Atlas · California
Every lighthouse in California
49 entries — light stations, active aids, ruins, relocations, and one museum-ship lightship. Use the filters below to narrow by region, access, or difficulty.
Showing 49 of 49

Old Point Loma Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12San Diego, Southern California
The oldest lighthouse structure on the West Coast and one of the most historically significant in the United States. Its deactivation story — too high, too foggy — is a foundational lesson in lighthouse engineering.
Point Vicente Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Rancho Palos Verdes, Southern California
Visually striking white tower on dramatic cliffs above the Pacific. One of the most recognizable lighthouse silhouettes in California. Active light. Adjacent to whale migration corridor.
Point Conception Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Lompoc, Central Coast
Geographically and historically one of the most significant lighthouse sites on the Pacific Coast. The 'corner' of California. Not publicly accessible, which makes it a compelling inclusion — the unreachable lighthouse.

Point Sur Light Station
★ Flagship 12Big Sur, Central Coast
The most complete surviving light station complex in California. The 3-hour guided tour is among the most immersive lighthouse experiences on the West Coast. The volcanic rock setting is visually extraordinary.

Point Pinos Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Pacific Grove, Central Coast
The oldest continuously operating lighthouse on the West Coast. The claim of the original Fresnel lens still in active use — if verified — would make it one of the most remarkable lighthouse artifacts in the United States.

Pigeon Point Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Pescadero, Bay Area / Peninsula
Iconic silhouette on the San Mateo coast. One of the most photographed lighthouses in California. The on-site hostel makes it a unique overnight destination. Tower restoration is a major ongoing story.

Point Bonita Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Sausalito, Bay Area
The guardian of the Golden Gate. One of the most dramatic lighthouse settings in the United States — perched on a rocky point, accessed by a suspension bridge over crashing surf. The very limited access (one Saturday per month) makes planning essential.

Point Reyes Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Point Reyes Station, Bay Area / North Bay
One of the windiest spots in North America — the lighthouse was built to withstand 100+ mph gusts. The preserved first-order Fresnel lens is one of the finest examples in California. The 308-step descent to the lighthouse is itself a memorable experience.

Point Arena Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Point Arena, Mendocino Coast
The earthquake story is one of the most compelling in California lighthouse history. The 115-ft tower is climbable. On-site keeper cottage lodging makes it a premier lighthouse overnight destination. Tectonic plate boundary runs through the property.

Point Cabrillo Light Station
★ Flagship 12Mendocino, Mendocino Coast
One of the most complete and best-preserved light station complexes in California. On-site keeper house lodging. Walking distance from the village of Mendocino. The Mendocino coast setting is among the most scenic in the state.

Trinidad Head Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Trinidad, North Coast
Dramatic headland setting with views of Trinidad Bay and the Pacific. The compact white tower against the rocky headland is one of the most photogenic lighthouse scenes in Northern California. The town of Trinidad is a charming base.
Battery Point Lighthouse
★ Flagship 12Crescent City, North Coast
The tsunami survival story is one of the most dramatic in California lighthouse history. The tidal island setting — walk across at low tide, stranded at high tide — is unlike any other California lighthouse experience. The museum inside the original keeper's dwelling is excellent.

New Point Loma Lighthouse
San Diego, Southern California
The 'replacement' story — why the old lighthouse failed and how the new one solved the problem — is a compelling engineering narrative. Visible from Cabrillo NM.

Point Fermin Lighthouse
San Pedro, Southern California
The WWII blackout story is unique in California lighthouse history. The Victorian architecture is extraordinary — unlike any other lighthouse in the state. Free museum with original Fresnel lens.

East Brother Island Light Station
Richmond, Bay Area
The only lighthouse B&B in the San Francisco Bay Area. Boat-only access. Victorian architecture intact. A unique overnight experience in the Bay.

Alcatraz Island Light
San Francisco, Bay Area
The first lighthouse on the Pacific Coast. The Alcatraz connection makes it one of the most-visited lighthouse sites in the United States. The lighthouse is often overlooked by visitors focused on the prison — a compelling story angle.

Point Montara Light Station
Montara, Bay Area / Peninsula
On-site hostel makes it a popular overnight destination on the San Mateo coast. Pairs naturally with Pigeon Point for a Peninsula lighthouse overnight.

St. George Reef Lighthouse
Crescent City, North Coast
The most expensive and most remote lighthouse in California history. The Brother Jonathan wreck story is one of the most dramatic in Pacific Coast maritime history. The helicopter tour is a bucket-list experience.

Los Angeles Harbor Light
San Pedro, Southern California
The green tower is one of the most visually distinctive working lighthouses in the country. It defines the visual entrance to the busiest port on the West Coast and the city's harbor identity. Pairs visually with Point Fermin a few miles up the coast.
Santa Barbara Lighthouse
Santa Barbara, Central Coast
The earthquake history is the entry's reason for being. California has few lighthouses whose original structure is gone due to seismic damage, and Santa Barbara is the cleanest example.

Anacapa Island Light Station
Ventura, Southern California
The most accessible of the Channel Islands lights and the only one with regular public visitation. The Spanish-revival station buildings on a treeless ocean headland are a distinctive piece of 1930s Coast Guard architecture.

Point San Luis Lighthouse
Avila Beach, Central Coast
One of the most architecturally intact Victorian light stations on the California coast and one of the only ones where you can both hike in and ride a shuttle. Volunteer docent-led tours are the primary experience.

Piedras Blancas Light Station
San Simeon, Central Coast
One of the rare California stations where you can take a structured guided tour of the grounds and outbuildings, paired with one of the largest elephant seal rookeries on the coast immediately to the south. The truncation story is its own piece of mid-century Coast Guard engineering history.

Año Nuevo Light Station
Pescadero, Bay Area / Peninsula
More famous today for the largest mainland elephant seal rookery in California than for the light station itself — but the ruins read as a clean lesson in what a coastal site looks like when navigation tech moves on and the buildings stay.
Point Arguello Light
Lompoc, Central Coast
The geography matters here more than the architecture. This stretch of coast earned the name 'Devil's Jaw' for a reason, and the 1923 disaster is the reason Coast Guard navigation training in California changed.

Farallon Islands Light
San Francisco, Bay Area
One of the original eight West Coast lighthouses and the most remote. The Farallons are a National Wildlife Refuge with no landing rights for the general public, which makes the light station as close to inaccessible as any in California.

Lime Point Light
Sausalito, Bay Area
One of the most photographed lighthouse positions in California by accident: it sits squarely under the Golden Gate Bridge. An active aid to navigation still doing the original 1900s job, automated. The light characteristic is Fl W 5s — flashing white every five seconds.

Mare Island Light
Vallejo, Bay Area
Worth knowing about as part of the Navy's California history more than as a lighthouse destination. The structure's current condition and ownership remain under-documented — a real research gap on this site, not a story we're skipping.

Point Diablo Light
Sausalito, Bay Area
The least-visited of the three Marin Headlands lights — easy to skip in favor of Point Bonita's suspension bridge a few miles west. Worth seeing for the Golden Gate viewing angle alone, and as the middle piece of a complete Marin lights walk.
Cape Mendocino Light
Ferndale, North Coast
A short list of California lighthouses are still on their original sites; this one is not. The Ferndale display is the rare case where you can walk up to and around a relocated tower instead of squinting at a photograph in a museum.
Humboldt Harbor Light
Eureka, North Coast
A useful pairing of California's brutal coastal-engineering history with one of its more successful preservation moves. The relocated tower is the practical way to see a 19th-century Humboldt light up close, and it pairs naturally with the Blunts Reef Lightship at the maritime museum nearby.
Crescent City Rear Range Light
Crescent City, North Coast
Included as an open research question. The entry exists so a corrected record has somewhere to land. May be a data artifact, or may be a small unlisted navigational aid distinct from Battery Point Lighthouse. We would rather publish an unresolved entry than quietly omit a station that might exist.

Point Hueneme Lighthouse
Port Hueneme, Southern California
One of the few Art Deco California lighthouses (alongside Long Beach Harbor), and a working military-base light station — a category that's largely closed to the public elsewhere on the coast. Worth knowing about even if you can't easily visit.
Fort Point Light
San Francisco, Bay Area
Lighthouse-meets-bridge-construction story is the entry. The original navigational role was made redundant by the very structure that erased the building.
Ballast Point Light (demolished)
San Diego, Southern California
A reminder that the larger Point Loma headland once hosted three navigational lights (the original, the current active aid, and Ballast Point), not the two more often discussed.
Mile Rocks Light
San Francisco, Bay Area
One of the most dramatic offshore-rock lighthouse sites in California, and the engineering story of the truncation is its own thing.
Southampton Shoal Light
Richmond, Bay Area
Most relocated California lighthouses end up in public parks. This one became a private clubhouse — a different ending and worth knowing about.
Carquinez Strait Light
Crockett, Bay Area
Closes the loop on the small cluster of inland-bay screw-pile lights that supported Bay-to-Delta navigation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries — Mare Island, Southampton Shoal, Roe Island, and Carquinez Strait.
Roe Island Light (demolished)
Pittsburg, Bay Area
An archive-only entry. Useful as the cleanest example of a California lighthouse being erased by another federal use of the same waterway, and as a footnote in the broader Bay-and-Delta navigational story.
Oakland Harbor Light
Oakland, Bay Area
One of only a few spark-plug lighthouses on the Pacific Coast — a structural type more common on the East Coast — and an unusually personable piece of Oakland's working-waterfront history.
Blunts Reef Lightship (WLV-605)
Eureka, North Coast
Lightships are the under-told half of U.S. navigational history. WLV-605 is California's last and one of the few preserved on the West Coast at all.
Yerba Buena Island Light
San Francisco, Bay Area
One of the most-photographed islands in California and one of its least-known lighthouses, because the Bay Bridge has been the main thing here for almost a century.
Point Knox Light (Angel Island)
Tiburon, Bay Area
Part of the Angel Island three-lighthouse anomaly with Point Blunt and Point Stuart. Worth knowing the name; not worth a dedicated trip.

Santa Cruz Lighthouse
Santa Cruz, Central Coast
Houses the Santa Cruz Surfing Museum — the first surfing museum in the world, opened 1986. A working light, a memorial, and a small museum in one squat brick tower on Lighthouse Point. One of the more emotionally specific stations in the atlas.
Long Beach Light
Long Beach, Southern California
The Art Deco design is the outlier in the California atlas — almost every other active California light is either a 19th-century tower or a mid-century USCG utility structure. This one is neither. Worth pairing with Point Vicente and Point Fermin on a Los Angeles harbor day.
Rubicon Point Light
Tahoma, Inland (Lake Tahoe)
Inland lake lighthouse is the rarity. Almost nobody knows Tahoe ever had navigational beacons; this and Sugar Pine Point are the evidence.
Sugar Pine Point Light
Tahoma, Inland (Lake Tahoe)
Companion entry to Rubicon Point — together they document the only inland lake light system in the California atlas.
Punta Gorda Lighthouse
Petrolia, North Coast
The Lost Coast's signature ruin, and proof that federal preservation funding still reaches remote California sites when someone advocates for it. The concrete tower and oil house remain in good condition after restoration.
Point Blunt Light
Tiburon (ferry departure), Bay Area
End-of-an-era marker for staffed California lighthouses. After Point Blunt, every new West Coast light went up automated. Worth pairing with the Angel Island immigration station for a full day of Bay history.