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Anyone who has spent a summer in the Pacific Northwest knows it arrives with a specific sort of relief. After months of gray skies and that particular kind of drizzle that makes you question your life choices (and your real estate decisions), the sun shows up in Portland like it’s been meaning to call. The heat is gentle, the light lingers until 9 pm, and suddenly the mountains are just there on the horizon again.
I make a summer bucket list every year for exactly this reason. Because summer in Portland is too good to sleepwalk through, and I have a bad habit of blinking and finding myself in September wondering where July went. This year, I’m paying attention, and these 30 ideas are how.

Before You Dive In, Ask Yourself This
What do you actually want this summer to feel like? Not what you want to accomplish, not what looks impressive on a to-do list, but the feeling you’re reaching for. More ease? More adventure? What about more mornings where you’re not already behind before you’ve had coffee? Let that answer guide how you move through this list.
30 Summer Bucket List Ideas to Soak Up Every Day
We’ve all felt it before: summer can slip through your fingers if you let it. One minute it’s Memorial Day weekend and you’re making plans; the next it’s Labor Day and you’re not entirely sure what happened in between. This list is an antidote to that—a collection of ideas designed to make summer feel lived in, intentional, and (drumroll) fun.
A few of these are adventures, and some are so small they barely count as plans. But every idea on this summer bucket list? 100% worth doing.
Eat & Drink
Summer eating is its own love language. These ideas are about slowing down and making the most of the season’s best ingredients. Ideally, with good company and something cold in your hand.
1. Visit your local farmers’ market. You have one rule: buy whatever looks best and figure out dinner from there.
2. Make a signature summer drink. These NA summer spritz options are my personal go-to.
3. Host a dinner party with a theme specific enough to become a story. Every dish from a country you’ve never visited. All pink foods (this is on my own summer bucket list). A menu built entirely around one ingredient. Commit to the bit.
4. Try the thing on the menu you’ve been curious about but always talked yourself out of. This is how I discovered that oysters are actually my favorite food.
5. Cook something entirely from scratch that you’ve always bought. A vinaigrette, a simple jam, a loaf of bread. (My only rule on the bread: just please don’t talk about it ad nauseam. Thank you!)
6. Eat at least one meal outside every week this summer. Not a picnic necessarily—just your regular dinner, on a blanket, on the porch… anywhere you can see the sky.
Move & Explore
The best thing about summer is that the world is easier to be in. These ideas are about getting out into it—whether that means exploring somewhere new or a post-dinner walk around your neighborhood.
7. Drive somewhere within two hours of home that you’ve never been. No itinerary, and ditch the agenda—just go and see what finds you.
8. Swim in something natural this summer. A lake, a river, the ocean. Embrace the shock of cold water and stay in longer than you planned.
9. Find a trail you’ve never hiked and do it at golden hour. Bring something to sit on at the top and enjoy the view.
10. Spend a morning exploring your own city like a tourist. The museum you’ve walked past a hundred times, the neighborhood you’ve never wandered, or the coffee shop that’s been on your list since last summer.
11. Take a walk without your phone at least once a week. Notice how different the world looks when you’re not half-documenting it.
12. Wake up early enough to watch the sun rise. Make coffee. Bring a blanket. Decide it was worth it.
Read & Create
Summer is the season to finally make time for the things that feed you creatively. These ideas are about getting lost in a story, making something with your hands, and giving your imagination room to breathe.
13. Read a book so good you lose track of time. Let yourself be completely unavailable to the world for the length of a really good chapter.
14. Start a summer journal. Not a diary, just a place to collect things. A pressed flower, a ticket stub, a sentence that stopped you mid-page, the name of a song you can’t get out of your head.
15. Try one creative thing you’ve always been curious about. Watercolor, pottery, film photography. Being a beginner is the whole point.
16. Write a letter to someone you love and actually send it. Not a voice memo, not a text—a letter, with a stamp. Trust me, they’ll love opening it.
17. Read outside whenever possible this summer. Even 10 minutes on a blanket in the backyard counts. Especially 10 minutes on a blanket in the backyard counts.
18. Make a summer playlist that captures exactly how this season feels. Listen to it on the last day of summer and let yourself feel it all.
Connect & Celebrate
Some of the best summer memories are just the result of showing up for the people you love. These ideas are about making time for connection before the season slips by.
19. Plan something to look forward to with someone you love. It doesn’t have to be elaborate—a picnic, a long Sunday breakfast, a movie night on someone’s back porch. Put it on the calendar so it actually happens.
20. Call someone you’ve been meaning to call. Walk while you do it so it doesn’t feel like a thing you have to sit down for.
21. Say yes to something you’d normally talk yourself out of. The spontaneous road trip, the last-minute invitation, the plans that don’t quite make sense on paper but sound like a story you’d want to tell later.
22. Throw a gathering with no occasion. Midweek, backyard, everyone brings something. The best parties are unplanned and an excuse to be with some of your favorite people.
23. Take someone somewhere that matters to you. Think of a place you love that they’ve never been, and let them see what you see in it.
24. Tell three people who made your year better that they did. Summer has a way of making you feel generous—lean into it before the feeling passes.
Romanticize the Ordinary
This is the category that ties everything else together. Because the magic of summer isn’t just in the big moments—it’s in how you move through the small ones.
25. Wear the nice thing. The dress you’re saving, the perfume you’re rationing, the earrings that feel like too much for a Tuesday. Tuesday is exactly when you should wear them.
26. Set the table properly for a meal you’re eating alone. Light a candle, put on music, pour something into a real glass. Remember: you are worth the ceremony.
27. Keep fresh flowers in your home all summer. Even grocery store flowers, even a single stem in a jam jar. Beauty is a practice, not a special occasion.
28. Give this summer a name. Just for you, not for Instagram. Something that captures the feeling you’re reaching for. Then live toward it like an intention.
29. Wander into a bookstore with no list and no plan. Buy the book whose cover stops you and trust that instinct.
30. On the last day of August, sit somewhere quiet and write down everything you want to remember about this summer. The light at 8 pm, the conversations that ran long, or maybe the moments that almost slipped by unnoticed.
The Magic Is Already There
A summer bucket list is really just a permission slip to pay attention. To notice the way the light hits at 7 pm or to stay at the table a little longer. None of the ideas above requires a flight or a major life overhaul—they just ask you to show up with your eyes open. The magic of summer isn’t something that happens to you. It’s something you decide to notice. And once you start looking for it, you’ll see it everywhere.
This post was last updated on May 25, 2026, to include new insights.





