Southwest Florida is a region in the U.S. state of Florida. It comprises the Gulf Coast counties of Sarasota, Charlotte, Lee, and Collier.
One of the best beach areas in Florida, the Southwest is about as "Florida" as anywhere in the state. This region is densely populated, prosperous, and popular with tourists with its mild winters and suburban feel. Although there are no big cities in this area, many of the mid-sized cities have grown to become metro areas, such as Sarasota, Port Charlotte, Fort Myers, and Naples.
Sarasota is just south of the Tampa Bay Area and is at the northern end of the region. One of the adjacent barrier islands, Siesta Key, is an acclaimed tourist destination due to its white sand of its beaches. The smaller town of Venice lies to the south, and beyond it Port Charlotte (and its suburb North Port) and Fort Myers (and its suburb Cape Coral) are two of the largest and most important cities in this region, both stretching across estuaries of two different rivers.
In the south, on the border with the Everglades, the beaches closest to the Everglades' swamps are in Naples and Marco Island. Naples is on the mainland, while Marco Island to the south, the last tourist destination of the Gulf Coast before the Everglades, is on an island that extends into the Gulf.
The climate is a little variable here, with southern winters milder than northern winters, but there is no true "winter" in this region. It is semitropical, like Miami on the other coast, although perhaps slightly more exposed to cold air masses from the north.
I-75 is the main interstate, going from Miami in the southeast to the Tampa/St. Pete area in the northwest.
The beach towns have the most sites, including some attractive commercial areas. On the mainland there are a few historic sites.
Find a boat tour around the intracoastal waterway or the shoreline of the Gulf of Mexico if you can.