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Miami Beach police officers start enforcing stricter spring break rules​on March 13, 2025 at 11:07 pm

Having to pay $100 for parking or a $532 towing fee, running into barricades, and stopping at checkpoints to get to the beach are some of the obstacles that spring break tourists face this weekend in Miami Beach.

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City officials warned that the law enforcement’s license plate reader details are going to be causing eastbound traffic delays on the MacArthur and the Julia Tuttle causeways. There is another on Fifth Street where there will also be a DUI sobriety checkpoint.

There will be checkpoints enforcing bans before getting to the beach, and city officials also ordered packaged liquor stores in the South Beach Entertainment District to close by 8 p.m.

“Spring break rules will leave you deflated” is the motto of the city’s marketing campaign this year to keep the spring breakers’ parties under control from Thursday to Sunday and from March 20-23.

Officer Christopher Bess, a spokesman for the Miami Beach Police Department, said the police officers tourists see on the street are not the only ones enforcing the rules.

Bess wants tourists to remember that there is a trained law enforcement team devoted to just watching the live feeds from a network of surveillance cameras that have been set up in South Beach.

Here are more details about the changes:

For more information about the city’s temporary rules and to view a traffic flow map, visit this page.

​Having to pay $100 for parking or a $532 towing fee, running into barricades, and stopping at checkpoints to get to the beach are some of the obstacles that spring break tourists face this weekend in Miami Beach.   

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. – Having to pay $100 for parking or a $532 towing fee, running into barricades, and stopping at checkpoints to get to the beach are some of the obstacles that spring break tourists face this weekend in Miami Beach.

Leer en español

City officials warned that the law enforcement’s license plate reader details are going to be causing eastbound traffic delays on the MacArthur and the Julia Tuttle causeways. There is another on Fifth Street where there will also be a DUI sobriety checkpoint.

There will be checkpoints enforcing bans before getting to the beach, and city officials also ordered packaged liquor stores in the South Beach Entertainment District to close by 8 p.m.

“Spring break rules will leave you deflated” is the motto of the city’s marketing campaign this year to keep the spring breakers’ parties under control from Thursday to Sunday and from March 20-23.

Officer Christopher Bess, a spokesman for the Miami Beach Police Department, said the police officers tourists see on the street are not the only ones enforcing the rules.

Bess wants tourists to remember that there is a trained law enforcement team devoted to just watching the live feeds from a network of surveillance cameras that have been set up in South Beach.

Here are more details about the changes:

For more information about the city’s temporary rules and to view a traffic flow map, visit this page.

 

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