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
At low tide, search the gravel over and around the dark peaty Freshwater Bed at the cliff base end of the beach — bone, teeth and shell wash out of it constantly. The chalk reef's rock pools also trap echinoids and belemnites.
What fossils look like here
Ice Age bone from the 'forest bed' is dark brown to black, heavy, with a honeycomb texture at broken ends. Sea-urchin fossils show as five-pointed stars on rounded flint pebbles. Free identification: Cromer Museum (photo enquiries via Norfolk Museums Service).
Concrete ramp onto the beach; the dark Freshwater Bed shows at the cliff base at low tide.
Hazards
These soft cliffs are actively slumping — never climb on or dig into them, and keep clear after rain. Groynes and chalk reef are slippery; the sea reaches the cliff base at high water.