La Jolla Cove Scuba Diving

La Jolla Cove is San Diego’s most famous dive site! It’s one of the few places in California where you can access giant kelp beds, rocky reefs, and sea caves all from a single beach entry. Plus, it’s one of the best places in California to dive with sea lions.

Let’s highlight a few reasons why there’s excellent scuba diving at La Jolla Cove, and share a few tips for divers who are visiting for the first time.

Dive Right In:

Learn more about our guided dives at La Jolla Cove.

la jolla cove scuba diving
la jolla cove scuba diving

Marine Conservation at La Jolla Cove

La Jolla Cove has been protected since 1929! Decades of conservation efforts have made this a dive site that’s flourishing with marine life.

The Cove is part of the Matlahuayl State Marine Reserve (previously known as the San Diego-La Jolla Underwater Park), a protected area that encompasses the waters in and around La Jolla Cove. It’s basically a state park that’s underwater.

The name “Matlahuayl” (pronounced “mot-la-hoo-uhl”) is a tribute to the Kumeyaay tribes that used to live here. They called La Jolla, mat kulaaxuuy, or, land of holes. That’s probably referring to the La Jolla sea caves.

la jolla cove scuba diving

Within the boundaries of Matlahuayl, no one is allowed to hunt or capture marine life of any kind. No commercial or recreational fishing is allowed, and no spearfishing.

Visitors are also prohibited from taking “geological” items. That means you’re not allowed to remove any shells or rocks from the cove.

Matlahuayl is not the only marine sanctuary in La Jolla. There are two adjacent conservation areas to the north and south. Together, they create a safe passageway for animals and allow marine life to flow more naturally.

la jolla cove scuba diving

La Jolla Cove: Dive Site Features

What kind of diving can you expect at La Jolla Cove?

The Cove has a few different habitats to explore: seagrass meadows, kelp beds, reefs, and the sea caves.

la jolla cove scuba diving

Seagrass Beds

The shallowest part of La Jolla Cove is a seagrass meadow, where you’ll find beds of surfgrass and eelgrass. Surfgrass clings to underwater rock, while eelgrass tends to grow in the sand or mud. It’s lovely to watch the seagrasses billow back and forth in the surf.

When you’re diving the seagrass meadow, be sure to look out for invertebrates, like nudibranchs and sea stars. You may also find baby and juvenile fish here. Younger fish swim and feed in the seagrass meadow until they grow large enough to survive in larger reefs.

Kelp Beds

Most divers come to California for the kelp forests.

The La Jolla Kelp Forest is formed by an expansive bed of giant kelp. The giant kelp rises all the way to the surface from the rocky bottom, forming an underwater forest you can swim through.

You can find plenty of fish, sharks, and pinnipeds in the kelp forest, but the real star is the giant kelp! The kelp beds feel enormous and otherworldly. Underwater photographers will love to capture the dazzling interplay of light and shadow. There’s no other experience like it.

Although California’s kelp forests have declined dramatically in the last 20 years, the kelp bed at La Jolla is among the largest and healthiest in Southern California.

la jolla cove scuba diving
la jolla cove scuba diving

Rocky Reefs

La Jolla Cove has shallow rock reefs that are covered in algae and seagrass. You can find a variety of fish and invertebrates hiding in the crevices, socializing, and tending to nests. It’s not uncommon to find eels, stingrays, and horn sharks.

la jolla cove scuba diving

Sea Caves

The “Seven Caves” are popular with snorkelers and kayakers, but scuba diving is the best way to explore them.

On calm days, scuba divers can explore a variety of swim-throughs that barrel through the rock. You can pop up inside a spacious grotto, with sea lion pups swimming alongside you.

Don’t let the term, “sea caves” intimidate you! The caves are mostly shallow and feature big, open-air chambers where you can surface. Be sure to dive this area with a guide if you’re exploring for the first time.

La Jolla Cove Marine Life

What kind of marine life can you find at La Jolla Cove?

The Cove provides food and shelter for a variety of underwater creatures, including fish, mammals, and invertebrates. Occasionally there are visitors from deeper water, like the broadnose sevengill shark.

There are too many species to list, but here are the most popular / commonly seen wildlife at La Jolla Cove:

la jolla cove scuba diving
la jolla cove scuba diving

Reef Fish

  • Garibaldi
  • California Sheephead
  • Kelp Bass
  • Opaleye
  • Sargo
  • Surfperch
  • Blacksmith
  • Señorita
  • California Moray Eel

  • Horn Shark
  • Leopard Shark
  • Broadnose Sevengill Shark
  • Round Stingray
  • Banded Guitarfish

  • California Sea Lion
  • Harbor Seal
  • Green Sea Turtle

  • Brown Pelican
  • Brandt’s Cormorant

  • California Spiny Lobster
  • Sheep Crab
  • Norris’s Top Snail (“kelp snail”)
  • Ochre Sea Star

  • Braided Hair Algae
  • Giant Kelp
  • Palm Kelp
  • Feather Boa Kelp
  • Surfgrass
  • Eelgrass

  • Help you safely and efficiently manage the surge
  • Safely navigate around the underwater bluffs
  • Take you into the swim-throughs at the Seven Caves