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
Search the orange Red Crag shell gravel at the base of the beach and sieve the loose sand at the tideline — shark teeth turn up on almost every visit. London Clay pyrite fossils lie among the darker gravel at low water.
What fossils look like here
Shark teeth from the Red Crag are glossy black or grey triangles in the orange shell gravel. Whale ear-bones look like heavy, folded knuckles of stone. Screw-shaped shells are classic Crag finds. Identification: the Naze Education & Visitor Centre helps with finds in season.
Naze visitor centre, café and toilets by the car park.
Access
Steps and sloping paths down to the beach below the Naze cliffs.
Hazards
Soft slumping cliffs and sticky London Clay mudflows — stay off them. The beach below the cliffs narrows to nothing at high water: go out on a falling tide.