Alabama Point Surf Guide

Surf spot guide

Ideal Surf Conditions

Swell Direction

SE

Wind

N

Surf Height

Knee-high to overhead.

Tide

If you catch a swell in Alabama, surf it into the ground. Tide be damned.

Alabama Point Surf Guide

With only about 50 miles of swell exposure and shallow sand flats hampering swell production — Alabama beachbreaks are abominably fickle and require a significant amount of local S-SE windswell or, more ideally, a strong tropical system to produce rideable waves. With its breakwater/seawall setup and assortment of jetties/groins, Alabama Point at Orange Beach often makes the most sense of any available energy from the Gulf, capable of holding up to six-foot faces during bigger SE swells, making it one of the best options on the Alabama mainland.

Ability Level

All Abilities

BegIntAdv

Everybody until the rarest of hurricane swells produces spitting barrels, which draws rippers out of the woodwork.

Local Vibe

Welcoming

WelcomingIntimidating

Alabamians are perhaps the friendliest surfers in the country. Both of them.

Crowd Factor

Mellow

MellowHeavy

A big, moody swell might summon the odd ripper from the Panhandle, but there’s always more than enough to go around.

Spot Rating

Poor

PoorPerfect

Manmade structures make this one of Alabama’s most dependable surf zones. But it’s still Alabama.

Shoulder Burn

Light

LightExhausting

It’s shallow, there’s structures — piece of cake.

Water Quality

Dirty

CleanDirty

Silt from the Mississippi and a history of oil spills is the reality in the Gulf of Mexico. Historically failed to meet water quality standards, less than 60% of the time.

Hazards

Sharks, jellyfish, pollution.

Bring Your

Shortboard, Fish, Funboard, Longboard

Access

Free parking.

Bottom

Sand.

Best Season

September-March

Do you have local knowledge about Alabama Point?

If you have any insights or information to add to this spot guide, drop us a note at [email protected]