Ginnie Springs
She came prepared. Privately owned, publicly obsessed over.
Ginnie Springs is what you get when a spring has actual infrastructure. Privately owned and operated, she's got a general store, equipment rentals, picnic tables, volleyball courts, bath houses, a playground, and camping — all on the banks of the Santa Fe River with seven different spring formations to explore. She prepared for your visit. She expects you to enjoy yourself.
The main spring has that deep blue-green color that makes everyone do a double take — clarity so clean it looks like someone filled a bowl with filtered glass. Snorkelers and scuba divers go absolutely feral for Devil's Eye and Devil's Ear, two of the most accessible cave diving systems in North America. For everyone else, there's tubing, kayaking, and swimming in water that holds at 72 degrees regardless of what the air is doing.
The vibe here is relaxed but lively — it attracts everyone from serious cave divers to families renting tubes for the afternoon. That range somehow works. Ginnie's got room for all of it.
AT A GLANCE
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Location |
High Springs, FL (Gilchrist County) |
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Water Temp |
72°F year-round |
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Best For |
Tubing, kayaking, snorkeling, scuba/cave diving, camping |
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Entry Fee |
$15–$20/person (day use, varies by season) |
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Hours |
8am–7pm daily (extended summer hours) |
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Vibe Rating |
9/10 Fully Equipped, Zero Excuses |
The spring that actually has her stuff together. Rentals on site, food available, camping steps from the water. She's set you up to have no reason not to stay all day. Go ahead and stay all day.
WHAT TO BRING
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Less than usual — she has rentals for almost everything
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Your own snorkel mask if you're particular about fit
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Camping gear if you're staying overnight (highly recommend)
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Scuba certification if you want access to Devil's Eye or Devil's Ear
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Cash for the general store — card is accepted but cash is faster
BEST TIME TO VISIT
Summer weekends get loud and lively — great energy if that's your thing. Spring and fall are quieter, water is the same temperature, wildlife is more active. Camping in October here is elite.
INSIDER TIPS
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Devil's Eye and Devil's Ear are for certified cave divers only — not open water certifications, actual cave diving certifications. The sign is serious.
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The tubing here goes on the Santa Fe River, not a spring run — wider, more current-y, different feel from Ichetucknee.
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Book camping spots in advance for summer weekends — they fill up.
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The gin-clear water photographs best in the early morning before snorkelers stir up any sediment.
CONSERVATION NOTE
LEAVE HER BETTER THAN YOU FOUND HER // Ginnie Springs has been privately managed for decades, which has actually helped keep it healthier than some state-run sites. Respect the rules they've set — they're there because previous visitors have damaged the springs. Stay out of posted areas, no glass containers near the water, and pack out what you pack in.
Ready to add her to the list? Download the Florida Springs Bucket List — free, no excuses.
Florida Springs Bucket List - Free Download
15 Florida springs. Every one worth it.
This isn't a generic travel list pulled from a Google search. These are the springs that actually matter — the iconic ones everyone talks about, the hidden gems that separate the people who really know Florida, and the underdogs that make you text your friends on the drive home.
What's inside:
- All 15 springs organized by tier: The Icons, Hidden Gems, and The Underdogs
- Each spring with its name and the one-line reason it made the cut
- Checkboxes to track your progress
- Trip notes section for the details that matter
- Conservation reminder because these springs need us as much as we need them
Printable. One page. Yours free.
Drop your email, grab the PDF, and start planning. The springs are 72°F year-round. There is no bad time to go.
Free. No catch. Just vibes and conservation.