Cypress Springs

The Panhandle's best kept secret. Not for long.


Cypress Springs sits in Washington County in the Florida Panhandle, which is already a sentence that most people pause on because the Panhandle has springs? Yes. The Panhandle has springs. Specifically it has this one, which flows into Holmes Creek and produces some of the most visually striking water in Florida — a blue so saturated it reads as artificial until you're standing in it.

The spring is small but deep, fed by a vent that opens into a pool bordered by white sandbars and dense cypress forest. The creek that flows out is one of the most peaceful paddles in the state — narrow, shaded, impossibly clear, with turtles on every log. The combination of spring pool, creek paddle, and the fact that almost nobody outside the Panhandle knows it exists makes Cypress Springs one of the most underrated experiences in Florida.

She's not going to stay secret. The photos are too good and the word is getting out. Go now while the parking lot is still manageable.

AT A GLANCE

Location

Vernon, FL (Washington County)

Water Temp

68°F year-round

Best For

Swimming, snorkeling, kayaking/canoeing Holmes Creek

Entry Fee

$2/person (Washington County park)

Hours

8am–sunset

Vibe Rating

9/10 Criminally Underrated, Going Viral Eventually


The quiet one that's actually stunning. Cypress Springs is what you show people when they say 'I've been to Florida and it was just theme parks and traffic.' She will change their mind in about four minutes.

WHAT TO BRING

  • Kayak or canoe for Holmes Creek — the creek paddle is the move

  • Snorkel mask — the spring pool clarity is exceptional

  • Water shoes — the spring bottom has some texture to it

  • Picnic setup — the grounds are beautiful and rarely crowded

BEST TIME TO VISIT

Weekday mornings almost any time of year. Summer weekends are the busiest but still manageable compared to North Florida's famous springs. Spring and fall are ideal.

INSIDER TIPS

  • The paddle from Cypress Springs down Holmes Creek to the Florida Wildlife Corridor access point is one of the prettiest flatwater paddles in the state.

  • Ask locals in Vernon about the other spring vents in the area — there are several along Holmes Creek that aren't in any official guide.

  • Combine with Morrison Springs (35 minutes away) for a full Panhandle springs day.

  • The sandbars at the creek junction are perfect for a float stop mid-paddle.

CONSERVATION NOTE

LEAVE HER BETTER THAN YOU FOUND HER  //  Holmes Creek and Cypress Springs are part of a fragile Panhandle watershed that feeds the Choctawhatchee River system. The Panhandle springs don't get the research or policy attention that North Florida springs do, which means visitor behavior matters here more than in some more monitored areas. Pack out everything, reef-safe sunscreen only, and stay out of the submerged vegetation.


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