The Chic Hamptons Escape That's Flying Under the Radar
Here's how to spend a stylish weekend out east with less traffic, fewer crowds, and all the charm.
New York City makes a very good case for staying put in the summer. There are farmers' markets to visit, linen dresses to wear, park picnics to plan, and the relief of the city feeling a little softer than usual—especially as some of the usuals migrate East. But eventually, even the best city weekend runs into the same truth: flip-flops on pavement are not the same as flip-flops near the beach.
The Hamptons have always meant different things to different people. There is the full summer-house version, with a packed car and a standing Friday departure time. There is the see-and-be-seen version, the Kennedy-adjacent version, and the quieter version where the whole point is simply being near water and trees and getting a little salt in your hair.
The sweet spot, to me, is somewhere in between. A weekend that still feels like the Hamptons—roadside farm stands, beaches, lobster rolls, and a reason to pack a striped sundress—but doesn't require you to plan your entire summer in February or turn dinner reservations into a competitive sport. While East Hampton and Montauk tend to dominate the conversation, the people who spend the most time out east often gravitate toward the places that feel a little less crowded and a little less performative. The best version of the Hamptons isn't necessarily the one everyone is posting from; it's the one that allows you to actually enjoy being there.
Ahead, the under-the-radar places to stay, eat, shop, and explore for a Hamptons weekend that captures everything people love about summer out east—without the stress of trying to do it all.
The hardest part of a Hamptons weekend is often figuring out where to sleep. A summer rental can literally run into the hundreds of thousands, hotel rooms come at a premium, and even the cute inns and beachy motels tend to book up fast. There are big resorts, charming bed-and-breakfasts, and everything in between, but the trade-off is usually the same: high prices, limited space, or the feeling that you had to plan the whole thing well before Memorial Day.
Canoe Place is the rare stay that makes the math feel a little less impossible. Set on the Shinnecock Canal, it gives you that unmistakable out-east feeling—water, boats, beach air, a good restaurant onsite—without requiring the full Route 27 endurance test before you even unpack. You’re close enough to Westhampton for an easy afternoon and about 35 minutes from Sag Harbor, but set just far enough back that the weekend doesn't begin with two hours of traffic-induced regret.
The property itself has the kind of history that makes the Hamptons feel like more than just a summer scene. Canoe Place sits on the site of one of the country’s oldest inns. After years of restoration, it reopened with landscaped grounds, a classic pool, restaurants, bars, and rooms that feel considered without trying too hard. It has the bones of an old inn, but none of the creakiness.
What makes it especially smart is that there is a version of the stay for almost every kind of trip. The main inn works if you want the ease of a hotel room and breakfast nearby. The cottages are great if you want a little more space. And the Boathouses are the real hidden gems, especially for families or anyone who wants the feeling of a Hamptons home. Set along the canal, they feel private yet offer hotel amenities: multiple bedrooms, full kitchens, fireplaces, private terraces, water views, and access to the pool, hot tub, lounge, fitness center, restaurant, bar, and spa.
For a weekend with kids, friends, or simply too many beach bags, that extra room matters. You can make coffee in a real kitchen, let everyone spread out, sit outside by the water, and still walk back into the hotel when you want dinner or a drink. It's the Hamptons as an actual weekend away—and that feels increasingly rare.
One of the reasons people return to the Hamptons year after year is that no two weekends ever really look the same. You can spend the entire time on a beach chair if that's your thing. You can make dinner reservations months in advance and treat it like a sport. Or you can do what I think is the most enjoyable version of the Hamptons: pick a direction, start driving, and see where the day takes you.
The East End is filled with the kind of small-town Americana that feels increasingly rare. There are historic villages, family-run farm stands, roadside flower carts operating on the honor system, old marinas, independent bookstores, antique stores, and seafood shacks that have been there longer than most of the people who eat there.
One of the things about Canoe Place is that you're positioned almost perfectly between the North and South Forks. You don't feel locked into one town. If you want to spend the morning wandering Sag Harbor, popping into local shops, and walking the marina, you can. If you're in the mood for vineyards, farm stands, and a slower pace, the North Fork is equally accessible.
The Hamptons are close enough to the city that plenty of familiar names have followed the crowd out east. But the reason to eat here is not really to recreate your downtown dinner reservation by the water. It's the local stuff—corn, tomatoes, seafood, peaches, clams—and the places that know what to do with it.
For an afternoon that does not require everyone to sit still, start at Kidd Squid Brewing Co. in Sag Harbor. It is especially good for kids, dogs, or anyone who just wants a low-lift plan: grab a beer, then wander through town before heading back.
For dinner, Good Ground Tavern makes the strongest case for staying put at least one night. The outdoor setup is the kind of place you want to linger, the menu is rooted in the area, and the food is exactly what you want on vacation: a Little Gem salad with crispy oysters, proper clam chowder, and easy crowd-pleasers like beef filet, roasted chicken, and fresh fish.
For a classic waterfront dinner, Cowfish is also a good choice, especially at sunset. Or, if you want to make a night of exploring, drive into town for Ivy on Main, which has that lively local-restaurant feeling that works for almost any kind of group.
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Sara Holzman is the Style Director at Marie Claire, where she has worked in various roles to ensure the brand's fashion content continues to inform, inspire, and shape the conversation around fashion's ever-evolving landscape. A Missouri School of Journalism graduate, she previously held fashion posts at Condé Nast’s Lucky and Self and covered style and travel for Equinox’s Furthermore blog. Over a decade in the industry, she’s guided shoots with top photographers and stylists from concept to cover. Based in NYC, Sara spends off-duty hours running, browsing the farmer's market, making a roast chicken, and hanging with her husband, dog, and cat. Find her on Instagram at @sarajonewyork.