Conditions guidance only. Cliffs are dangerous — never dig in or stand near them. Check tide times locally and tell someone where you're going. Safety page

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What to take fossil hunting

The honest list: you need far less than you think. The sea has already done the digging — your job is looking.

The essentials

Nice to have

What about a hammer?

Usually you don't need one — the best finds are lying loose, and you must never hammer cliffs, ledges or in-place rock: at many protected beaches (Kilve, the West Dorset coast) it's against the collecting code. The exception is nodule coasts like Yorkshire, where collectors crack open loose rounded nodules found on the beach — if that's you, bring safety glasses too, split them well away from other people, and expect most nodules to be empty. Beginners: skip it for the first few trips and train your eyes instead.

Before your first trip, read the safety page — five minutes that makes every trip better — and check your beach's forecast for the leave-by time.