Miami Beach eases spring-break rules
Miami Beach loosened some spring-break restrictions for 2026 — city-owned parking garages and lots south of 23rd Street will remain open, though law enforcement is keeping a strict stance on crime during the period Miami Beach policy update Fox coverage. That change shifts logistics for beach-and-city travelers who want both sand and nightlife without the last-year closures.
The [city designated]miamibeachfl.gov March 2026 as a high‑impact period, identifying March 12–15 and March 19–22 as the two peak weekends expected to draw the largest crowds. miamibeachfl.gov Art Deco District garages will carry flat parking rates of $40–$100 (the city set $40 for March 5–8), street parking in the area is listed at $20/hour with a $100 daily max, and nonresident towing will be $548 plus administrative fees. miamibeachfl.gov The Miami Beach Police Department will deploy License Plate Reader details on the eastbound MacArthur and Julia Tuttle causeways on March 13–15 and March 20–22 starting at 10 p.m., and the city has announced enhanced DUI checkpoints and nighttime enforcement. miamibeachfl.gov A traffic plan that begins at 6 p.m. Thursday–Sunday during March will funnel vehicles onto Ocean Drive only from 15th Street with a single exit at 5th Street on those peak weekends. wlrn.org Free 24‑hour shuttles will run from the Fifth & Alton, Sunset Harbour and 42nd Street municipal garages with peak frequency every 10 minutes to assist workers and visitors, and the city is programming fitness events — Gymreapers Wodapalooza (expected ~40,000 attendees, March 12–15) and the ATHX Games (March 21–22) — as part of its “Wake Up to a New March” campaign, a shift Mayor Steven Meiner described as having “ended the chaos and restored order.” miamibeachfl.gov