Volusia County · Daytona Beach Area · Atlantic Coast

Is it safe to swim at Smyrna Dunes Park today?

GOOD

Latest DOH sample is GOOD

The latest Florida DOH sample at Smyrna Dunes Park measured 10 CFU/100mL, which is in the good range. That is a positive sign, but it is still a sample from Monday, May 11, 2026 rather than a live reading.

Latest sample on page

Monday, May 11, 2026

This is the latest DOH beach-water sample we found for Smyrna Dunes Park.

Bacteria reading

10 CFU/100mL

The EPA beach action value is 70.5 CFU/100mL. Lower is better.

12-month risk context

0% poor results

Use the current sample first, then use the 12-month track record as context.

This page helps you make a better beach decision, not just read a badge. If it has rained heavily since Monday, May 11, 2026, lean conservative even if the latest sample looks fine.

Start with the sample date

The number on this page is only as fresh as the last sample. If the date feels old for your trip, be more skeptical.

Use history as a tie-breaker

Two beaches can both look good today, but the one with fewer past spikes is usually the safer bet on an uncertain weather day.

Rain beats the badge

Stormwater runoff can change conditions faster than Florida's routine testing schedule, especially near inlets, canals, and urban drains.

Smyrna Dunes Park beach conditions and water quality today

If you searched for Smyrna Dunes Park water quality or beach conditions today, the latest Florida DOH sample shown on this page is 10 CFU/100mL from Monday, May 11, 2026. This site currently classifies that sample as GOOD.

Latest sample on this page: Monday, May 11, 2026

This sample is 2 days older than the freshest update currently on this site.

How Smyrna Dunes Park compares nearby today

Smyrna Dunes Park currently ranks #2 of 4 monitored nearby beaches on this page based on current status, 12-month risk, and sample freshness.

If you want the stronger backup right now, compare Marineland Beach first.

Compare Smyrna Dunes Park with Marineland Beach

Your best next step from this page

Use the right page for the decision you're making

These deeper views help when you need more than the same-day badge.

Historically one of the steadier options

Smyrna Dunes Park has a strong 12-month track record in this dataset. That makes a dry-weather good sample more reassuring, but it still does not override recent rain, runoff, or brown water.

Most recent poor sample shown here: No poor samples are shown in the last 12 months on this page.

Freshest sample anywhere on this site: May 13, 2026

Sample source details

Source station
SOUTH JETTY
Station ID
40884
Data source
Florida DOH Healthy Beaches Program via Water Atlas API

Monitoring station names can differ from beach signs or local nicknames. Use this source detail when you want to match the page back to the underlying Florida DOH sample record.

Water Quality History — Last 12 Months

35.4
70.5
8
Oct
10
Oct
11
Oct
9
Nov
10
Nov
9
Dec
9
Dec
9
Jan
12
Jan
11
Feb
8
Feb
10
Mar

Values in CFU/100mL. Green = Good (≤35.4), Yellow = Moderate (35.5–70.4), Red = Poor (≥70.5)

If it rained recently, treat this page as stale faster

Florida DOH testing is routine, not continuous. Heavy rain can push bacteria higher through runoff before the next posted sample catches it. For Smyrna Dunes Park, wait at least 72 hours after heavy rain and be extra careful around inlets, canals, storm drains, or brown water. Read the rain guide.

About Smyrna Dunes Park

A 73-acre park at Ponce de Leon Inlet with boardwalks through coastal hammock, beach access on both the ocean and Indian River sides.

Where Smyrna Dunes Park sits in Volusia County

Smyrna Dunes Park currently ranks as the strongest monitored beach in Volusia County by current status, 12-month risk, and sample freshness.

Compare with Daytona Beach

Where Smyrna Dunes Park sits in Daytona Beach Area

Smyrna Dunes Park currently ranks #2 of 8 monitored beaches in the Daytona Beach Area group by current status, 12-month risk, and sample freshness.

Compare with Marineland Beach

Keep Exploring This Coastline

Use the county, regional, and city guide pages to compare more beaches before you commit to one stop.

Compare Nearby Beaches Before You Go

These nearby beaches are sorted by current status, historical spike rate, and sample recency so you can compare backup options before you drive.

Read Before You Go

Disclaimer: Water quality data is sourced from the Florida Department of Health Healthy Beaches Program. Conditions can change rapidly. This website provides informational guidance only — always check with Florida DOH for official beach conditions. Safe to Swim Florida is an independent project and is not affiliated with any government agency.