search
Get Started
search

Best Border Lighthouse

Updated Daily
Filter by Tags

Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 Tower of Hercules

The Tower of Hercules is a Roman-era lighthouse located in Galicia, Spain. Constructed around the 1st or 2nd century AD, it's notable as the oldest European lighthouse still standing and operational. The structure’s innovative design allowed for consistent light signals crucial for maritime navigati...

2 Hook Lighthouse

Hook Lighthouse stands as one of Ireland’s oldest continuously operational lighthouses. Constructed in the 13th century, this coastal tower guides ships through treacherous waters off the Wexford coast. Its enduring presence makes it a significant historical landmark and remains vital for maritime s...

3 Phare de Cordouan

The Phare de Cordouan is a Renaissance-era lighthouse located on an island in France’s Gironde estuary. It remains the world's oldest continuously manned lighthouse and one of only two manually operated lighthouses still active today. Its unique operation relies entirely on human oversight, making i...

4 Fastnet Lighthouse

The Fastnet Lighthouse stands on Ireland’s remote Fastnet Rock, a towering granite structure built in 1904. It is notable as the nation's tallest lighthouse and historically significant for guiding ships through treacherous waters around this prominent Atlantic landfall. The light serves mariners, p...

5 Torre de Hércules

The Torre de Hércules is a historic lighthouse located on Spain’s coast. Constructed in the late 19th century, it represents the world's oldest continuously operating lighthouse. Originally built as a maritime signal tower, its design reflects Roman-era construction techniques and served crucial rol...

6 Phare de la Jument

The Phare de la Jument is a distinctive offshore lighthouse located on Île de Oussant in Brittany, France. Its unique conical shape, resembling a horse's head, makes it easily recognizable and crucial for maritime navigation, particularly during storms. Built in the 1850s, it serves sailors, fisherm...

7 Touch of Evil

Orson Welles’ *Touch of Evil* (1958) is a seminal film-noir exploring moral decay along the US-Mexico border. The movie's lengthy, unbroken opening sequence remains a technical achievement and highlights themes of police corruption and personal obsession. It’s notable for its dark atmosphere and com...

8 Bell Rock Lighthouse

Bell Rock Lighthouse, constructed in 1857 on a submerged granite outcrop off the coast of Maine, is renowned for its innovative spiral staircase design and crucial role in guiding ships through treacherous waters within Penobscot Bay.

9 Peggy's Point Lighthouse

Peggy's Point Lighthouse is a Nova Scotia beacon whose present concrete tower was first lit in 1915 at the entrance to St. Margaret's Bay.

10 Peggy's Cove Lighthouse

The Peggy’s Cove Lighthouse, situated on the southwestern tip of Nova Scotia’s Halifax Harbour, is a historic granite tower built in 1823 to guide ships through treacherous waters and remains a beloved landmark today.

11 La Jument Lighthouse

La Jument Lighthouse, located on Île de la Jument off the coast of Brittany, France, was constructed in 1846 and stands as a distinctive hexagonal granite tower guiding mariners through hazardous waters due to strong currents and reefs.

12 Heceta Head Light

Heceta Head Light is an Oregon Coast lighthouse first lit in 1894, with a beam visible 21 nautical miles from its 205-foot headland.

13 Smeaton's Tower

Smeaton's Tower is the rebuilt upper part of John Smeaton's 1759 Eddystone Lighthouse, a landmark in stone lighthouse engineering.

14 Cape Neddick Light

Cape Neddick Light, or Nubble Light, is a Maine lighthouse first used in 1879, later pictured on the Voyager Golden Record.

15 Split Rock Lighthouse

The Split Rock Lighthouse, perched on a rugged granite headland in Minnesota’s North Shore wilderness, guides ships through dangerous shoals with its powerful Fresnel lens and distinctive beacon since 1925.

16 Cape Hatteras Lighthouse

The Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, located in Buxton, North Carolina, stands as the tallest brick structure in North America and has guided ships along the Outer Banks coastline since its completion in 1870.

17 Bass Harbor Head Light

Bass Harbor Head Light is a Maine lighthouse first lit in 1858, marking Bass Harbor and Blue Hill Bay within today's Acadia National Park.

18 Hook Head Lighthouse

Hook Head Lighthouse, located at the easternmost point of Ireland, is a historic granite tower built in 1793 to warn ships of the dangerous rocks and currents surrounding Dublin Bay, operating continuously until 1947.

19 Nubble Light

Nubble Light, officially designated York Island Lighthouse, is a granite New England landmark situated on a small, rocky island off the coast of York, Maine, guiding mariners since its construction in 1872.

20 Ponce de Leon Inlet Light

Ponce de Leon Inlet Light is an 1887 Florida lighthouse near Daytona Beach, a 175-foot tower that became a National Historic Landmark in 1998.

21 Cape Spear Lighthouse

Cape Spear Lighthouse is Newfoundland's oldest surviving lighthouse, first lit in 1836 near St. John's at Canada's easternmost point.

22 Genoa Lanterna

The Lanterna di Punta della Signora is a historic cylindrical lighthouse perched atop a rocky promontory in Genoa, Italy, built in the 16th century to guide ships into the bustling port of Genoa and still operates today.

23 Skerryvore Lighthouse

Skerryvore Lighthouse, situated on a remote Scottish island, is the tallest sea lighthouse in Europe, standing at 63 meters and utilizing a powerful fixed optic to guide ships through hazardous waters since its completion in 1897.

24 Eddystone Lighthouse

Standing on Plymouth Sound, Eddystone Lighthouse was constructed in 1794 following the collapse of its predecessor, built by John Sullivan, and remains one of Britain’s most iconic and perilous navigational beacons.

25 Fastnet Rock Lighthouse

Fastnet Rock Lighthouse, situated on Ireland’s southwestern coast, is a towering granite structure built in 1877 to warn mariners of dangerous reefs and currents within the notoriously hazardous Fastnet Race area.

26 Heceta Head Lighthouse

Heceta Head Lighthouse, perched dramatically on a rocky promontory in Oregon’s Tillamook Bay, was constructed in 1889 and continues to operate as an active aid to navigation, guiding ships through treacherous coastal waters.

27 Sandy Hook Light

Sandy Hook Light is a 1764 New Jersey lighthouse built by Isaac Conro to guide New York Harbor traffic; it is the oldest working U.S. lighthouse.

28 St. Augustine Light

St. Augustine Light is an 1874 Florida lighthouse on Anastasia Island, a 165-foot tower designed by Paul J. Pelz with a first-order Fresnel lens.

29 Yaquina Head Light

Yaquina Head Light is an 1873 Oregon lighthouse near Newport, the state's tallest at 93 feet, with an 1868 French first-order Fresnel lens.

30 Bishop Rock Lighthouse

Bishop Rock Lighthouse, situated on a remote granite islet in the Atlantic Ocean off Cornwall, England, is one of the world’s most isolated and dangerous lighthouses, maintained by Trinity House since 1859.

Loading more...

Save to your list

Save your favorites and follow how their scores change over time.

Save favorites
Get updates
Compare scores

Already have an account? Sign in

Compare Items

See how they stack up against each other

Comparing
VS
Select 1 more item to compare