While Argentina Dropdown content isn’t known for powdery white beaches and transparent warm waters like some Latin American countries, it does boast 4,989 km of coastline as well as lakes, streams and rivers. What Argentina lacks in tropical vibes, it more than makes up for in rugged natural beauty. Keep that in mind as you check out our list of the best beaches in Argentina.
Many Argentines – and especially porteños, or Buenos Aires residents – take their holidays in January and February, meaning popular spots really pack out during these months. There nothing stopping you from enjoying the Atlantic Coast in spring (September-November) or a rocky Patagonian beach in autumn (March-May).
Mar del Plata's heyday was in the 1920s, when wealthy porteños flocked here by train, hoping to exchange Buenos Aires’ swampy weather for cool Atlantic breezes. Today, Argentina’s largest fishing port is surrounded by a cluster of beaches, each with a different personality. In January visitors pack in like sweaty sardines, but the bracing Atlantic ocean is refreshing to say the least.
Hands down Argentina’s biggest seaside resort, there are plenty of beaches to choose from. Playa Grande’s waves attract wannabe surfers and pro riders, beautiful people pitch up on La Caseta’s yellow sands, while Punta Mogotes fills with families sharing mate and playing games at low tide.
For the ultimate Mar del experience, spend the day on close-to-bursting Playa Bristol in front of the casino, just to say you’ve done it. Those who can afford it to book into a balneario (private beach club) with various facilities such as a swimming pool and bathrooms, renting a carpa (tent) and sunbeds for a fortnight; the colourful pointy roofs dot the coast.
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Mar del Plata is BA's busiest seaside resort © JopsStock/Shutterstock
While this port city's main draw is as the jumping off point for visiting Unesco world heritage site the Valdés Peninsula, Puerto Madryn offers up a few trump cards of its own. Playa Paraná on the Nuevo Gulf offers up a stretch of very white sand, which turns into a seaweed bed come low tide, and is a great beachy base for exploring the surrounding area. Time your visit right and you could be sharing this bay’s waters with the famous southern-right whale (May to late November). Other bayside aquatic activities include snorkelling with friendly sea lions, SUP and kayaking.
Golden sands, warmish Atlantic currents and manageable waves await at Pinamar, which translates to pine tree on the sea. This beach town complete with fishing pier and surrounding forest attracts families with little kids as well as brattish teens let loose for the first time. Kite surfers head here each summer for the vigorous breezes. If you can acquire a 4X4 or quad bike, drive north up and over the sand dunes up to La Frontera beach for relative peace and quiet, and plan to stay for the unadulterated pink-and-purple ocean sunsets.
The wide expanse of beach at Pinamar © JopsStock/Shutterstock
A few miles south of sister town Pinamar, Cariló’s fancy houses and lovely gardens attract the wealthy upper class that chooses to vacation in Argentina. A quiet spot home to just 300 families out of season, visitors might be surprised by the number of cars that cross the dunes and park up on the beach itself, which somewhat goes against Cariló’s eco-friendly attitude. Regardless, this is the country’s top resort, chosen by politicians, impresarios and celebrities looking for a tranquil safe haven.
Cariló
beach, where the rich and famous come to play © Alex Ruhl/Shutterstock
When the end of the world hits its annual top temperature of around 24Cº in summer, fueguinos strip off at Playa Larga in
Playa Larga, on the southern tip of Argentina © Pablo Rodriguez Merkel/Shutterstock
The endless hawkers flogging churros, ice-cream, sunglasses and headgear form part of the landscape at Villa Gesell, the seaside bolthole for Buenos Aires’ working-class families and students – who pack out the surrounding camp sites. A wooden boardwalk lines the yellow sandy beach, which turns muddy come low tide, traipsed by joggers and dog walkers. Head south of the centro from calle 20 upwards (near the fishing pier) for a slightly quieter experience at balnearios such as Afrika.
Villa Gesell is often packed in the summer months and empty at other times of the year © elxeneize/Shutterstock
For mountain views and Alpine vibes from your towel, pitch up at one of the lakeshores around Lago Nahuel Huapi in
Nahuel Huapi Lake in Bariloche, part of Argentina's Lake District © elbud/Shutterstock
It’s not all Atlantic waters around
Rowing along the canal in Tigre © elbud/Shutterstock
Top image: Mar del Plata is BA's busiest seaside resort © JopsStock/Shutterstock