The off-leash area at Miramar sprawls across several fenced acres with enough room that dogs rarely feel crowded even on weekend mornings. The park splits into separate zones—a larger field for bigger dogs and a smaller enclosure for dogs under 25 pounds—so your small dog won’t get bowled over by a 90-pound Lab mix. Grass covers most of the main area, which drains reasonably well after rain, though sections near the edges can get soft. There’s a water station on-site, and scattered trees provide some relief from the sun, though midday in summer you’ll want to arrive early or wait until late afternoon.
Dogs run free year-round, and the park has no day-use fees. The gates typically open at dawn and close at dusk, though hours can shift seasonally. Peak times tend to fall between 9 a.m. and noon on weekends, when the lot fills quickly and the social dog cliques are already well established. Weekday afternoons draw a smaller, often quieter crowd. The terrain is mostly flat with no significant elevation changes, so older dogs or those recovering from injury handle it without strain.
Miramar sits in the Torrance area with street parking along the perimeter—arrive early if you’re coming during busy windows, as the lot can max out. The park backs near residential neighborhoods, so the noise level stays manageable. Bring water for your dog in summer; the on-site station works but isn’t always reliably cool. Tennis courts and playgrounds sit adjacent, so the park draws families throughout the day, making it a genuinely mixed-use space rather than a dog-only enclave.





