Please click your browser's "Refresh" button to Refresh Page.
Home | Find a Park | Event Calendar | Activities | Park Guide | Contact Us | Make us your Homepage
Green ferns cover the rock ledge around the waterfall.

Welcome to Falling Waters State Park

Huge trees and fern-covered sinkholes line Sink Hole Trail, the boardwalk that leads visitors to Florida's highest waterfall. Falling Waters Sink is a 100-foot deep, 20-foot wide cylindrical pit into which flows a small stream that drops 73 feet to the bottom of the sink. The water's final destination remains unknown. Only a few miles south of I-10, the park provides travelers with a quiet, serene stop on their journey. Visitors can see beautiful native and migrating butterflies in the butterfly garden, take a dip in the lake, or have a family picnic. Hikers can experience the verdant, gently sloping landscape of North Florida. Park rangers host interpretive programs in the amphitheater. Full-facility campsites nestled in a shady pine forest provide the perfect excuse for an overnight stay at Falling Waters. Located three miles south of Chipley, off State Road 77A.

Contact the Florida Park Service Information Center for general inquiries.
For Information about Falling Waters State Park, please call 850-638-6130.

Book Your Vacation Spot Now!
Reserve America - Reserve your cabin or campsite today

Get more information on making a reservation.


Hours of Operation

8:00 AM to sunset

Driving Directions

Falling Waters State Park is located 3 miles south of Chipley off State Road 77, turn left on State Park Road and follow it to the parks entrance. From I10, take Chipley Exit south on State Road 77 and follow signs to the park.


Park Fees

Admission Fees - $4.00 per vehicle.
Pedestrians, Bicyclists, Extra Passengers, Passengers In vehicles with holder of Annual Individual Entrance Permit - Admission Fee $1.00 Picnic Pavilion Fees
Large Pavilion, 10 tables, seats 60, $50.00 (plus tax) per day. Medium Pavilion, 4 tables, seats 24, $30.00 (plus tax) per day. Camping Fees
All Year $15.00.

Activities at Falling Waters State Park

Campfire Circles Icon

Campfire Circle

The campground has a campfire circle and amphitheater for camper gatherings and summer interpretive programs presented by one of the Ranger staff. Spend the evening with a Park Ranger and watch a slide show at the amphitheater, or sit around a campfire and take in an interpretive talk and experience why the real Florida is so special. These programs are given on Saturday evenings and are free to registered campers.

Fishing Icon

Fishing

Fishing is allowed in designated areas
Do you need a Fishing License?

Full Facility Camping Icon

Full Facility Camping

This 171-acre park has 24 campsites nestled in an upland pine forest. Each site has a picnic table, ground grill, and clotheslines. Water and electric are available and there is a dump station for your convenience. reservations for Falling Waters State Park can be made through the Florida Park Service's Central Reservation Sytem. CAMPGROUND HOST If you are an energetic and gracious person who has the desire to provide hospitality and assistance to campers, Florida Park Service style, we have a job for you. Monitoring activities in the campgrounds and maintain the facilities and sites would be your duties in exchange for a campsite without charge for the duration of the agreement. If interested please contact the park office for further information.

Visit Reserve America's website to Reserve your Cabin or Campsite

Hiking/Nature Trails Icon

Nature Trails

The park has three short nature trails. One trail will take you past the butterfly garden as you stroll toward the waterfall sinkhole. Once there, you can actually walk down into this sinkhole and get a breath taking view of Florida's highest waterfall. Then take an elevated boardwalk around a series of sinkholes under a canopy of southern magnolias and other hardwoods. There are self-guided tours and information kiosks throughout the park. A guided tour by a Park Ranger of Falling Waters State Park is available to groups by prior notification (call the park). As always, if your curiosity has gotten the best of you, and you want to know why we burn the park, have sink holes, or even have parks at all, just ask a Park Ranger.

Pet Camping Icon

Pet Camping

Pets must be confined, leashed (not to exceed six feet in length) or otherwise under the physical control of a person at all times. Tethered pets must not be left unattended for more than 30 minutes. Quiet hours must be observed from 11:00 p.m. - 8:00 a.m. Pet owners must pick up after their pets and properly dispose of all pet droppings in trash receptacles. Florida law requires that pets be vaccinated against rabies. Any pet that is noisy, dangerous, intimidating or destructive will not be allowed to remain in the park. Non-furbearing pets, such as reptiles, birds, or fish must be confined or under the physical control of the owner. Some animals may be prohibited on park property. Failure to abide by these rules may result in the camper being asked to board the pet outside the park or to leave the campground.

Visit Reserve America's website to Reserve your Cabin or Campsite

Pets Icon

Pets

Pet camping is available

Picnic Areas Icon

Picnicking

Bring your lunch and spend the day picnicking in a longleaf pine forest. Two pavilions (available for reservations), BBQ grills, picnic tables, restrooms, and playground equipment are available.

Primitive Camping Icon

Primitive Camping

Primitive camping is available

Showers Icon

Showers

Public showers are provided

Swimming Icon

Swimming

The park has a two-acre lake with a white sand beach. It is a great place to relax and get your feet wet. The swimming area of the lake is sectioned off for safety, and has a sand bottom. There are picnic tables, benches, and restrooms under shade trees. You can fish at the lake in designated areas with a Florida Freshwater Fishing License.

Wildlife Viewing Icon

Wildlife Viewing

Wildlife viewing is possible at this park

Youth Camping Icon

Youth Camping

Youth Group camping is available

Youth Camping Icon

Youth Camping

The youth camping area is designed to accommodate organized groups of all ages, and has a capacity of 50 individuals. This camping area has two large fire rings, picnic tables, water, and an old fashion out house. It is located close to the lake area of the park in a hardwood forest. Fees for the youth area are $4.00 per night per person (adult or child).

Special Events for Falling Waters State Park


Frequently Asked Questions about Falling Waters State Park


Question: Can you swim in the waterfall?
Answer: No. The water falls into a sinkhole that is 67 feet deep and then disappears underground to destinations unknown.

Question: Where can we swim?
Answer: We have a lake in which you can swim or fish.

Question: Are there any alligators in the swimming area?
Answer: We have not seen any alligators, but there is always that possibility.

Question: Can we have campfires?
Answer: Yes. Unless the State imposes a fire ban. You will need to bring firewood or charcoal with you as the park does not provide these items.

Falling Waters State Park History

The park’s history is colorful. During the Civil Was era, the waterfall provided power for a grist mill which was operated for several years by Duke Horne. After it was abandoned, timbers fell into Falling Waters Sink. Some of them were recovered in 1962 and are on display in the park. A whiskey distillery was once operated legally just above the waterfall and furnished the spirits for a wine shop established to meet the demands of men at the frontier railway construction site that was to become the town of chipley. An apparent earth fault in the area attracted a serious wildcat effort to find oil in 1919. The drillers, taking periodic samples, drilled past the 3,900-foot mark and got a blow of gas; but no oil in commercial quantities flowed and the well was capped and abandoned in 1922. Long before the grounds were donated to the state, the area was the site of a plant nursery. From the early 1920s until some time in the 1930s when the economic depression caused the nursery’s failure, non-native plants were taking hold. As a result, exotic species such as mimosa, Japanese privet and date palm can still be found.

The most obvious feature at Falling Waters is the sinkhole characterized by conical depressions with steep limestone walls where ferns and mosses take hold. Around the sinks and near the bottom of the hills, you can detect the slope forest with its well-developed, closed canopy forest of upland hardwoods on steep slopes and ravines. The trees found there are white oak, Southern magnolia, sourwood, American beech and flowering dogwood. Wild azaleas reach peak bloom in the spring. The upland pine forest rolls with widely-spaced pines, few under story shrubs and a dense groundcover of grasses and herbs. Broad, open areas encourage growth of fields of wildflowers such as meadow-beauty and Osceola’s plume. Fox squirrels, red fox, red-headed woodpeckers, bobwhite, quail, as well as many other animals inhabit the pine forest.

Falling Waters State Park Volunteer Information


Visit the Main Volunteer page for information on volunteering in Florida State Parks

Visit the Main Volunteer page at http://www.floridastateparks.org/volunteers/default.cfm for more detailed Information


Falling Waters State Park

1130 State Park Road
Chipley, Florida 32428
Phone: 850-638-6130
Fax: Contact Park for Number


Citizen Support Organization

Friends Of Falling Waters State Park
Friends of Falling Waters, Inc.
1365 Watford Circle
Chipley, FL 32428

« Return to the Parks Main Page  ::  Contact Us

What do you think of our website? E-mail us .
Florida State Parks Information Center (850) 245-2157
Florida Division of Recreation and Parks · 3900 Commonwealth Blvd · Tallahassee, Florida 32399
Copyright © 2008 Department of Environmental Protection /
Division of Recreation and Parks

» Web Site Awards «

Privacy Statement
Official Florida Department of Environmental Protection Logo FLAUSA Logo MyFlorida Logo FRPA Logo