CHOOSE YOUR SPORT :

Search

SPOTS

You are here: Home  > SPOTS

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    São João - Poça

    This is a city wave and comes with plenty of facilities and plenty of crowds. When it`s on, the level of surfing here gets pretty good and it`s not a rare sight to see Portugese pros ripping it up on their homebreak. A fairly consistent, mid-tide reef with a fun cover up section on the take off....

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Monte Estoril

    A sectiony, fat, fairly uncrowded righthander that breaks off a man-made jetty. It can handle massive swells and the bigger it gets the further out it will...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Torre

    The first surfspot you`ll see in the Tagus estuary coming from Carcavelos. Park at the Forte de São Julião da Barra, located on the headland between Praia de Carcavelos and Praia do Torre. Torre is a very sheltered spot that works best in stormy winter conditions when Carcavelos is too big and...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Cresmina

    Cresmina is located right next to the bigger, much better known Praia do Guincho, and is sometimes reffered to as `Little Guincho`. Cresmina has similar conditions to Guincho and is very exposed to all the elements the Atlantic coast has to offer. But unlike Guincho, Cresmina is backed by...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Meio da Baia

    A seemingly endless stretch of pristine sand with a plenitude of peaks catering to most levels of surfing. Mostly mellow in the summer, but can get big, heavy and hollow during the winter months. Plenty of space to launch a kite as well with steady winds and open space on the water.  

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Fonte da Telha

    A sheltered alternative when the surf is too big for your level at Costa da Caparica, Fonte de Telha is a peaceful, sleepy town for most of the year, but comes alive during the summer. Wave quality depends on sandbars, swell and wind direction, but is mostly above...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Praia das Maçãs

    Praia das Maçãs, also known as the Apple Beach. In the olden days, apples that fell off their trees and into the Ribeira de Colares, were taken downstream and scattered in the ocean at the mouth of the river at Praia das Maçãs: hence the name Apple Beach.
    Nowadays, Praia das Maçãs...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Parede

    This is one of the rarest waves to break on the Costa do Estoril, but when a big swell hits Portugal it can turn into a regular footer`s dream with long rideable walls. Most surfers head for the more consistent peaks of Carcavelos, so Parede rarely gets crowded.
    © Rui Oliveira / 

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    São João - Azarujinha

    One of the few lefthanders on this part of the Portugese coastline. It`s a fairly consistent wave that can produce quality waves even on the smaller days, due to it`s protected location from onshore winds. Park your car at Praia da Poca or on the Avenida Marginal and walk southwards, where...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Praia Grande

    One of the most renowned spots of this coastline with a local crew as heavy as it`s waves. Rumours say that the hardest charging locals of Portugal hail from this ultra-consistent playgroud. Always fun, busy and easily maxes out for the average travelling surfer. Keep a low profile!
    © Rui...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Praia do Guincho

    Guincho made the world aware of Portugal`s surf potential, after photos of huge surf were published in Surfer Magazine `67, September issue.
    The stunning bay is located near Cabo da Roca, the most western cape of Europe, and therefore is a swell and wind magnet. Windsurfers and kitesurfers...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Carcavelos

    Carcavelos was one of the first breaks to be surfed in Portugal and due to its proximity to the center of Lisbon, is usually very crowded. Fairly consistent surf throughout the tide and works with a wide variety of conditions. The predominant N/NE wind blows offshore here, making it a good...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Foz do Lizandro

    A beautiful beach at the mouth of the Rio Lizandro with all facilities a spoiled surfer can dream of. When the sandbars settle correctly, this can be a classic beachbreak with a decent amount of power! A good place to launch your kite too on windy days.
    © Rui Oliveira / 

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Santa Cruz

    A long stretch of virgin sand with plenty of peaks to keep the average surfer satisfied. The breaks in front of the village tend to become busy in the summer, but park your car, walk 1km north or south and you`ll find empty waves waiting for you. Santa Cruz is wind exposed which can spoil the...

  • Item thumbnail
    0

    Caxias

    Caxias is the last surf spot in the Tagus Estuary and the only left hander between a wide range of rights. All the surf spots between Torre and Caxias only come alive during the winter months when the Costa do Estoril is maxing out. Torre and Caxias are also the easiest spots around here,...