C ClothingOptional.org

2 locations · United States

Illinois

Every clothing-optional place we've verified in Illinois. Tap any entry for full visit notes, etiquette, access and seasonal advice.

Illinois Beach State Park
Beach

Illinois, USA

Illinois Beach State Park

Illinois Beach State Park is a 4,160-acre park on Lake Michigan in Zion, Illinois — one of the last remaining natural lake beaches in the state and one of very few clothing-optional lake beaches in the Great Lakes region. The park preserves a mix of beach, dunes, swamp, and savanna, making it ecologically significant beyond the beach itself. The clothing-optional area is in the South Beach section of the park, in a less-trafficked stretch of the shoreline. Lake Michigan water is cold — averaging 65–70°F in July and August at this latitude — but the beach is wide and sandy, and the Great Lakes provide a fresh-water beach experience with no jellyfish, no salt, and strong swimming conditions when the wind is calm. The lake has no tidal variation but significant wave action from wind; the shallow near-shore warms quickly on calm days. The park is in Zion, about 40 miles north of downtown Chicago and 10 miles south of the Wisconsin border. It's accessible by car via Route 41 and by Metra North Line commuter rail to the Zion station, making it a viable Chicago day trip.

Day use Freshwater
Club

Illinois, USA

Blue Lake, Inc

Blue Lake sits in northwestern Illinois near Erie, about 30 miles east of the Quad Cities. It's a member-owned cooperative that's been running since the 1950s, making it one of the older continuously operating naturist clubs in the Midwest. Like many co-ops of its era, it was founded by families looking for a private, informal place to practice social nudity away from public scrutiny—a model that shaped much of the American naturist landscape when commercial resorts were rare and public nude recreation essentially nonexistent. The property centers on a small private lake suitable for swimming and paddling, surrounded by wooded areas and open lawn spaces. The atmosphere is low-key and community-oriented rather than resort-like. You'll find people swimming, playing volleyball, reading in the shade, or just hanging out by the water. Facilities are basic: restrooms, showers, and a clubhouse. This isn't a place with amenities like a restaurant or spa—it's more rustic and DIY, reflecting its cooperative roots where members pitch in to maintain the grounds. Blue Lake is family-oriented, especially during summer months when kids are common. First-time visitors need to contact the club ahead of time rather than just showing up. As a co-op, it operates differently than commercial clubs—membership structures and guest policies reflect a community-focused model where regulars know each other and help run the place.