Most people fly into Portland and drive straight north to Acadia. I get it — Acadia is the draw, Bar Harbor is the destination, the mountain Airbnb is the plan. But York is 45 miles (72 km) south of Portland, right at the start of the Maine coast, and skipping it is a mistake.
It was my first stop in Maine and it set the tone for everything that followed.
York doesn’t feel like a tourist town

And that’s exactly the point. Bar Harbor is beautiful and busy and worth every second — but it knows it’s a destination. York doesn’t. It feels like a small coastal town that happens to have one of the most photographed lighthouses in New England sitting right on its rocks. More families than tour groups. More locals than cruise ship passengers.
Old town vibes, unhurried energy, the kind of place where people come for peace and quiet on a long weekend. The man I met fishing at the rocks on Labor Day said exactly that — he just gets away here when he needs some quiet. That told me everything.
Go straight to Sohier Park
Sohier Park is where you go. It’s a small public park right across from Nubble Lighthouse — officially called Cape Neddick Light Station — and it’s free. Park, walk to the viewing area, and just stand there for a minute.
The water at Nubble Point is the bluest I saw in all of Maine. Not just blue — a specific kind of blue. Bright, clear, almost unreal in the afternoon light. The lighthouse sits on a small rocky island just offshore, red-roofed, white-walled, exactly what you picture when someone says Maine lighthouse. It was built in 1879 and has been guiding ships along this stretch of coast ever since.

Walk to the rocks at the viewing area. That’s where the real experience is — not the paved path, but right at the water’s edge where the rocks meet the ocean. You’ll see people fishing, families with kids, photographers with tripods. It has that easy, local energy that makes you want to stay longer than planned.
Talk to whoever is fishing

I ended up next to a man fishing with a rod and a bucket at the rocks. I joked that whatever he was catching looked like lunch. He laughed, asked if I’d ever fished before, and when I said no, he proceeded to show me how it’s done. Including how to put a worm on a hook — which requires jabbing it right through its face. Poor worm. Shirm the worm. (If you get the reference.)
That conversation lasted twenty minutes and I learned more about Maine from that one local than from anything I’d read before the trip. Talk to whoever is there. That’s the move at York.
See the lighthouse from the water
The view from Sohier Park is spectacular but there’s another one — from the water. York Beach Charters runs intimate Nubble Lighthouse scenic cruises for up to 6 passengers, taking you around the back of the lighthouse for angles you simply can’t get from land. If you’re visiting with family or a small group, this is worth booking in advance. Captain John runs a personal, relaxed operation and the Maine coastline from the water is a completely different experience.
If you’re coming from or heading to Ogunquit, Finest Kind Scenic Cruises also runs a 50-minute Nubble Lighthouse cruise departing from Perkins Cove — about $31 per adult and one of the better value boat experiences on the southern Maine coast.
Where to eat
Fox’s Lobster House sits right near Sohier Park with ocean views of Nubble Lighthouse — casual, classic Maine seafood, lobster rolls, chowder, fish and chips. The location alone makes it worth stopping in.
For something slightly more local and hidden, The Dockside Restaurant has been a York institution since 1952. Family-owned, oceanside, stunning views of parts of the Maine coast most tourists never see. Whole lobster, fresh haddock, the kind of place that gets passed down through generations of locals as the spot.
Lobster Cove is right near the lighthouse and consistently gets called out by first-time Maine visitors as the discovery of their trip — fresh chowder, lobster rolls, big windows with water views. If you’re hungry after Sohier Park, this is where you eat.

Practical things worth knowing
York is about 45 miles (72 km) south of Portland — roughly 45-50 minutes by car from the airport. It makes it the perfect first stop if you’re flying in before heading further up the coast. Don’t skip it in the rush to get to Acadia.
Sohier Park is free and open year-round. September is particularly good — the crowds thin out, the light is incredible for photos, and the shoulder season is when the lighthouse looks its absolute best.
If you have more time, York Beach — Long Sands Beach and Short Sands Beach — are both worth a walk. Long Sands is a mile-long stretch right off the main road. Quiet in September, beautiful any time of year.
Why it matters
Maine welcomed me in York. The salty air, the bluest water, a stranger teaching me to fish on Labor Day. It was an hour, maybe two, and it completely set the tone for everything that followed.
Most people skip it. Don’t be most people.
Planning the full Maine trip? The [4-day Maine itinerary – coming soon] has it all — York, Acadia, Bar Harbor, and the slow day that makes everything worth it. And the full story of how this trip actually went is right here.
Drop your questions in the comments — I’ll answer every single one. The lighthouse, the fishing spots, the hidden restaurants, all of it.
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Read the full Maine series: Oh Maine! · The best days have no plan · The day I didn’t go anywhere



