Within South Carolina UFOs

Are Myrtle Beach UFO Reports Really Unusual?

Myrtle Beach leads South Carolina reporting totals, but tourism, night skies and ocean horizons complicate the mystery.

On this page

  • Why coastal cities generate so many reports
  • Common shapes, colours and witness descriptions
  • How tourism, aircraft and ocean horizons affect interpretation
Preview for Are Myrtle Beach UFO Reports Really Unusual?

Introduction

Myrtle Beach is unusual in South Carolina UFO history because it produces a dense, repeatable cluster of reports rather than one dominant landmark case. The pattern is especially strong along the Grand Strand: Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach and nearby beach towns repeatedly appear in civilian reporting, often with witnesses describing orange, red or white lights over the Atlantic that appear, fade, reappear, line up or drift in groups. NUFORC-based rankings put Myrtle Beach first in South Carolina for reports since 1995, ahead of North Myrtle Beach and Charleston, which makes the area a genuine reporting hotspot even if it does not prove anything extraordinary. [Stacker]stacker.comcities most ufo sightings south carolinareports as of April 25, 2025. But what do the numbers look… North Myrtle Beach - UFO sightings: 139 #1. Myrtle Beach - UFO sightings…Published: April 25, 2025

Overview image for Myrtle Beach The key point is that Myrtle Beach is both a good place to see odd-looking lights and a difficult place to interpret them. A tourist coastline creates many night-time observers; the ocean horizon removes familiar distance cues; aircraft, drones, boats, flares, satellites and military activity all complicate what people think they are seeing. The result is a coastal lights pattern that matters historically, but remains evidentially mixed.

Why do Myrtle Beach reports stand out in South Carolina?

Myrtle Beach’s prominence is partly numerical. A 2025 Stacker analysis of National UFO Reporting Center data, covering reports since 1995, listed Myrtle Beach as South Carolina’s highest-reporting city with 317 sightings, followed by North Myrtle Beach with 139 and Charleston with 82. The same list also included Surfside Beach and Pawleys Island, meaning several of the state’s top ten reporting locations sit along or near the Grand Strand rather than being spread evenly across South Carolina. [Stacker]stacker.comcities most ufo sightings south carolinareports as of April 25, 2025. But what do the numbers look… North Myrtle Beach - UFO sightings: 139 #1. Myrtle Beach - UFO sightings…Published: April 25, 2025

That concentration is important, but it needs careful handling. NUFORC is a civilian reporting database, not a verification system. It records what witnesses say they saw, usually without radar, calibrated imagery, physical evidence or official investigation. A city with thousands of holidaymakers on balconies, piers, beaches and hotel decks will naturally generate more reports than a town where fewer people are outside looking across a dark horizon. That is why Myrtle Beach’s high count is best read as a reporting pattern first and a mystery second.

Older per-capita rankings have made the area look even more striking. Local and regional coverage of a TruePeopleSearch Insights analysis reported Surfside Beach, Myrtle Beach and North Myrtle Beach among the top North American cities for UFO sightings per 100,000 residents, with Myrtle Beach and North Myrtle Beach appearing high on the list. The Myrtle Beach Online report also noted that the analysis could not definitively separate hoaxes, mistakes and genuinely unexplained reports. [Myrtle Beach Sun News]myrtlebeachonline.comMyrtle Beach Sun News Myrtle Beach SC declared a 'hotspot' for UFO sightings3 with 671 sightings per 100,000 people, Myrtle Beach at No. 6 with 507 per 100,000 residents, and North Myrtle…Read more…

That caveat matters because beach towns distort per-capita statistics. Myrtle Beach’s resident population is much smaller than the number of people who pass through it each year, so a “per resident” UFO rate can make a tourist city look stranger than it really is. The denominator counts locals; the observers may include visitors from across the country. This does not erase the pattern, but it changes the question from “why is Myrtle Beach uniquely anomalous?” to “why do so many people report unusual lights from this particular coastal viewing platform?”

Myrtle Beach illustration 1

What do witnesses usually describe?

The most distinctive Myrtle Beach reports are not usually classic daylight discs. They are night-time lights, often over the ocean, and often described as orange or red “orbs”, “fireballs” or grouped lights that brighten and fade. This is why the Grand Strand pattern feels different from South Carolina’s older Blue Book-era cases: it is less about a single official file and more about recurring civilian descriptions.

Several NUFORC reports show the pattern clearly. In April 2008, two witnesses in North Myrtle Beach reported orange spheres appearing and disappearing over the Atlantic for roughly half an hour, with up to three visible at once and apparently moving randomly. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org. In October 2014, four witnesses in Myrtle Beach reported six orange orbs appearing in quick succession in a horizontal line above the ocean, each briefly brightening before fading; the witness also mentioned aircraft nearby and a helicopter with a searchlight after the incident. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.

A 2017 North Myrtle Beach report is especially useful because it describes not just one event but a repeated local expectation. Three witnesses said they had seen orange orbs “numerous times over the years”, usually around 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. over the ocean, sometimes appearing in a straight line and then reappearing scattered elsewhere. The report itself says the witnesses had found similar accounts along North and South Carolina beaches but had not found a firm explanation. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.

Not every report fits the orange-light template. Recent NUFORC entries include white and orange orbs near the coast, red-and-white shapes, and fast-moving circular objects above the ocean. One January 2025 Myrtle Beach report described multiple white and smaller orange orbs shortly after sunset, but NUFORC added a note that the attached video appeared to show only a planet. That note is a useful reminder that sincere witnesses can misread ordinary sky objects, especially at twilight. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.

Why coastal cities generate so many reports

The Grand Strand is almost designed to create ambiguous sky reports. Many people are outside after dark, facing the same open horizon, often from elevated hotel balconies or beachfront restaurants. Over the sea, lights can appear detached from any visible ground reference. A boat, aircraft, flare or drone can seem stationary, low, close, far away, rising from the water, or silently hovering depending on distance, haze and viewing angle.

Myrtle Beach also has a busy aviation environment. Myrtle Beach International Airport describes itself as the Grand Strand’s gateway, with more than 50 nonstop destinations and ten airline partners. [Myrtle]facebook.comSource details in endnotes. Beach International Airport The airport sits close to the beach and serves a tourist corridor, so commercial aircraft, general aviation and airport approaches can all contribute to night-time light traffic. For a visitor who does not know the local flight paths, a landing light turning towards the viewer can look like a bright fixed object before it changes direction or fades.

Military aviation is another relevant factor, though it should not be used as a blanket explanation for every report. WPDE reported in 2017 that Contract Air Services was working with the US Navy on military training exercises flying out of KMYR next to Myrtle Beach International Airport, advising residents not to be alarmed by military-type aircraft along the Grand Strand. [WPDE]wpde.comMilitary aircraft training exercises being conducted at MyrtleMilitary aircraft training exercises being conducted at Myrtle More generally, the FAA defines offshore warning areas as airspace extending from three nautical miles off the US coast that may contain activity hazardous to non-participating aircraft. [Federal Aviation Administration]faa.govSource details in endnotes. That does not identify any single Myrtle Beach sighting, but it shows why coastal airspace can include activity that ordinary beachgoers may not recognise.

Boating traffic adds another layer. The US Coast Guard’s visual distress signal material covers approved maritime signals, including orange smoke signals and pyrotechnic devices. [dco.uscg.mil]dco.uscg.milVisual Distress Signals (VDSVisual Distress Signals (VDS Boating safety guidance also lists red flares, meteor flares and parachute flares among distress-signal options for night or poor-visibility use. [Drive a Boat USA]driveaboatusa.comDrive a Boat USAVisual Distress Signals on a Boat: Types and RegulationsDrive a Boat USAVisual Distress Signals on a Boat: Types and Regulations A distant flare over water can match several common Myrtle Beach witness descriptions: a bright red-orange light, short duration, apparent hovering, fading, and reappearance in a nearby position.

Myrtle Beach illustration 2

The coastal lights pattern: mystery or repeated misidentification?

The strongest argument for treating Myrtle Beach as a meaningful UFO subtopic is repetition. Reports separated by years describe similar orange lights over the Atlantic, often after dark, sometimes appearing in lines or groups. The 2008, 2014 and 2017 NUFORC reports are not identical, but they rhyme: orange lights, ocean-facing witnesses, brief appearances, fading, and uncertainty over distance or altitude. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.

The strongest argument against treating the pattern as strong evidence is that the reports usually lack the data needed to distinguish between extraordinary objects and ordinary lights seen under difficult conditions. AARO, the US government office tasked with UAP analysis, says its work uses a scientific and data-driven approach. [AARO]aaro.milOpen source on aaro.mil. Its 2024 historical report warns that most UAP sightings have little beyond a vague narrative account, and that even when “hard data” exists it is often incomplete or poor quality. [U.S. Department of War]media.defense.govDOPSR 2024 0263 AARO HISTORICAL RECORD REPORT VOLUME 1 2024DOPSR 2024 0263 AARO HISTORICAL RECORD REPORT VOLUME 1 2024 Myrtle Beach reports often fall into that same problem: they may be vivid, repeated and sincere, but they are rarely supported by synchronised video, flight data, radar, vessel data and exact viewing geometry.

The most plausible explanations vary by case:

Aircraft and approach lights can appear fixed when coming towards the viewer, then seem to fade or move when they turn. The airport’s heavy tourist role and many nonstop routes make this a routine possibility around Myrtle Beach. [Myrtle]facebook.comSource details in endnotes.

Flares and military training are a good fit for some red-orange lights that appear over water, glow intensely, descend slowly or vanish. This explanation becomes stronger when reports mention grouped orange lights, brief burn times, and offshore locations, but it should still be checked against dates, exercise notices and witness direction.

Boats and maritime signals can produce red, white or orange lights over the water, especially when distance is hard to judge. Coast Guard-approved visual distress signals and boating flares are real coastal light sources, not speculative debunking tools. [dco.uscg.mil]dco.uscg.milVisual Distress Signals (VDSVisual Distress Signals (VDS

Planets, satellites and Starlink trains can confuse even careful observers, particularly near dusk when objects catch sunlight against a darkening sky. NASA’s UAP independent study report stresses that many UAP observations suffer from limited high-quality data, making it hard to separate unfamiliar but ordinary objects from genuinely unexplained ones. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govScience Independent Study Team ReportScience Independent Study Team Report

Drones are increasingly relevant, especially near tourist zones where photography, recreation and commercial use overlap. The FAA tells drone pilots they are responsible for knowing where they can fly, including airspace restrictions around airports. [Federal Aviation Administration]faa.govSource details in endnotes. In a city close to an airport, a drone light seen from a balcony can be hard to distinguish from a more distant aircraft or unexplained object unless its range, direction and altitude are known.

The tourism effect: more witnesses, more reports, more noise

Myrtle Beach’s UFO reputation cannot be separated from tourism. The city is marketed as a leisure destination, and even its official tourism site has leaned into the idea that visitors might look for unexplained lights over the Atlantic. [Visit Myrtle Beach]visitmyrtlebeach.comufos in myrtle beach 10 space themed activities to try on your next tripufos in myrtle beach 10 space themed activities to try on your next trip That does not make reports fake. It means the setting encourages sky-watching, storytelling and online reporting in a way that inland communities may not.

This creates three effects that are easy to confuse.

First, there are more potential witnesses. A hotel-lined coastline puts large numbers of people outside at night, often facing east across the ocean. Even rare or ordinary events can be noticed by many people.

Second, there are more unfamiliar observers. Visitors may not know where aircraft usually appear, how offshore lights behave, where boats sit at night, or how haze affects the horizon. A local pilot, fisherman or airport worker might interpret the same light differently from a first-time holidaymaker.

Third, there is more cultural expectation. Once a place is described as a hotspot, people look harder and report more readily. That feedback loop can preserve genuinely puzzling accounts, but it can also amplify weak ones. Myrtle Beach therefore sits in a middle category: not dismissible as a single hoax or rumour, but not proven as an anomalous zone either.

The 2023 Chinese balloon incident off Myrtle Beach shows how quickly a coastal sky event can become a public spectacle when many people can see it from the shore. Associated Press reported that crowds gathered on beaches, in hotel areas and neighbourhoods as the balloon was shot down offshore, with debris later recovered from shallow waters. [AP News]apnews.comAP News Chinese balloon's downing creates spectacle over tourism hubAP News Chinese balloon's downing creates spectacle over tourism hub That incident was identified, official and geopolitical rather than a UFO case, but it demonstrates the same observational setting: a populated tourist coast, a visible object over or near the ocean, and rapid public attention.

Myrtle Beach illustration 3

What would make a Myrtle Beach sighting stronger?

The best Myrtle Beach reports are not the most dramatic ones; they are the ones with enough detail to test. A useful report needs more than “orange lights over the ocean”. It needs time, direction, elevation, duration, movement, number of witnesses, exact location, weather, aircraft checks, satellite checks, and whether the lights were seen from more than one place.

A stronger Myrtle Beach case would have several features at once: independent witnesses from separated locations, consistent timing, video with fixed landmarks, flight-tracking comparison, vessel or Coast Guard context, and a check against known drone, satellite and military activity. Without that, a report may remain interesting but not very diagnostic.

This is why the coastal lights pattern is best understood as a theme cluster rather than a solved case. It is real as a reporting pattern: Myrtle Beach and North Myrtle Beach repeatedly generate accounts of orange, red and white lights over the Atlantic. It is weak as proof of extraordinary craft: most cases are short, visual, night-time reports with limited corroborating data. The honest conclusion is neither “nothing happened” nor “Myrtle Beach has alien visitors”, but that the Grand Strand is one of South Carolina’s clearest examples of how place, tourism, aviation and the ocean horizon can turn ordinary and possibly unusual lights into a persistent UFO tradition.

How Myrtle Beach fits the wider South Carolina UFO story

Within South Carolina’s UFO history, Myrtle Beach plays a different role from the state’s older archival cases. The New Ellenton/Savannah River Plant material belongs to the Cold War world of sensitive facilities, official files and military concern. Myrtle Beach belongs to the modern civilian-reporting world: public databases, phone videos, tourist witnesses, local news stories and recurring online discussion.

That makes it valuable, but in a different way. Myrtle Beach helps explain why South Carolina’s UFO geography is coastal as well as inland. It shows how a place can become prominent not because one case is exceptionally strong, but because many weaker reports share a recognisable shape. It also shows why UFO history cannot be read from report totals alone. High numbers may point to something worth examining, but they may also point to where people gather, look up, film lights and file reports.

The coastal lights pattern remains unresolved in the broad sense that no single explanation accounts for every account. Some reports are probably aircraft, flares, drones, boats, planets or satellites. Some are too thin to judge. A smaller number may remain genuinely unidentified because the information needed to resolve them was never collected. Myrtle Beach’s significance lies in that tension: it is South Carolina’s most visible modern UFO reporting cluster, but also one of the clearest warnings that a hotspot is not the same thing as hard evidence.

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Endnotes

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    Title: cities most ufo sightings south carolina
    Link: https://stacker.com/stories/south-carolina/cities-most-ufo-sightings-south-carolina
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    reports as of April 25, 2025. But what do the numbers look... North Myrtle Beach - UFO sightings: 139 #1. Myrtle Beach - UFO sightings...

    Published: April 25, 2025

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    3 with 671 sightings per 100,000 people, Myrtle Beach at No. 6 with 507 per 100,000 residents, and North Myrtle...Read more...

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Additional References

  1. Source: youtube.com
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCKvKuorwhc
    Source snippet

    REAL footage UFO flying over Myrtle Beach SC 12/7/08...

  2. Source: youtube.com
    Title: Time-lapse video catches mysterious lights over Myrtle Beach
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RY2kqK9Sh_k
    Source snippet

    Experience the Encounters: UFO Experience at Myrtle Beach...

  3. Source: youtube.com
    Title: REAL footage UFO flying over Myrtle Beach SC 12/7/08
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRN5YhlyL5k
    Source snippet

    Time-lapse video catches mysterious lights over Myrtle Beach...

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