Private mountain lake with forest-deep cabins an hour from LA.
Tips on renting in Lake Arrowhead
Getting Around
What to Pack
Must-Try Activities
Smart Spending Tips
Lake Arrowhead is the more reserved sibling of Big Bear — private in ways that Big Bear isn’t, with a lake that the general public cannot swim in or launch boats on without a property-owner invitation. That exclusivity is the whole point. Come here because you want a forest escape that feels genuinely removed, where the Village shopping area is small by design and the lake views are earned by staying on the right side of the deed restrictions.
The Lake
Lake Arrowhead is a private reservoir at 5,174 feet in the San Bernardino National Forest. Unlike Big Bear, public access to the waterfront is restricted to property owners and their guests — there are no public boat launches, no public beaches, and no day-use swim areas. This is a feature, not a bug: the lake stays uncrowded, the shoreline is forested and quiet, and a vacation rental with lake rights (dock access or beach club access via the Lake Arrowhead Community Services District) delivers a private-feeling waterfront experience that public lakes cannot match. Confirm lake access specifically before booking — not all properties in the area include it.
Where to Stay
The best rentals in Lake Arrowhead are lakefront or lake-view properties with private deck access — log-style A-frames and mountain craftsman homes that lean into the forest setting. Properties within the Lake Arrowhead Communities gated area have the best lake access; those just outside may be surrounded by trees but lack direct water rights. For couples, a two-bedroom A-frame with a hot tub and lake view is the classic configuration. For families or groups, larger lodges with multiple decks, a game room, and parking for three-plus vehicles are available. This market skews romantic retreater and legacy gathering — it’s less a kid-activity hub than Big Bear and more a place where the lake itself is the activity.
What to Do
The SkyPark at Santa’s Village, reopened in 2018 after a multi-year restoration, offers family-oriented outdoor activities year-round: disc golf, archery, a ropes course, and a small ski area (SkyPark Mountain) in winter. The PCT passes near Arrowhead, and the Deep Creek Hot Springs hike (roughly 8 miles round trip from Splinters Cabin trailhead) is one of the best day hikes in the San Bernardinos — strenuous but rewarding. For lake access, guests with property privileges can rent kayaks and paddleboards from the lake association beach clubs. The Lake Arrowhead Village shopping area has a handful of restaurants and shops; the overall pace is slower and the commercial footprint smaller than Big Bear Village.
Food and Local Rhythm
Casual dining centers on Lake Arrowhead Village: Dogwood Cocktails & Kitchen has the best lakeside patio and a menu that holds up. For a morning coffee before a hike, Starbucks is in the Village (reliable if uninspired) — locals drive to nearby Blue Jay for the smaller independent options. The village grocery selection is limited; stock up in Running Springs or at the Stater Bros in Rim Forest on the way up via Highway 138. The rhythm here is deliberately unhurried: mornings on the deck, afternoons on the water, evenings with a fire.
Best Time to Go
Lake Arrowhead is a strong fall destination — October and early November, when the deciduous oaks turn and the summer crowds evaporate, offers the best combination of atmosphere and value. Winter is quieter than Big Bear (less ski infrastructure) but works well for snow-dusted cabin weekends. Summer is the busiest season for lake access, with July and August commanding peak rates. Spring can be variable — snow lingers at 5,000 feet into April — but late May into June, before school ends, is excellent value for couples.
Practical Rental Advice
The single most important booking step for Lake Arrowhead is confirming whether lake access is included. Many listings describe a “lake area” property without specifying beach club membership or dock rights — ask before booking. Properties inside the Lake Arrowhead Communities boundary have the clearest access path. San Bernardino County STR regulations apply here as in the rest of the mountain region; noise and occupancy rules are enforced. The Highway 18 approach from the west and Highway 138 from Cajon Pass are the primary routes — both are subject to winter chain controls. Parking is more manageable here than at Big Bear; most homes have driveways sized for the property.
Quick tips before you book
- Confirm lake rights explicitly — “lake area” does not mean beach or dock access.
- Properties inside the gated Communities boundary have strongest water privileges.
- Stock groceries before ascending; Village selection is limited.
- Fall weekdays offer the best value and the best leaf color.
- Deep Creek Hot Springs hike requires a full day — start by 7am in summer.
Browse all Lake Arrowhead vacation rentals on Lake.com, or explore more Southern California lake retreats nearby.
Nearby cities
Hesperia
Discover Hesperia, where you can unwind by the scenic Silverwood Lake and enjoy endless outdoor adventures year-round.
Big Bear
Two miles east of the Village, Big Bear City is the San Bernardino mountain experience without the resort markup. Families and groups find larger cabins, lower rates, and the same access to the lake's east end, the PCT, and both ski mountains — with quieter roads and more privacy.
Canyon Lake
Ninety minutes from Los Angeles in Riverside County, Canyon Lake is a gated community built around a 383-acre private reservoir — a real boating lake with sandy beaches and wakeboarding coves. It doesn't market itself to tourists, which is exactly why it remains one of the most genuinely local-feeling lake escapes in Southern California for families and water-sport enthusiasts.
Lake Elsinore
Explore Lake Elsinore and experience the thrill of skydiving above Southern California’s largest natural freshwater lake.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to see what Lake Arrowhead has to offer? Let’s tackle some of the burning questions you might have as you plan your visit!
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Lake Arrowhead itself is a private lake owned by the Lake Arrowhead Community Services District (LACSD), accessible only to property owners and their confirmed guests. The surrounding San Bernardino National Forest — trails, scenic viewpoints, and public roads — is fully open. If you’re staying in a rental within the Lake Arrowhead Communities boundary, your host can provide guest access to beach clubs and lake areas; confirm this before booking.
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Lake access for rentals typically means one of two things: (1) the property has a private dock with direct water access, or (2) the rental includes guest privileges at a LACSD-managed beach club, where you can swim, launch non-motorized watercraft, and use picnic areas. ‘Near the lake’ with no further specification usually means neither. Ask your host for the specific access method and the beach club name before confirming.
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Lake Arrowhead is approximately 80 miles from downtown Los Angeles, typically a 1.5- to 2-hour drive via I-15 North to Highway 138 East to Highway 18, or via I-10 East to Highway 30 to Highway 138. The Highway 138 approach from Cajon Pass is the most direct and least affected by ski traffic. Allow extra time on winter Fridays and summer holiday weekends.
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Yes, with appropriate property selection. The SkyPark at Santa’s Village has age-appropriate outdoor activities including a ropes course, archery, disc golf, and seasonal snow play. Properties with beach club access give children a safe, supervised swim environment. The community roads are gated and low-traffic, making outdoor play and cycling within the gates manageable. Big Bear’s more extensive kids’ ski infrastructure is about 45 minutes east if ski lessons are the priority.
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The closest ski area to Lake Arrowhead is Snow Valley Mountain Resort in Running Springs, approximately 15–20 minutes east via Highway 18. Bear Mountain and Snow Summit in Big Bear are about 45 minutes to an hour east, offering more terrain and terrain park options. Snow Valley is a good choice for beginners and families with young children; Big Bear resorts suit intermediate and advanced skiers better.