You can rent a kayak in Los Angeles within a 20-minute drive of anywhere in the city, and the Pacific coastline gives you some of the most spectacular paddling in North America. Dolphins ride your bow wave. Sea lions haul out on rocks 50 feet from your boat. And on a clear day, Catalina Island shimmers on the horizon 22 miles offshore. Here is where locals actually paddle.
1. Marina del Rey Kayak Rentals — Best for Beginners
Marina del Rey is the largest man-made recreational marina in the United States, and its calm interior channels make it the best place in LA to learn to kayak. Both LA Kayaks (at Fisherman's Village) and Blue Water Kayaks run guided tours and self-guided rentals starting at $18/hour for a single kayak.
The insider loop: Launch from Fisherman's Village, paddle north through Mother's Beach (flat water, family-friendly), circle Burton Chace Park, and return. Total distance: 3.5 miles, 90 minutes. You pass a resident sea lion colony at marker G12 — they're there year-round and utterly unbothered by kayakers.
Pricing 2026:
| Single | Double | SUP | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 hour | $18 | $26 | $18 |
| Half day (4hr) | $55 | $75 | $50 |
| Full day | $85 | $115 | $80 |
2. Malibu Coastline Sea Kayaking
Rent from Malibu Pier Watersports and paddle north along the Malibu coast. The stretch between Malibu Pier and Point Dume (8 miles round trip) is one of the most scenic coastal paddles in Southern California. Sea caves at Point Dume only accessible by water. Dolphins and grey whales (November–March) are regular sightings.
Skill level: Intermediate. The open Pacific can have afternoon swells up to 4 feet. Launch in the morning before 10am for the calmest conditions. Check surf forecast at Surfline.com before paddling.
3. Catalina Island Kayaking — The Big Adventure
The 22-mile crossing from Long Beach to Catalina Island is for experienced paddlers only. However, once on the island, kayak tours operate from Two Harbors and Avalon covering sea caves at Seal Rocks, kelp forest snorkel stops, and the Casino Point Marine Preserve (California's first underwater park). Descanso Beach Ocean Sports rents kayaks starting at $20/hour.
Insider Tip: The sea cave route from Avalon Cove north to Little Frog Rock (2.5 miles) passes through three navigable sea caves at moderate swell and is consistently ranked the best kayaking experience in Southern California. Do it at low tide only.
4. Leo Carrillo State Park Sea Caves — Malibu
Twenty-eight miles north of Santa Monica on PCH, Leo Carrillo offers the most dramatic kayaking on the LA coast. The sea caves at the northern end of the park are accessible by sea kayak at low to medium tide. Three caves can be paddled through completely. Rock arch formations frame views of the open Pacific.
Key detail: Bring a headlamp. The deepest cave (locals call it "The Cathedral") is roughly 180 feet long and completely dark in the middle. The acoustic experience inside is extraordinary.
5. Echo Park Lake — Urban Kayaking
For an on-the-nose LA experience, rent a swan pedal boat or kayak at Echo Park Lake in downtown LA. The lake sits below the skyline with a backdrop that regularly ends up on Instagram. $11/hour pedal boats, $13/hour kayaks. The park reopened in 2022 after a renovation and the facilities are excellent.
FAQ: Kayaking in Los Angeles
Do I need experience to kayak in Los Angeles? Marina del Rey and Echo Park Lake are genuinely beginner-friendly — no experience needed. Malibu coastline and Leo Carrillo require intermediate skills. The Catalina crossing requires advanced open-water experience and should only be attempted with a qualified guide.
Are there free kayaking spots in Los Angeles? Yes — if you bring your own kayak, many beach parks allow free launches. Dockweiler State Beach, Cabrillo Beach, and Topanga State Beach all have free beach launches.
→ Explore kayak rentals and guided tours in Los Angeles at WowLocalUSA
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