Miami Beach is making it clear—rowdy spring breakers are not welcome. The city has launched its “Miami Beach Spring Break Reality Check” campaign, aimed at warning visitors that reckless behavior won’t be tolerated. Officials are rolling out strict new measures throughout March, including steep parking fees, traffic restrictions, alcohol crackdowns, and increased law enforcement presence.
According to Miami Beach City Manager Eric Carpenter, the entire month of March 2025 has been designated as a high-impact period, meaning the city will ramp up enforcement to control crowds. Miami Beach Police Chief Wayne Jones confirmed that authorities will be using license plate readers, drones, and video surveillance to monitor behavior, as well as increasing arrests for public alcohol consumption and drug possession.
The biggest change this year? Astronomical parking fees. On the busiest spring break weekends—March 13-16 and March 20-23—all parking garages and surface lots south of 23rd Street will be closed, forcing visitors to park at select garages where they’ll be charged a $100 flat fee. On other high-traffic weekends, a $30 flat fee will apply at several city garages, with entry closing at 6 p.m. for non-residents.
Beyond parking headaches, visitors will also face curfews and strict traffic controls. Ocean Drive will be blocked off with access only through 13th Street, while DUI checkpoints will be set up along 5th Street on March 14-15 and March 21-22. Additionally, businesses will not be allowed to rent golf carts, mopeds, or motorized scooters, reducing the number of reckless drivers on city streets.
Bars and liquor stores in the Entertainment District will strictly enforce an 8 p.m. closing time, while sidewalk seating on Ocean Drive will be completely shut down on March 14-16 and March 21-23 to limit overcrowding.
Miami Beach officials are making it clear that they don’t want a repeat of past years, where out-of-control spring breakers led to violence, arrests, and property damage. With steep parking costs, heavy police presence, and traffic restrictions, the city hopes to discourage rowdy partygoers from making Miami Beach their go-to destination.
Consider this your reality check. Spring Break and Miami Beach don’t mix.
Learn more: https://t.co/oC3tbwOeuy pic.twitter.com/5FAatT5GUs
— City of Miami Beach (@MiamiBeachNews) February 4, 2025
Discover more from Baller Alert
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.