Browse the top hotels in Cape May Point with pricing, features, and local tips to help you choose.
Plan Your Cape May Point Trip — Add Tours & Experiences
Whale watching, lighthouse tours, walking tours, and local experiences. Free cancellation on most reservations.
Finding the Right Hotel
Accommodations at the Jersey Shore range from historic Victorian inns to modern beachfront resorts, classic motels with pool views to boutique hotels with personality. Each shore town has its own character, and the right hotel can define your trip. Location matters - beachfront comes at a premium, but walking distance to the beach is often the sweet spot for value.
Insider Tips
- Recent renovation dates matter more than star ratings
- Check if "ocean view" means actual view or just a sliver
- Parking included vs. paid makes a big difference in cost
- Read recent reviews, not just the overall score
Summer Season Tips
Book early for peak weekends. Minimum stays are common July-August. Prices drop mid-week.
Top 2 Hotels
Cape May Hotels (Nearby)
$$$Cape May (5 min) offers Victorian B&Bs, hotels, and resorts. Congress Hall, Virginia Hotel, and charming B&Bs.
Cape May Point Vacation Rentals
$$$Beach cottages and homes in this quiet, nature-focused community. Limited inventory - book early for birding season.
Accommodation Tips
Get more for your money with these local insights for hotels in Cape May Point.
- 1Weekday rates can be 30-50% less than weekends
- 2Shoulder season (May, September) offers best value with good weather
- 3Properties a block or two from the beach are significantly cheaper
- 4AAA, AARP, and other memberships often have shore hotel discounts
Planning Your Visit to Cape May Point?
Check out our complete guide to Cape May Point with beaches, events, parking info, and more.
View Cape May Point Guide →About Cape May Point
Cape May Point exists for one reason that draws over 100,000 visitors per season: this narrow peninsula acts as a "bird funnel" where Delaware Bay and the Atlantic Ocean force migrating raptors to concentrate as they filter south. Over 400 different species have been recorded during fall migration—peregrines, merlins, ospreys, sharp-shinned hawks—and the Cape May Hawkwatch Platform has become the premier birding destination in North America. They call this the "Raptor Capital of North America," and the title is earned daily from August through November. The beach experience here differs fundamentally from typical shore towns. Borough beaches require badges ($6 daily, $25 season, $15 seniors), but the famous Sunset Beach is free—and it's not primarily a swimming beach. People come for the Delaware Bay sunsets, the SS Atlantus (a WWI-era experimental concrete ship that ran aground in 1926 and remains visible offshore), and Cape May Diamonds (quartz crystals polished by bay waves until they sparkle like gemstones). The nightly flag-lowering ceremony has run since 1973, honoring veterans as the sun drops over the bay. This is ritual beach-going, not recreational. Cape May Lighthouse stands 157 feet tall with 199 steps to the top—the second-oldest continually operating lighthouse in the United States, built in 1859. The state park surrounding it includes nature trails, a WWII bunker (Atlantic Observation Platform from the coastal defense era), and the birding stations that serious ornithologists plan trips around. Park parking runs $20/day in summer; the beach access is included. The commercial presence is minimal by design. Sunset Beach Gift Shop & Grill handles casual food before the flag ceremony—ice cream, sandwiches, the beach-town basics. Serious dining means driving 5 minutes to Cape May proper for Victorian restaurant row: Washington Inn, Ebbitt Room, Peter Shields Inn. Figure $50-80 for fine dining in Cape May, which most Cape May Point visitors do at least once. Accommodations are primarily vacation rentals in this residential borough. Charming beach cottages and nature-focused properties suit birders who arrive before dawn for migration flights. Cape May hotels (Congress Hall, Virginia Hotel, the B&B collection) are 5 minutes away for those preferring Victorian atmosphere. The flag ceremony has run every night since 1973. That kind of consistency—a small, residential borough that shows up every evening regardless of crowd size—says something about what Cape May Point actually is. Birders come for the September-October raptor migration, families come for the Cape May Diamond hunting, lighthouse people come for the 199 steps and the view. All of them end up at Sunset Beach for the 8pm flag-lowering. Restaurants and nightlife are five minutes north in Cape May proper; come here for the geography and what it does to birds, light, and quartz crystals.
Why Cape May Point for Hotels?
Cape May Point in Cape-may County draws visitors for its birding and natural character. The hotels scene reflects that mix — you can find options ranging from casual to upscale throughout this cape-may County beach town.
What Makes Cape May Point Special
- birding atmosphere
- natural atmosphere
- peaceful atmosphere
- historic atmosphere
- sunset views atmosphere
Planning Your Visit
Cape May Point is accessible from major cities, making it perfect for day trips or weekend getaways. For the best hotels experience, consider visiting during shoulder season (May-June or September-October) when crowds are lighter but most establishments are open.
Getting to Cape May Point
- From NYC: 3hr
- From Philadelphia: 1hr 30min
- From Newark: 2hr 45min
Local Tips
- Parking: State Park has parking fees. Sunset Beach has paid parking lot.
- Best Time: Weekday lunches offer shorter waits at popular spots.
- Reservations: Book ahead for summer weekends, especially waterfront venues.