Three days into a beach week, someone in the group will want to do something that is not the beach. Beaufort is the answer every time.
North Carolina’s third-oldest town sits 25 minutes from Emerald Isle on the mainland side of the Crystal Coast. Walkable waterfront, free maritime museum, wild horses visible from the boardwalk, fresh seafood straight off the boat, and a pace that makes it feel like the mainland operates in a different time zone from the rest of the state. Most groups spend a half day and wish they had gone sooner in the week.
How to Get There from Emerald Isle
Drive east on NC-58 through Atlantic Beach, cross the bridge into Morehead City, then follow US-70 east into Beaufort. The whole drive takes 25 minutes on a normal day.
One practical note: Saturday mornings from 10am to noon can back up on the bridge due to rental changeover traffic on the island. If you are going on a Saturday, either leave before 9:30am or wait until after noon. Every other day of the week the drive is straightforward with no meaningful traffic.
Parking in Beaufort is mostly free. Public lots sit along Front Street near the waterfront and street parking is available on the side streets a block back. On peak summer weekends, arriving by 10am gets you a good spot without circling.
Front Street Start Here
Front Street runs along Taylor Creek and is the center of everything in Beaufort. The boardwalk stretches the length of the waterfront a 20-minute walk end to end lined with sailboats, working fishing boats, and the occasional research vessel from the Duke Marine Lab nearby.
Walking the boardwalk is free and requires no plan. The combination of the water on one side and the historic homes and storefronts on the other is the reason people describe Beaufort the way they do. It has a specific character that has not changed meaningfully in decades and resists the kind of over-development that has erased it from most comparable coastal towns.
The shops and restaurants along Front Street are independently owned. No chain restaurants, no strip mall energy. The whole street is walkable in under an hour if you are moving longer if you are stopping, which you will be.
NC Maritime Museum Free and Worth Every Minute
The North Carolina Maritime Museum sits directly on Front Street and admission is completely free. This is the most consistently underestimated attraction on the Crystal Coast.
The museum covers the maritime history of the entire region from the fishing and whaling traditions of the Outer Banks to the recovery of artifacts from Blackbeard’s flagship, Queen Anne’s Revenge, which was wrecked off Beaufort Inlet in 1718 and discovered on the seafloor in 1996. Cannons, anchors, and personal items recovered from the wreck are on display. For a free exhibit covering one of the most significant maritime archaeology finds in North Carolina history, the quality of the collection is genuinely impressive.
The Harvey W. Smith Watercraft Center next door is also free and covers traditional wooden boat building worth 20 minutes if the group has any interest in how working boats were made.
Hours: Monday–Saturday 10am–5pm, Sunday 12pm–5pm
Wild Horses on Carrot Island No Ferry Required
From the boardwalk on Taylor Creek, look directly across the water. On most days you will see wild horses grazing on Carrot Island the Rachel Carson Reserve visible from the shore without a boat, a ferry, or any advance planning.
This is a separate herd from the Shackleford Banks horses that require a ferry to see up close. The Carrot Island herd is managed by the state and lives year-round on the reserve across the creek. Binoculars make a significant difference in how clearly you can watch them from the boardwalk worth keeping in the bag for any waterfront day on the Crystal Coast.
If you want to get closer to the Carrot Island horses, passenger ferries run from the Beaufort waterfront to the reserve. It is worth comparing the two horse experiences: Carrot Island is more accessible and works for a short addition to a Beaufort afternoon. Shackleford Banks requires a full day if that is on your list, the Cape Lookout day trip guide covers both islands in detail.
Where to Eat on the Beaufort Waterfront
The seafood restaurants on Front Street are the best argument for timing your Beaufort visit around a meal. The fish here comes off the boats that are tied up at the same dock you are looking at while you eat the freshness shows.
A few options worth knowing:
- 34 Degrees North at the Beaufort Inn waterfront dining, locally sourced East Carolina cuisine, 2024 OpenTable Diners’ Choice recipient
- Clawson’s 1905 Restaurant a Front Street institution, consistent local favorite for lunch and dinner
- Front Street Village restaurants multiple waterfront options at different price points within easy walking distance
Lunch works best for most day-trippers from Emerald Isle arrive mid-morning, museum and boardwalk before noon, lunch at the waterfront, back at the beach by mid-afternoon.
Half Day or Full Day?
Half day is the right call for most groups visiting from Emerald Isle.
Arrive at 10am. Walk the boardwalk and watch for horses from the water 30 minutes. NC Maritime Museum 45 minutes to an hour. Lunch on Front Street an hour. Harborside Park for a short sit after lunch if the weather is good. Back on the road by 2pm and at the beach by 2:30pm.
That itinerary covers everything without rushing anything and leaves the afternoon free. A full day in Beaufort is also worthwhile if the group has strong interest in the Rachel Carson Reserve ferry or wants a slower pace but most families find the half-day version feels exactly right.
For more Crystal Coast day trips and things to do near Emerald Isle from surf fishing at Bogue Inlet to the NC Aquarium the full activity guide covers everything worth planning a week around.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far is Beaufort, NC from Emerald Isle?
About 25 minutes by car on a normal traffic day. Drive east on NC-58 through Atlantic Beach, cross into Morehead City, and follow US-70 east into Beaufort. Saturday morning between 10am and noon can slow down due to rental changeover traffic on the island plan around that window and the drive is straightforward.
Is the NC Maritime Museum in Beaufort really free?
Yes completely free admission. The museum accepts donations but there is no entry fee for the main collection or the Harvey W. Smith Watercraft Center next door. For a free exhibit covering the Queen Anne’s Revenge artifacts and the maritime history of the Crystal Coast, the quality is well above what most visitors expect before they walk in.
Can you see wild horses in Beaufort without taking a ferry?
Yes the Carrot Island herd on the Rachel Carson Reserve is visible from the boardwalk along Taylor Creek on most days. Binoculars improve the experience significantly. A passenger ferry from the Beaufort waterfront gets you closer to the horses if the group wants a more immersive experience. This is a separate herd from the Shackleford Banks horses, which require the Cape Lookout ferry from Harkers Island to reach.
Dune Castle sits 25 minutes from Beaufort on the Atlantic in Emerald Isle direct oceanfront access, both units available for groups of 10 or 20, and no platform fees when you book directly with the owners.