Nobody is saying you don’t deserve the Hamptons. I’m sure you do. But between the 00-a-night hotel rooms, the three-hour traffic crawl on the LIE, and the general sense that everyone around you is doing a cost-benefit analysis of being seen, it’s not exactly doable (or desireable) for many of us.

The good news is that the actual appeal of the Hamptons — beautiful water, good food, boutique hotels with real taste, that specific feeling of people who have figured out how to summer correctly — is not exclusive to a particular zip code on Long Island. It exists in lake towns all over the country, in places that have had their own version of this thing going on for a century without needing anyone to write about it. A few of them are having a moment. A few have been quietly excellent for decades. One of them you might have driven past and not stopped, which would be your loss.

Here are seven lake towns worth putting on the itinerary, one per region, all of them doing the Hamptons thing on their own terms.

Lake Placid, NY

The Adirondacks • Northeast

Lake Placid has a lot going on before you even get to the water. Two Winter Olympics. A main street of white-clapboard storefronts that looks like someone built a movie set and forgot to tear it down. Mirror Lake sitting right in the middle of town, calm enough to actually reflect the mountains. The Hamptons energy here is old-money Adirondack — people who have been summering here for three generations, weathered docks, kayaks stacked up beside impeccable gardens. There’s excellent dining (The View at Mirror Lake does a proper dinner if you want a more upscale night or hit up The Breakfast Club for mimosas and pancakes lakeside), access to the High Peaks for anyone who wants to hike before their spa appointment, and a low-key craft beverage scene anchored by the Adirondack Pub & Brewery which is delightfully family-friendly. The town is genuinely walkable in a way that keeps whining to a minimum, which means everyone can remain in good spirits. (Well, you know. As much as possible.) The bonus is you spend less time in the car and more time actually being on vacation.

Geneva Lake, WI

Walworth County • Midwest

Chicago’s wealthy have been escaping to Geneva Lake since the 1870s. The Gilded Age mansions that ring the shoreline are still there, still gorgeous, still largely in the same families. The snooper in me is delighted by the 26-mile Geneva Lake Shore Path which traces the entire perimeter of the lake along private waterfront properties. (A quirk of old legal access agreements that means you can walk past estates that would otherwise cost millions to glimpse and fantasize about. Just be sure to stay off their lawns.) The Abbey Resort sits on a harbor in Fontana and has the full package with a reasonable price tag: spa, lakefront dining, boats for rent, big indoor pool. The Grand Geneva (originally a Playboy Club, which is information you can use or discard as you see fit) adds two championship golf courses and a ski hill to the mix. Downtown Lake Geneva proper is boutique-heavy and bustling in summer, and the restaurant scene has grown up considerably in the last decade. Property here now lists in the millions, which tells you everything about the direction this place has been heading.

Petoskey, MI

Little Traverse Bay • Northern Michigan

Northern Michigan has a lot of beautiful lake towns, and Petoskey is arguably the most underrated of them. It sits along the crystal clear Little Traverse Bay with absolutely stellar views and beaches that rival any oceanfront. The Gaslight District — the Victorian downtown — has the boutiques, the galleries, and an unhurried Saturday-morning energy that’s truly refreshing. Ernest Hemingway summered nearby as a young man, which gets mentioned in every piece about this town and yet somehow doesn’t feel tired when you’re actually there, standing in front of a display of Petoskey stones on a little wooden shelf outside a shop. (And if you don’t know what a Petoskey stone is, you will within 24 hours of visiting.) Stafford’s Perry Hotel has anchored the hospitality scene for decades, with access to everything you need right within walking distance. Harbor Springs, just up the bay, adds a layer of old-money quiet that’s almost comically idyllic — tiny harbor, no chain stores, sailboats, the whole thing. Petoskey gives you Northern Michigan’s best summer without the Traverse City traffic.

Lake Lure, NC

Blue Ridge Foothills • South

If you grew up watching Dirty Dancing, you’ll recognize Lake Lure (and the phrase, “I carried a watermelon.”) With the clear water and Blue Ridge Mountains rising straight up from the shoreline you can almost picture Baby sneaking around in those white Keds. (Forgive me, this movie is my Roman Empire.) Lake Lure was named Southern Living’s Best Lake Town in 2022, and it earned it. The 1927 Lake Lure Inn and Spa, which has accommodated everyone from Presidents Coolidge and FDR to Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey themselves (!), remains the anchor stay, with Rumbling Bald Resort offering a more sprawling option on the northern end. Chimney Rock State Park is four minutes away and has some of the most dramatic hiking in the Southeast.

Hit hard by Hurricane Helene in fall 2024, the recovery has been real, community-driven, and ongoing. Happily, as of spring 2026 the lake is reopening for its first full season back. Visiting Lake Lure right now is one of those cases where your tourist dollars are doing something. The town needs the summer season, and you’ll have a better trip for knowing that the people running the restaurants and renting the kayaks actually need you there.

Possum Kingdom Lake, TX

Palo Pinto County • Texas

The name does not help it. Ignore the name. Possum Kingdom Lake is a 20,000-acre reservoir in the Palo Pinto Mountains west of Fort Worth, and it has been a quiet destination for Texas money for long enough that the infrastructure has actually caught up. The cliffs along the Hell’s Gate area are so dramatic that it’s hard to believe you’re in Texas at all. The red rocks drop straight into clear blue water, with houseboats anchored in the coves and the sky is enormous and uninterrupted. (Though I guess Texas does boast about their sky fairly often.) Boutique lodging options have grown up around the lake over the last decade, and the dining scene isn’t what it was ten years ago. The crowd is loyally Texan and mostly in the know, which means the secret hasn’t fully gotten out yet. That’s the case for going now.

Lake Chelan, WA

North Cascades • Pacific Northwest

Lake Chelan stretches 55 miles through the Cascade Mountains, fed by glaciers, and manages to see over 300 days of sunshine a year despite being in Washington State — a fact that still feels implausible every time you say it. (I mean, have you ever been to Seattle? It’s like 97 shades of grey.) The town of Chelan sits at the southern end with a protected historic district, good restaurants, and a boutique scene that fills out in summer. What makes this place feel genuinely special is the combination: you’re wine tasting at one of 40-plus wineries in a federally designated AVA while also swimming in water so cold and clear it registers as slightly shocking. (Provided you like that kind of thing.) Campbell’s Resort has been the main event on the lakefront since forever, and it’s been updated enough to feel current without losing the family-owned ease that defines it. It also has a heated outdoor pool if that aforementioned shocking lake water isn’t your vibe. The boats come out in summer, the mountains are always there, and there’s a laid-back confidence to the whole scene that makes you feel like you found something the travel algorithm hasn’t fully caught up to yet. It has.

Coeur d’Alene, ID

North Idaho • Mountain West

cs reputation has shifted in the last few years as it became a relocation destination, but the lake itself is not a trend — it’s 25 miles of genuinely stunning Idaho water, ringed by forests and flanked by mountains. The Coeur d’Alene Resort sits directly on the waterfront and remains the anchor; it has a floating golf green in the lake that is either delightful or completely absurd depending on your relationship to golf. The downtown is walkable and has filled out considerably — boutique retail, a solid restaurant scene, and enough coffee shops to sustain a population that apparently works remotely in a very nice setting. The North Idaho Centennial Trail runs along the lake’s northern shore for cyclists. Summers here are warm, the water is swimmable, and there’s a version of this trip where you do absolutely nothing ambitious and it’s still one of the better vacations you’ve taken.