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Satellite Beach seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (October - March)

The North Atlantic winter machine cranks up in October, delivering a steady diet of ENE and E swell to Satellite Beach's east-northeast facing shores. With average swell heights climbing to 0.9-1.0m and periods pushing into the 8.6-9.0s range, the wave quality jumps markedly. The real key is the wind: stronger pressure gradients from cold fronts sweeping across the Southeast US bring more frequent intervals of offshore flow from the SW through WNW quadrants. During these windows, the typically onshore-dominant E/ENE swell gets cleaned up, producing punchy, rippable lines. December through February offer the highest percentage of ideal wind (14-16%), making this the prime window for quality surf.

Fair Surf Season (April - May & September)

Spring and early fall represent transitional periods. April sees the tail end of winter swell, with average heights still around 0.8m and a decent mix of NE to E swell. However, the wind becomes less cooperative — ideal offshore flow drops to 13%, and increasing onshore sea breezes from the ESE and SE (common in April at 13% and 11% respectively) degrade surface quality. May is a step down: swell heights dip to 0.7m, periods shorten to 7.9s, and ideal wind plummets to 11%. September shows a promising uptick in swell energy (0.8m, 9.0s) as hurricane season stirs the Atlantic, but wind remains fickle — onshore ENE flow dominates at 15% of the time. Only when tropical systems track favorably and winds shift westerly does September deliver gems.

Low Surf Season (June - August)

Summer is the doldrums for Satellite Beach. From June through August, average swell heights bottom out at 0.5-0.6m with periods around 7.6-8.1s — too small and weak to generate meaningful surf. The swell direction is overwhelmingly E and ESE (over 70% combined in July), which is directly onshore for this ENE-facing beach. Worse, the wind climatology is dominated by light to moderate onshore flow from the SSE through SW, with ideal offshore wind from the west only occurring 8-11% of the time. The result is a long stretch of tiny, choppy, closed-out conditions. Occasional pulses from distant hurricanes or tropical storms can fire up the beach, but they are rare and unreliable. Overall, summer is a time for longboards and grovelers, not performance surfing.