse in Crescent City, CA several years ago, I luckily hit that spot at low tide, not having known in advance that that particular lighthouse is inaccessible during high tide. Since then, in my lighthouse journeys, I now make an active effort to ascertain whether tides may affect the accessibility of 𝘹-lighthouse. I read a fairly recent Google review for Cape Disappointment which asserted that the trail becomes washed over during high tide, so if one were to successfully walk to the lighthouse but somehow lollygag long enough for the tide to rise, then one would be stranded until the next low tide. I truly don’t mean to sound like a sanctimonious “well, 𝘢𝘤𝘵𝘶𝘢𝘭𝘭𝘺” Cheeto-finger Redditor, but 𝙩𝙝𝙞𝙨 𝙞𝙨 𝙣𝙤𝙩 𝙧𝙚𝙢𝙤𝙩𝙚𝙡𝙮 𝙩𝙧𝙪𝙚. I feel that it is important to distinguish this for folks who may be timing their trip based upon reviews that they may have encountered on Google. A Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center docent, as well as our own walk to the lighthouse at peak high tide, confirmed that the tides have absolutely no bearing on the functionality of the lighthouse trail. ✘︎ Accessibility: There is a large lower parking lot, where the lighthouse trailhead can be accessed directly from one corner of the lot, plus a much smaller parking lot located immediately adjacent to the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center, which offers a completely paved & handicap-accessible path to the museum & an associated set of binoculars for viewing the lighthouse from there. Please be...

   Read more
avatar
5.0
1y

We were staying in Long Beach Washington for the night and decided to take a short ride to Cape Disappointments lighthouse. It took maybe 10 minutes And it was well worth it.

I almost left my car without paying the $10 fee, but when I was looking at the information area where the bathrooms are before walking to the lighthouse, I noticed the fee machine. As I am buying my $10 ticket to put in the car the park ranger is looking at my car and looking around my car to find the ticket in the window and I let him know that I was just purchasing the ticket. He was super nice and doing his job, so you may want to make sure that you pay your fee.

It was maybe a half mile easy walk to the lighthouse. The views are beautiful and I'm sure my camera did not do it justice.

Patty who happens to volunteer in the lighthouse happened to catch us outside contemplating if we were going to climb to the top of the lighthouse and said a group just went up and that she could add us to it if wanted. We paid $3 and we went up the stairs. I'm guessing there were more than 30 stairs in total.

There were four people at the top of the lighthouse with a gentleman who I forgot his name, but he is Patty's husband and he volunteers the touring part of the experience.

We hung out for about 10 minutes and took a couple of pictures before heading back down.

We then walked back up to the parking lot, there is a loop to walk to and from.

The views were beautiful, there were people on the beach and it was a well worth hour...

   Read more
avatar
5.0
3y

The trail to Cape Disappointment lighthouse has reopened to the public as of October 2021. The path to the lighthouse starts at the interpretive center parking lot which is a dirt path. Once you reach deadman’s cove trailhead which is labeled by signs the path turns to gravel. Take a right to access Deadman’s cove and go left to continue to the lighthouse. Deadman’s cove has wooden steps so use caution when wet. Currently there are trail improvements happening so take it slow where gravel hasn’t been placed. Handrails will be coming soon which will make transiting up and down much easier. If you go left on the trail it will take you to a black fence where you will have a great view of the Coast Guard Station and the 47 MLB’s. The trail then turns to a nice concrete driveway all the way to the lighthouse. In a few days there will be benches placed along the trail to allow those that need to rest a place to do so. Take note vehicles do transit up and down the driveway to conduct Coast Guard business throughout the day so move off to the side when safe to do so. The watch tower has an active duty member in it so please don’t disturb them by tapping on the windows or trying to open the watch tower door. Please remember no littering, climbing on navigating aids, and defacing any of the trails bunkers or trees. Please do your part to keep this beautiful place open. The trail to the lighthouse will close when adverse weather conditions arise such as high winds,...

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