New England
Print

The Most Underrated Coastal Town in Maine That Locals Are Trying to Keep Secret

Daniel Conner
Hits: 5

Travel Map IconMAINE - If you mention a summer trip to Maine, the immediate response is almost always: Bar Harbor. And yes, Bar Harbor is stunning. But it is also a cruise ship parking lot where you spend 45 minutes circling for a parking spot, pay $400 a night for a mediocre motel, and stand shoulder-to-shoulder with thousands of tourists trying to buy a lobster roll. It’s iconic, but it’s exhausting.


The Most Underrated Coastal Town in Maine That Locals Are Trying to Keep Secret
The Most Underrated Coastal Town in Maine That Locals Are Trying to Keep Secret

But there is another version of the Maine coast—the rugged, foggy, "Wyeth painting" version that feels like the edge of the world. It’s quiet, the lobsters are cheaper, and the lighthouses are actually lonely. Skip the crowds of Mount Desert Island. This year, drive further down east to the bold coast: Lubec.

Lubec marks the easternmost point of the U.S., offering dramatic cliffs and silence that Bar Harbor can't match.



The "Anti-Tourist Trap": Lubec, ME

Population: ~1,200 Vibe: The end of the world (in the best way possible).

While Bar Harbor feels polished and commercial, Lubec feels wild. It sits at the very end of a peninsula, marking the easternmost point of the United States. If you stand on the rocks at sunrise, you are the first person in the country to see the sun.



The town itself is a collection of weathered shingle buildings, fishing boats, and silence. There are no t-shirt shops or chain hotels. It’s a working fishing village that happens to sit on some of the most dramatic cliffs on the East Coast.

Why Locals Go Here Instead

The barrier to entry is distance—it’s about 2 hours past Bar Harbor—which acts as a perfect filter. The tour buses don't come this far.

Affordable Luxury: How to Do It Right

Lubec offers a raw, authentic experience for a fraction of the cost of "Down East" resorts.

The Local Secret

Most people visit the lighthouse and leave. But the real secret is the Hamilton Cove Preserve.



Located just outside town, this land trust offers a hiking trail through mossy, fairytale forests that dump you out onto a massive, rocky beach that is usually completely empty. It is the perfect place to sit on a piece of driftwood, eat a packed lunch, and watch the lobster boats haul traps in the fog.


The Bottom Line: If you want fudge shops and crowds, go to Bar Harbor. If you want to see the rugged, lonely beauty that made artists fall in love with Maine, go to Lubec.