Florida Porch

Outdoors

Cedar Key Scrub keeps Levy's coastal sand country visible

Cedar Key Scrub State Reserve sits east of Cedar Key with scrub, salt marsh, trails, wildlife, paddling nearby, and a quieter way to understand Levy County's coast.

Cedar Key gets a lot of attention for water, seafood, islands, and old streets. Cedar Key Scrub State Reserve adds the dry land behind that picture.

The reserve sits about five miles east of Cedar Key and protects scrub, flatwoods, salt marsh, and other natural communities. Trails reach into the reserve from two trailheads, and the land can be used for hiking, biking, horseback riding, wildlife watching, and quiet time away from the busier waterfront.

Scrub can look modest if you are used to lush shade. Low plants, white sand, open sun, and fire-shaped habitat are part of the point. The reserve helps show why dry, sandy land can be just as important as the water. Florida scrub-jays, gopher tortoises, and other wildlife fit into that harsher-looking ground.

The marsh side brings Cedar Key back into the note. The reserve reaches tidal marshes and creeks, though paddlers need to use the proper launch outside the reserve. That mix of scrub and salt marsh makes the place feel like a hinge between inland Levy County and the Gulf coast.

Check the park page before you go. Trailheads, allowed uses, weather, bugs, events, and current notices can change the right plan.

Where to see it

Cedar Key Scrub State Reserve east of Cedar Key. Check Florida State Parks for trailheads, trail mileage, allowed uses, marsh access, wildlife details, fees, current events, and alerts before visiting.

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Official sources

Last checked against these sources: July 6, 2026.

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