Zeke’s Landing is the busiest of the three big Orange Beach marinas — the one with the most charters per square foot, the loudest dock energy, and the easiest path for a first-time visitor to walk in, see the boats, talk to a mate, and put a deposit down for tomorrow.
The setup includes:
- A charter fleet of roughly 40+ vessels — six-pack boats, larger group boats, headboats, the works
- Multiple restaurants and bars on-site (Hazel’s Nook, Cactus Cantina, and others depending on the season)
- Live music outdoor stage in season
- Fuel dock
- Ship store
- The all-important fish-cleaning station for if you bring back the limit
The afternoon shuffle around 3-4 p.m. — boats coming in, mates cleaning fish, the smell of bait, the dock-side crowd — is one of the more authentic moments at any Gulf Coast harbor. Don’t book a charter without watching it once. It tells you who’s serious and who’s running a tourist circus.
This is where the offshore tournaments base out of half the time. Big-fish-on-the-dock photos happen here.
Booking a charter
Zeke’s is the easiest of the three big marinas for a first-timer: the most charters per square foot, the loudest dock energy, and the lowest friction to walk in, look at the boats, talk to a mate, and put a deposit down for tomorrow. The fleet runs roughly 40-plus vessels — six-pack boats, larger group boats, headboats — so there’s a trip to match almost any group size and budget.
The afternoon shuffle
Come by around 3-4 p.m. for the daily return: boats easing in, mates cleaning the catch, the smell of bait, the dock crowd gathering. It’s one of the more authentic moments at any Gulf Coast harbor and the best free read on who’s serious and who’s running a tourist circus. Watch it once before you book.
Eating and getting there
On Perdido Beach Boulevard in the Pass-marina cluster, with multiple restaurants and bars on-site, an outdoor music stage in season, a fuel dock, a ship store, and the all-important fish-cleaning station for when you bring back the limit.