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Prince Edward Island National Park | Prince Edward Island

Prince Edward Island National Park is the classic Parks Canada beach-and-dune experience on the island's north shore. Parks Canada highlights sandy beaches, red cliffs, wind-shaped dunes, coastal bays, woodland hikes, ponds, cycling, lighthouses, wildlife watching, and family-friendly beach time.

This park works well for travellers who want an easy-to-understand PEI itinerary: beach time, short trails, cycling, picnics, camping, and nearby communities can all fit into the same trip. It is also a sensitive coastal landscape, so rules around dunes, pets, cliff areas, water safety, and visitor guidelines should be checked before going.

Why Visit Prince Edward Island for Beach Camping & Swimming

The park is one of the strongest first stops for visitors who want PEI scenery without overcomplicating the plan. You can build a day around beaches and red cliffs, add a seashore bike ride or short hike, then use official maps and tide information to choose where to spend more time.

It also gives travellers a good base for longer PEI trips because camping, beaches, trails, interpretation, weather, tides, and nearby national historic sites are connected through Parks Canada visitor planning pages.

Things To Do: Beach Camping & Swimming

Plan around beach visits, swimming when conditions allow, cycling, short hikes, birding, lighthouse picnics, camping, interpretation programs, and coastal viewpoints. Parks Canada keeps current links for maps, fees, hours, accessibility, camping, trail information, water safety, dog rules, fire safety, and important bulletins.

The official page notes an annual domestic animal ban that begins April 1, so pet rules are not a side detail here. Sandstone cliffs are also treated as a safety issue, and visitors should stay back from closed or unstable areas.

Planning Notes for Prince Edward Island

Parks Canada lists the park as accessible year-round, with visitor services available from May to October. Confirm current beach conditions, tides, camping dates, dog restrictions, closures, fees, trail status, fire notices, and safety guidance through the official source before travelling.

Park Details

Designation
National Park
Jurisdiction
Federal
Managing Agency
Parks Canada
Province/Territory
Prince Edward Island