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Marin County · Above the Fog

Mount Tamalpais

Also known asMt. Tam · Mount Tam · Mt. Tamalpais · Mount Tamalpais State Park
Mountain · Grassland · Ridgeline · Overlook · Fog

A 2,500-foot peak above the Marin headlands, where the proposal happens over a sea of fog with San Francisco laid out below.

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From the photographer
Chris Schmauch
by Chris Schmauch, owner of GoodEye Photography

Mount Tamalpais is the 2,500-foot peak that crowns Marin County, with 360-degree views over San Francisco, the Pacific, the Bay, and the Marin Headlands. Grasslands, oak woodlands, and a summit that frequently sits above the fog line. One of the most dramatic proposal backdrops in the Bay Area.

Most Bay Area proposals happen at sea level: a beach, a bridge overlook, a city rooftop. Mount Tamalpais takes you up. From the peak you're looking down on all of it at once. San Francisco, the Golden Gate, the Pacific, the entire Bay spread out below, and on the right evening, a sea of fog rolling in underneath you while you stand in clear gold light.

What to expect

The lay of the land

Access
Winding mountain drive (25 to 30 min from Mill Valley, longer on busy weekend evenings) to the state-park lots ($ day-use fee). Short but uneven walk from parking to the viewpoints.
Footwear
Stable flats or boots, not heels. Rock, packed dirt, and grassland underfoot, plus wind at the top. Bring a warm layer.
Best Time of Day
Golden hour, the hour before sunset looking west. Time arrival about 45 minutes before sunset. Wind picks up as the sun drops.
Best Season
Summer for the above-the-fog drama; clear winter evenings for the sharpest long-distance views. Every season works; the wildcard is wind and fog timing.
Privacy
Public park and a popular sunset spot. Weekday evenings are quiet; weekend sunsets are crowded. A scouted vantage keeps onlookers out of frame for the proposal.
From the field

The fog is the wildcard that makes this place. I've shot proposals up here where we arrived to a totally socked-in summit, couldn't see fifty feet, and I was quietly bracing the couple for a view-less evening. Then over about ten minutes the fog dropped below us and the whole bay opened up underneath, lit gold, with the city floating on a cloud. You can't schedule that. But Mount Tamalpais hands it to you more often than anywhere else I shoot.

Drive times

Getting here

Mill Valley25 min
Sausalito30 min
San Francisco45 min
Stinson Beach30 min
San Jose1 hr 30 min
Approximate, off-peak driving.
Worth knowing

A few things about Mount Tamalpais

  • Mount Tamalpais rises about 2,570 feet, the highest peak in the Marin Hills, straddling Mount Tamalpais State Park and the Marin Municipal Water District watershed lands.

    parks.ca.gov
  • The mountain's ridgeline silhouette is known as 'the Sleeping Lady' for its resemblance to a reclining woman, a nickname tied to local Coast Miwok and later folklore.

    Wikipedia / Marin history
  • On clear days the summit offers views of the Farallon Islands, the Marin County hills, San Francisco, the Bay, Mount Diablo, and occasionally the snow-capped Sierra Nevada over 150 miles away.

    parks.ca.gov
  • The Mountain Theater (Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre) near the summit is a stone amphitheater built by the CCC in the 1930s and still hosts performances, one of several historic features on the mountain.

    Wikipedia
  • The world's first official mountain bike races were held on Mount Tamalpais's fire roads in the 1970s; the sport was largely invented on these slopes.

    Marin Museum of Bicycling
Also known as

Mount Tamalpais also appears as Mt. Tam, Mount Tam, Mt. Tamalpais, or Mount Tamalpais State Park.