Gilchrist Blue Springs

So blue it looks fake. It's not fake. Florida is just built different.


Gilchrist Blue Springs is the spring that makes people stop scrolling. The color of the water is a saturated, electric blue that photographs like it has been edited and has not been edited. The spring is that color. The water is that clear. The vibe is that good. Welcome to Gilchrist County, population: this spring and a lot of longleaf pine.

Formerly known as Blue Springs of High Springs, Gilchrist Blue is a second-magnitude spring that flows into the Santa Fe River. The swim area is spacious, the water is deep enough to jump in from the bank, and the surrounding park is small and well-maintained. It's close to High Springs, which means it neighbors Ginnie Springs and a cluster of other North Florida gems that can be combined into a multi-spring weekend.

She doesn't get the press of Ichetucknee or Rainbow. Her county doesn't spend a lot on tourism marketing. But the people who find her put her in their top three every time. There's a reason for that.

AT A GLANCE

Location

High Springs, FL (Gilchrist County)

Water Temp

68°F year-round

Best For

Swimming, snorkeling, photography, Santa Fe River access

Entry Fee

$5/vehicle

Hours

8am–8pm (summer); 8am–sunset (winter)

Vibe Rating

9/10 Wildly Photogenic, Quietly Excellent


The underrated blue. Gilchrist pulls a color out of the ground that most springs can't match. She's unassuming about it, which makes it better. Come see what blue actually looks like.

WHAT TO BRING

  • Camera — the color needs to be documented

  • Snorkel gear for the spring pool and Santa Fe River access

  • Water shoes — entry can be slippery limestone

  • Float or inner tube — she's wide enough to spread out

BEST TIME TO VISIT

Year-round. Summer weekdays are ideal — the park is small so weekends fill up faster than you'd expect for a lesser-known spring.

INSIDER TIPS

  • Morning light hits the spring pool and the blue looks deepest — try to arrive by 9-10am.

  • Ginnie Springs is 20 minutes away. The two pair perfectly for a full day.

  • The Santa Fe River access here is great for a short paddle — the spring run meets the river and the transition is visually striking.

  • High Springs has actual good coffee shops and restaurants — plan lunch in town after your float.

CONSERVATION NOTE

LEAVE HER BETTER THAN YOU FOUND HER  //  Gilchrist Blue feeds the Santa Fe River, which feeds the Suwannee. The Suwannee basin is one of the most studied spring systems in Florida due to ongoing water quality issues from agricultural runoff upstream. Your reef-safe sunscreen and packed-out trash isn't just courtesy here — it's meaningful.


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