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Car RequiredSummer EditionSouth-West Estonia

Pärnu County — Estonia's Summer Coast

Estonia's warmest beach resort, the country's most unusual national park, wild dune coasts, and a UNESCO island where folk tradition is still daily life.

Pärnu County is the summer heart of Estonia. The county seat, Pärnu, is the country's most beloved beach resort — a graceful spa town with warm Baltic water and a wooden promenade that has attracted summer visitors since the 1830s. Beyond the city, the county spreads south along the coast in a sequence of wild dune beaches, bird migration stations, and remote peninsula roads, then turns inland to Soomaa National Park — one of the most distinctive wetland landscapes in Northern Europe. Almost everything worth seeing outside the town requires a car.

7 Highlights of Pärnu County

01beach_access

Pärnu Beach & Resort Town

Pärnu City · 130 km from Tallinn

Estonia's summer capital and its most beloved resort destination — a 19th-century spa town with a 2-km white sand beach, an art nouveau promenade lined with wooden villas, beach bars, volleyball courts, and the warmest sea water in Estonia. The old town behind the beach has a completely different character: pedestrian streets, independent cafés, a functioning 17th-century gate tower, and the unhurried pace of a town that invented Estonian summer.

do_not_disturb_onBus runs from Tallinn (2.5 hrs) but limits flexibility for coastal exploration; car opens the entire county
starSwimming, Promenade, Summer Evenings, Spa, All Ages
02kayaking

Soomaa National Park

East Pärnu County · 150–165 km from Tallinn

Estonia's most unusual national park — a vast wetland of raised bogs, floodplain forests, and slow rivers that in spring flood so dramatically they create a 'fifth season': the entire lowland disappears under water for several weeks, and canoes become the only means of navigation. In summer, the same landscape offers superb canoeing, bog walks, and primeval forest trails. The Kuresoo bog boardwalk and the Riisa bog trail are the park's signature walks.

do_not_disturb_onNo public transport to the park's trails or canoe launch points — car is essential for any real visit
starCanoeing, Bog Walks, Spring Floods, Primeval Forest, Nature Photography
03terrain

Häädemeeste Dune Coast

Häädemeeste Parish · 175 km from Tallinn

A 15-kilometre stretch of wild coastal dunes backed by Scots pine forest — the Tornimäe dune reaches 14 metres above sea level and offers panoramic views over the Baltic Sea. The beach below has no facilities, no lifeguards, and almost no visitors during the week. The sand is deep and fine; the forest behind the dunes is fragrant with resin. One of the most untouched stretches of coast in mainland Estonia.

do_not_disturb_onForest access roads only — no bus, car essential to reach the dune ridge and beach
starWild Coast, Dune Walking, Photography, Solitude, Sunrise
04flutter_dash

Kabli Bird Station

Häädemeeste Parish · 180 km from Tallinn

One of Europe's finest spring and autumn bird migration watch points — on a good May morning, tens of thousands of finches, swallows, hirundines, and raptors stream along the coast past the monitoring station. The Kabli ornithological station has operated since 1967 and is one of the longest-running migration studies in the Baltic states. The beach here is wild pebble and sand, completely undeveloped.

do_not_disturb_onForest track off the coastal road — no bus service at any point
starBirdwatching, Spring Migration, Wild Coast, Nature Photography, Research
05sailing

Tõstamaa Peninsula

Pärnu County West · 160 km from Tallinn

A remote peninsula jutting into Pärnu Bay with sea meadows, traditional fishing villages, and views across open water to Kihnu island. The village of Tõstamaa is completely uncommercialised — the kind of place where the only sound is wind in the reed beds and the occasional fishing boat. The peninsula road is a dead end; you come here deliberately, and the reward is the authentic coastal Estonia that most visitors never reach.

do_not_disturb_onDead-end peninsula road with no public transport — car only
starAuthentic Villages, Sea Meadows, Views to Kihnu, Peninsula Drive, Quiet
06directions_boat

Kihnu Island

Kihnu Parish · 150 km from Tallinn + ferry

A UNESCO-listed island off the Pärnu coast where traditional culture has survived more completely than almost anywhere in Europe. The women of Kihnu still wear striped folk skirts as everyday clothing; the island has its own distinctive music, handicrafts, and maritime tradition. The ferry from Pärnu takes about 1.5 hours; on the island, a single road loops around the coast past farmsteads, an old lighthouse, and the village church.

do_not_disturb_onFerry from Pärnu harbour (1.5 hrs) — car not necessary on the island itself, but required to reach the ferry
starUNESCO Culture, Folk Traditions, Island Life, Handicrafts, Authentic Estonia
07water

Audru Delta & Polder

Audru Parish · 140 km from Tallinn

The Pärnu River delta just west of the city — a vast shallow lagoon and polder landscape where the river floods out across meadows and into the bay. The calm, sheltered water warms up faster than almost anywhere on the Estonian coast; families with small children love the knee-deep paddling in the polder channels. In spring the flooded meadows attract thousands of migrating swans and geese visible from the roadside.

do_not_disturb_on15 km west of Pärnu — car needed to reach the polder trails and lagoon access
starFamilies, Paddling, Birding, Spring Flocks, Calm Water

Best of Pärnu County in Summer

  • thermostatSouth Estonia sea water reaches 18–20°C by July — warmer than the north coast by 2–3 degrees
  • kayakingSpring (March–April): Soomaa floods — the only time you can canoe through the forest
  • flutter_dashMay: Kabli bird migration peak — tens of thousands of birds pass the shore daily
  • beach_accessJune–August: Pärnu beach season at its best — promenade, open-air concerts, evening swims

Suggested Route: 3 Days in Pärnu County

Day 1

Tallinn to Pärnu — Town, Beach & Delta

Tallinn → Audru Polder (bird stop) → Pärnu Old Town → Beach → Promenade

Stop at the Audru delta 15 minutes west of Pärnu for a quick birdwatching scan, then arrive in Pärnu before lunch. Afternoon on the main beach; evening walk along the promenade and dinner in the old town.

Day 2

South to the Dunes & Kabli

Pärnu → Tõstamaa Peninsula → Häädemeeste Dunes → Kabli Bird Station → Ikla

Morning on the Tõstamaa peninsula for sea meadow and village atmosphere. Drive south along the coastal road to Häädemeeste for a dune walk, stop at Kabli for birdwatching, and finish at Ikla — Estonia's southernmost beach.

Day 3

Soomaa National Park

Pärnu → Soomaa NP (Kuresoo bog + Riisa trail) → Tori gorge → back to Tallinn

Early start for Soomaa — arrive at the Kuresoo trailhead by 8 am for the bog in morning light. Walk the Riisa trail in the afternoon. Stop at the Tori sandstone gorge on the way back before the 2-hour drive to Tallinn.

Who This Guide Is For

Pärnu County suits almost any kind of traveller. Beach lovers and families will gravitate to Pärnu's main beach and the shallow, warm Audru delta. Birdwatchers should plan their visit for May to catch the Kabli migration. Hikers and canoeists who want to see Soomaa at its most dramatic should come in March or April when the spring floods fill the forests. Couples looking for a romantic Estonian weekend will find the Tõstamaa peninsula drive and a Pärnu promenade dinner exactly right. And anyone who wants to drive a beautiful, quiet coastline from resort town to Latvian border will find the south coast route one of the best drives in the country.

Drive South from Tallinn

CarRental.ee offers pick-up in Tallinn city centre and at the airport. Pärnu is 130 km south on the main highway — a comfortable 1 hour 45 minutes. The south coast, Soomaa National Park, and the Kabli bird station are all within a 2-hour drive. Book online in under three minutes, pick up in the morning, and arrive in Estonia's summer capital before the crowds.

Estonia's Summer Capital Awaits

White sand beach, wild dune coasts, flooded forests and a UNESCO island — all south of Tallinn and all best reached by car.

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