Playa Las Lajas seasonal overview
Best Surf Season (December - March)
The heart of the dry season delivers the most consistent and clean conditions at Playa Las Lajas. With the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) positioned well to the south, strong high pressure over the Caribbean funnels steady offshore winds from the north through northeast. These winds groom the persistent SSW and SW groundswells into clean, peeling lines. Average wave heights hover around 0.7m, but the long periods (12-13s) bring punchy, well-defined surf that is surprisingly fun for the size. The average wind ideal for surfing sits above 70%, reaching 79% in February. This is the window for glassy mornings and consistent, rideable waves.
Fair Surf Season (April & November)
These transition months straddle the shift between dry and wet seasons. In April, the trade winds begin to weaken, but a solid 62% of the time the wind is still offshore, primarily from the north and NNE. Swell from the SSW is plentiful, with 96.6% of waves coming from that direction, and the average period climbs to 13.8s, offering long, lined-up waves. However, the swell height remains modest (mostly 0.5-1m). November mirrors April in many ways, though with a slightly lower ideal wind percentage (51%). The swell window opens up more to the SW as the southern hemisphere storm track stirs, offering a mix of SSW and SW swells with periods around 12s. It's a gamble, but when the wind aligns, there are excellent, clean waves to be had.
Low Surf Season (May - October)
The wet season brings the ITCZ overhead, leading to a dramatic increase in onshore, southerly to westerly winds. The percentage of ideal offshore winds drops to between 44% and 53%, with October being the worst. While the average swell height actually increases slightly to 1.0m and the SW component becomes more prominent with more 1-1.5m waves, the wind-ruined conditions make for messy, choppy surf most of the time. A significant amount of wind comes from the SSW, SW, and WSW - directly onshore for this south-facing beach. Occasional windows of offshore N or NNE breezes can occur, particularly in the early mornings or when a strong cold front pushes through the Gulf of Mexico, but these are fleeting. The surf is generally small, weak, and blown out, best left to longboards on the rare clean day.
