Beach cleanups for people passing through

Pick up trash.
Make friends.
Earn the beach.

Travelers meet up to clean the places they love visiting — organized by locals who know where help is needed. One hour of picking, then coffee with people worth meeting.

GOOD TIDE CLUB

Leave it better than you found it.

BEACH CLEANUP
EVERY SATURDAY · 9:00 AM
MEET AT THE FLAGPOLE

→ gloves & bags provided
→ one hour, then the hang
→ just show up
meet travelers · meet locals

How it works

The easiest good thing you'll do all trip

STEP 1

Show up

Same beach, same time, every week. No signup, no fee, no gear — gloves and bags are waiting for you at the meeting point.

STEP 2

Clean for an hour

Grab a bag, grab a partner from another dorm, and work the tide line. Locals pick the spot — they know where the help is needed.

STEP 3

Stay for the hang

Group photo with the full bags, then coffee. You'll leave with cleaner sand, new friends, and the best story at dinner.

Find a cleanup

Chapters

Every chapter is a standing weekly event run by a local host. Roll into town, check the schedule, show up.

Start a chapter

Locals & hostels: we bring the hands, you bring the beach

Run a hostel, dive shop, surf school, or just love your beach? Host a standing weekly cleanup and become the place travelers talk about. It costs about $5 a week in bags and gloves — we hand you everything else.

  • Safety first, every event — a 2-minute brief and a sign-in sheet, both written for you.
  • The trash actually leaves the beach — you sort out disposal before your first event; we show you how.
  • Locals lead — you pick the site, you set the pace. If a local group already cleans here, we join them, not compete.

Apply to host a chapter

The cleanup-in-a-box kit — free

  • One-page quick-start & event checklist
  • Safety brief script & waiver template
  • Disposal planning worksheet
  • Flyer, captions & WhatsApp templates
  • Brand kit & your spot on the chapter map
  • Cross-promotion of every event photo

Locals lead. We're just the extra hands.

Hosts choose the sites, set the schedule, and direct the work — travelers are guests contributing labor, not saviors passing through. Where a local cleanup crew already exists, we partner with them or get out of the way.