Rainbow Springs

Four hundred million gallons a day. She is not playing.

Rainbow Springs is the overachiever. One of Florida's largest first-magnitude springs, she pumps out 400 million gallons of crystal clear 68-degree water every single day without breaking a sweat. You will immediately understand why people have been coming here since the 1930s. Some things just have range.

The headspring pool is genuinely one of the most beautiful things in Florida — visibility so far down you'll question your depth perception. Kayak up to the boil, snorkel through spring runs full of fish and eelgrass, or go full unhinged and book the nighttime glow kayak tour. Bioluminescence and 68 degrees. That's a date.

Rainbow River State Park handles the swimming and tubing access; Rainbow Springs State Park covers the headspring. They're connected but technically separate — check which one matches what you want to do before you go.

AT A GLANCE

Location

Dunnellon, FL (Marion County)

Water Temp

68°F year-round

Best For

Swimming, kayaking, snorkeling, tubing, night kayak tours

Entry Fee

$2/person (headspring); $5/person (swim area)

Hours

8am–sunset daily

Vibe Rating

11/10 She Does The Most And Earns It


Lush, dramatic, and fully aware of herself. Rainbow Springs is the spring you show people to make them believe in Florida again. Arrive with your camera. Stay longer than you planned.

WHAT TO BRING

  • Snorkel mask — the underwater visibility demands it

  • Clear kayak or paddleboard if you can rent one

  • Waterproof camera — the colors are genuinely unreal

  • Layered swimwear — 68 degrees feels colder than Ichetucknee

  • Picnic supplies — the grounds are beautiful and there are facilities

BEST TIME TO VISIT

Year-round beautiful, but spring (March–May) is peak for wildflower blooms along the banks. Summer fills up fastest. Winter weekday mornings are practically private.

INSIDER TIPS

  • Book the glow kayak tour in advance — it sells out. Worth every penny.

  • The tubing put-in is at K.P. Hole County Park, not the state park — different entrance, different fee.

  • Snorkeling from the headspring area gives you the clearest views — less foot traffic churning up sediment.

  • Locals show up at 8am on summer weekends. That is not an exaggeration.

CONSERVATION NOTE

LEAVE HER BETTER THAN YOU FOUND HER  //  Rainbow Springs feeds the Rainbow River for 5.7 miles before it reaches the Withlacoochee. What you put in here doesn't stay here. Reef-safe sunscreen only. Take out everything you brought in. The fish you're looking at have been living in this spring run for longer than you've known what a spring is.


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