Polzeath seasonal overview
Best Surf Season (October - March)
The North Atlantic becomes a relentless swell machine during these months, with average wave heights consistently above 1.8m and periods ranging from 10s to over 12s. The dominant W to WNW swell direction aligns perfectly with Polzeath's WNW-facing beach, delivering powerful, long-period groundswells that can easily reach pumping (1.5-2.5m) to firing (2.5m+) heights. However, the trade-off is persistent onshore winds from the SW through NW quadrant, which degrade wave quality. The bright side? When a high-pressure system settles over the UK or Scandinavia, it funnels crisp offshore winds from the ENE through SE, turning the heavy, raw swell into clean, hollow, rippable lines. This is the prime window for advanced surfers chasing size and power.
Fair Surf Season (April, May, September)
As the transition months, these offer a blend of leftover winter energy and early summer consistency, with average swell heights between 1.2m and 1.5m and periods in the 9-10s range. The swell direction remains dominated by W and WNW, but the overall energy is dialed back, producing mostly fun to good (1-1.5m) conditions. Wind patterns become slightly more favourable: the percentage of ideal offshore winds (ENE-SE) creeps up to 24-27%, compared to the deep winter months. This means more clean, peeling waves, especially on the smaller days when the wind is light. It's an excellent time for intermediate surfers looking for manageable, yet periodic, quality surf.
Low Surf Season (June - August)
Summer brings the smallest surf of the year, with average heights dropping to 1.0-1.1m and periods shrinking to 8-9 seconds. While the swell direction remains predominantly from the W and WNW, the wave energy is mostly small (0.5-1m) to fun-sized (1-1.5m) at best, often lacking the push for serious performance. The wind becomes the biggest challenge: ideal offshore wind days are scarce (only 16-18% of the time), and the prevailing SW-W winds are directly onshore, making conditions often choppy and messy. However, early morning sea breezes or the occasional thermal offshore can salvage a session, especially on a rising summer swell from a distant storm. It's a time for groveling on small-wave gear, with days of clean waves being a rare treat.
