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Unstad seasonal overview

Best Surf Season (October - March)

The North Atlantic roars to life during these months, and Unstad feels the full force of the winter storm track. Average swell heights climb to 1.5-1.9m with periods averaging 8.8-10.2s, often delivering powerful, long-period groundswells from the W to NNW quadrant that pulse directly into the bay. While the percentage of ideal offshore wind (E through SSE) sits at a modest 11-14%, the combination of a dominant SW-to-W swell and frequent SE winds can align to produce world-class, hollow walls at this iconic Arctic pointbreak. The NAO index heavily influences activity: a negative phase can shunt storms south, leaving smaller surf, while a positive phase funnels gale after gale toward the Lofoten Islands. When it all clicks, you get pumping, firing waves with light offshores – this is the window for charging.

Fair Surf Season (April & September)

Transitional months offer a mixed bag. April sees average swell drop to 1.2m and period to 8.8s, with more windswell influence, while September ramps back up to 1.2m and 8.5s as autumn lows begin to deepen. In April, the wind is ideal 14% of the time, but the dominant swell shifts to a north-northwest component – which can be on the big side but often choppy. September benefits from a higher percentage of clean SW-to-W swell and a decent shot at offshore ESE winds. Both months can deliver fun, rippable conditions on the smaller days, but consistency is lower than winter.

Low Surf Season (May - August)

Summer is a tough time for Unstad. Average swell heights hover around 0.8-0.9m with short periods of 6.9-7.8s, meaning mostly weak, choppy windswell. The dominant swell direction shifts to the north-northeast, which is largely blocked or shadowed by the surrounding coast. On top of that, the wind is ideal only 8-11% of the time, and strong thermal lows generate persistent NNE winds that are directly onshore for the WNW-facing beach. The result is predominantly small, messy, and often blown-out surf. Occasional long-period southwesterly groundswells can sneak in, but they require a rare combination of distant storm and perfect local wind – a true low-light season best suited for a cold-water paddle or exploring the Arctic landscape.