you bought a beach house — now what? the new owner’s setup checklist

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I spent most of my childhood summers at my grandparents’ beach house.

To me it was pure magic — long slow days, salt air, the kind of unhurried that only seems to exist at the shore. But I was there for the other side of it too: the work that made the magic possible. I watched what it actually takes to keep a second home running, and how fast the dream turns stressful when you show up unprepared — the scramble for basics, the one thing that’s always missing, the run into town that eats the whole first afternoon.

And now the keys are yours. A beach house is supposed to be the place you exhale — and it can be — but only if you set it up once, on purpose, so every arrival after this one feels like the retreat you bought it for instead of a to-do list with a view.

Here’s the checklist I’d work through, zone by zone — including the beach-house realities (hi, humidity) the generic lists skip. The kind of thing you only learn from a lot of summers of watching it done. At the end you will find a full shopping list with links to each necessity.

stock the kitchen so you can actually cook

At a beach house you want easy — after-the-beach meals, not five-course dinners. Keep the basics on hand so you arrive and eat without a grocery run.

  • Pantry staples that keep: coffee, olive oil, salt and pepper, a few spices, pasta
  • One good pan, a pot, a sheet pan, plus everyday dishes, glasses, and flatware for a full house
  • A cooler and reusable water bottles for beach days
  • Paper towels, napkins, and easy paper plates for sandy, salty hands
  • Dish towels, sponges, dish soap, and food storage containers

make the beds guest-ready

A beach house hosts — friends, family, the cousins who “might come down.” Double your linens so you never haul bedding back and forth, and choose washable everything, because sand gets everywhere.

  • Two sheet sets per bed
  • Washable quilts, extra pillows, and mattress and pillow protectors
  • Blankets and a sofa throw for cool coastal nights
  • Spare bath towels in every bathroom — plus a separate stack of “beach only” towels

the bathroom — and all the sun care

Keep a full set of toiletries at the house so you can pack a carry-on, and make one shelf the sun-care station so nobody’s ever caught without it.

  • Toothbrushes, toothpaste, shampoo, conditioner, and body wash
  • A hairdryer
  • Sun-care central: sunscreen, after-sun aloe, SPF lip balm
  • First-aid basics, pain reliever, and anti-itch or bug relief
  • A mildew-resistant shower curtain and plenty of toilet paper

beat the salt air + sand (the part everyone forgets)

This is the section that separates a beach house that ages beautifully from one that’s rusting and musty by year two. Salt air corrodes, closed-up humidity breeds mildew, and sand finds its way into everything. A little defense up front saves you real money later — and the mustiness is so much easier to prevent than to fix, which is exactly the kind of thing you only learn after enough summers of watching it go wrong.

  • A dehumidifier, or moisture absorbers in the closets — the single best thing for a house that sits empty between visits
  • Heavy-duty doormats inside and out, plus a sand brush or bucket by the door
  • An outdoor rinse station (even a simple hose-and-bucket) for feet and gear
  • Mesh bags or hooks for wet swimsuits and towels — never the floor
  • Rust-resistant hardware and a can of anti-rust spray for hinges and fixtures

organize so everything has a home

When everything is contained and labeled, you find things fast — and so does anyone you lend the place to. This is the calm-versus-chaos part.

  • Clear bins for closets and the garage; baskets for blankets, towels, and entry clutter
  • Drawer organizers, and a label maker so every bin is obvious at a glance
  • Hooks by the door for keys, bags, hats, and beach gear
  • One dedicated bin for sunscreen, bug spray, and after-sun, so it’s never lost

build the beach gear station

The whole reason you’re here. Keep it all together by the door, ready to grab on the way out.

  • Beach chairs, an umbrella or canopy, and a wagon or cart to haul it
  • A cooler and an insulated beach bag
  • Quick-dry towels, a beach blanket, and a few toys or paddles
  • Hats, a dry bag for phones, and a refillable sunscreen caddy

build an arrival basket

The little touch that turns “we just got here and there’s nothing” into an actual welcome. Keep a basket by the door, restocked and ready.

  • A couple of shelf-stable snacks and bottled water
  • A candle and matches
  • Phone chargers and a spare set of keys
  • A note with the wifi password, trash day, and the good local seafood and coffee

if you’ll share it (or rent it out)

Beach houses get loved by a lot of people. A few moves keep every handoff easy:

  • A simple “house guide” with the wifi password, appliance how-tos, and house rules
  • Doubles of everything that vanishes: chargers, sunscreen, bottle openers
  • A locked owner’s closet for your personal things
  • Labeled, restockable bins so the next group can reset the place fast

where to start

If you only do one thing this weekend, do this: pick a single zone, work through it, and keep a running list of what’s still missing. By your next visit, the house mostly runs itself.

Setting up a beach house isn’t really about the bins and the beach chairs. It’s about clearing every small friction between you and the slow, salt-air life you bought it for. Looking back, the summers I loved most weren’t the ones where everything was perfect — they were the ones where everything was handled, so everyone could actually stop and just be there. That’s what this list is for: so the next time you turn down that road, all that’s left to do is roll the windows down.

Want the printable version of this whole checklist? Sign up here and I’ll send it to your inbox →

beach house checklist

shop the checklist

every product I’d keep at a beach house, by category — a few price points where it counts. (affiliate links; full disclosure up top.)

kitchen

bedroom

bathroom & sun care

salt air & sand

organize

beach gear station

arrival basket

if you’ll share it (or rent it out)

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