
Venetian Pool
A 1924 public swimming pool carved from a coral rock quarry, with grottoes, waterfalls, and Venetian bridges.
The call
Worth it if you are watching the budget and you only have one day.
Why
- 01
A genuinely magical, one-of-a-kind swim — spring-fed water, caves, waterfalls, and porticos that feel like a film set.
Our read - 02
The catch: it's seasonal (typically closed in winter), small and fills to capacity early on hot days, has restrictions for young children, and is well outside the tourist core.
Our read
Is it a fit?
Go if
You are watching the budget
On a budget, Venetian Pool still earns its price.
You only have one day
Even on a tight schedule, Venetian Pool earns the hours.
You are traveling as a couple
As a couple, Venetian Pool works.
You are traveling solo
Solo, Venetian Pool works.
Think twice if
You are traveling with kids
With kids, it depends on the day.
You want something active
For adventure, Venetian Pool is hit or miss.
Plan it well
- Cost
- ~$15–25 (resident discount); seasonal hours
- Timing
- Arrive at opening on a hot day before capacity fills; confirm seasonal hours.
- Booking
- ~$15–25; check the seasonal schedule before going.
- Allow
- 2–3 hours
- Accessibility
- Historic site with steps and uneven coral rock; limited accessibility.
- Getting there
- In Coral Gables; drive, as it's outside the tourist core.
Consider instead
Sources and method (2)
- The Venetian Pool was created in 1924 from a former coral-rock/limestone quarry and is the only swimming pool listed on the National Register of Historic Places (added 1981). en.wikipedia.org ↗
- The pool closed for a major renovation beginning October 2024 and was scheduled to reopen in fall 2025; post-reopening non-resident admission is set at $21 adult / $16 child. coralgables.com ↗