Playa de Famara seasonal overview
Best Surf Season (October - March)
The North Atlantic roars to life from October through March, delivering the most consistent and powerful surf to Famara. During these months, the average swell height climbs to 1.5-1.7m and the dominant wave period stretches into the 11-13 second range, fueled by extratropical cyclones tracking across the North Atlantic. While the prevailing winds are from the north and northeast—blowing onshore and often chopping up the waves—the frequency of south and southwest winds (offshore for this northwesterly exposure) peaks in this window, with ideal wind conditions occurring 7-15% of the time. This is when you have the best shot at clean, long-period swell wrapping into the bay. When a high-pressure system sets up over North Africa and a low swings by the British Isles, the pressure gradient flips the wind to a light offshore from the south, and the combination with a solid NW or NNW groundswell yields firing, glassy conditions at Famara. It's a gamble, but the payoff is epic.
Fair Surf Season (April & September)
April and September serve as transition months, with the average swell dropping slightly to 1.2-1.5m and periods averaging 9-11 seconds. The chance of offshore wind drops to 3-4% as the trade wind regime strengthens, but these months still see occasional pulses of longer-period swell from winter-like storms. The swell direction shifts increasingly to the north-northeast, making the wave quality more dependent on clean wind windows. These are months of mixed conditions—some days you get fun, rippable waves with average period, and others you're dealing with choppy, onshore slop. It's a decent time for the less crowded lineup, but don't expect the same consistency as the heart of winter.
Low Surf Season (May - August)
From May through August, Famara enters its low surf season. The average swell height sits around 1.2-1.4m with short periods of 7-9 seconds, generated by local windswell rather than powerful storms. The prevalence of strong north-northeast trade winds (the Alisios) becomes overwhelming, blowing onshore a whopping 99-100% of the time, with ideal offshore wind conditions dropping to 0-2%. Most of the swell comes from the north and NNE, which combined with these onshore winds creates generally messy, choppy, and weak surf. While there may be an occasional small, clean morning window when the wind is light, the consistent trades quickly wreck the surface. This is the time to explore other activities or bring a groveler for the rare fun session. The ocean is warm and inviting, but the wave quality suffers under the relentless summer pattern.
