
The town began in the 1870s, when Mathias Day laid out a community on the former Williams Orange Plantation along the Halifax River. Henry Flagler's railroad reached the coast in the 1890s, and the resort grew; in 1926 Daytona, Daytona Beach, and Seabreeze consolidated into the City of Daytona Beach. Through it all the draw was the same: a uniquely wide, flat, hard-packed beach — firm enough that, to this day, you can still drive a car on the sand.
Off the sand, Daytona kept the easy rhythm of a classic Florida beach resort: the boardwalk and Main Street Pier, the coquina-rock Bandshell built on the oceanfront in 1937, the long Atlantic "Fun Coast," and the Ponce de Leon Inlet Lighthouse standing watch to the south. It's the vintage-postcard Florida of wide beaches, sea air, and summer afternoons by the water.
Why People Visit Daytona Beach
Daytona Beach offers iconic Florida seaside fun with a layer of vintage-speed history beneath the sand. Visitors split their time between the beach, the boardwalk, the river parks, and the area's world-famous racing heritage. It's lively, nostalgic, and welcoming — a Fun Coast classic that pairs natural beauty with easy beach-town culture.