The Peak Season for Crab Island is definitely summertime (May, June, July, August). There is a rush of Spring Breakers during March/April, but it is typically too cold for most to be out there (locals included).
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While Crab Island is a hot tourist destination, the water around the sandbar can get very crowded and potentially dangerous, due to its popularity. The good news is that Destin is not lacking in less crowded, just as sandy beaches.
The best time of year to go to Crab Island is during the summer months of May, June, July and August. This is when the water temperature is most comfortable for swimming and the vendors are out offering food, drinks, merchandise, and rentals. Summer is when the most tour and excursion boats are operating.
One of the locals favorite places to party in Destin, Florida is on Crab Island. Crab Island is a 1 to 3-foot depth of water on a sandbar next to the Destin Pass bridge.
Crab Island does not have restrooms. If you need to go to the bathroom, most people will releive themselves in the water or they ask a fellow boater for access to the restroom. If you have transportation, you can go back to the Harbor and use the restroom at one of the local restaurants.
You can think of it like the DoorDash of the water. They work with nearby local restaurants to pick up your food order and get it out to your boat on Crab Island. So now there is a larger variety of options than the few food vendors at Crab Island.
The lighter area of blue water is indicative of the most shallow portion of Crab Island- here you can walk around and the water will only be at your knees to your waist. Also seen is the Destin bridge with the west to the left and east to the right.
Yet, it is protected from the surf and waves that you would typically experience along the beach. With that in mind, our bay is “brackish” water which is fresh, salt water, giving it the brownish color. Our bay also has a river, creeks, and springs that feed into it as well as the salt water from the Gulf.
These days Crab Island is not an island, but it was once— a man-made one. The “island” was formed in the 1960s when, in an attempt to stabilize the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico, the Army Corps of Engineers dredged the East Pass (Destin Pass) and constructed jetties.