Morrison Springs

Panhandle legend. Cave divers know. Now you know.


Morrison Springs is a Walton County park on the Choctawhatchee River that contains one of the most beautiful spring pools in the Panhandle — an oval, deep blue vent surrounded by white limestone and old cypress, with visibility so far down the cave divers who come here specifically for access to the underwater cave system can see where they're going from the surface. The water is 68 degrees and 100% the reason people make the drive.

This is a county park, which means the infrastructure is basic and authentic: a parking lot, some picnic tables, a boat ramp, and the spring. No rental shops, no gift store, no line to get in. You show up, you get in, you understand immediately why the cave divers have been coming here for decades.

The Choctawhatchee River flows right alongside the park, offering a genuinely wild paddling option off the spring run. Florida flatwoods and hardwood swamp on all sides. Blue water at the center. She doesn't need a marketing department.

AT A GLANCE

Location

DeFuniak Springs, FL (Walton County)

Water Temp

68°F year-round

Best For

Swimming, snorkeling, cave diving (certified), Choctawhatchee River paddling

Entry Fee

$1/person (Walton County park)

Hours

8am–sunset

Vibe Rating

9/10 No-Frills Panhandle Perfection


Stripped down. Just the spring, the water, and the cypress trees. Morrison Springs is for people who don't need amenities to have a good time — who want the real thing without the infrastructure around it. One dollar. Worth it.

WHAT TO BRING

  • Snorkel gear — the spring pool is deep and clear

  • Cave diving certification if that's your plan — the cave system here is serious

  • Kayak for the Choctawhatchee River section

  • Your own food and water — no facilities nearby

  • Cash for the $1 entrance fee (still one of the best deals in Florida)

BEST TIME TO VISIT

Weekdays year-round — this park is beloved by locals but doesn't attract the same crowds as North Florida springs. Summer weekends draw the biggest crowds; still manageable. Fall and spring are ideal.

INSIDER TIPS

  • The cave system here is only for trained cave divers — not open water, not cavern certified, actual cave certified. The dive site is clearly marked.

  • The spring pool is wide enough that swimmers and divers coexist without crowding each other.

  • Cypress Springs is 35 minutes east — pair them for a full day of Panhandle spring exploration.

  • DeFuniak Springs (the town) has a beautiful historic downtown and a natural circular spring lake — worth a stop on your way back.

CONSERVATION NOTE

LEAVE HER BETTER THAN YOU FOUND HER  //  Morrison Springs and the Choctawhatchee River corridor are part of a Panhandle watershed that is less monitored than North Florida's springs. The cave system here is a fragile, irreplaceable geological feature — only certified cave divers with proper equipment should attempt it. For everyone else: reef-safe sunscreen, pack out what you bring in, and stay out of the cave entrance area if you're not certified.


Ready to add her to the list? Download the Florida Springs Bucket List — free, no excuses.