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Home/Surf Conditions/ Desert Point
Live conditions

Desert Point

Indonesia Β· Indo-Pacific

Updated 43 min ago
🌦️
Type:reef
Shelter:exposed
Difficulty:advanced
Tide:mid
Facing:SW

Forecast accuracy at Desert Point

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Best time to go

Tomorrow 6am-9am

Clean cross-offshore winds, quiet before the morning rush, conditions building through the session

77
Chest to head highCross-offshoreEmpty

Nearby spots right now

Desert PointYou are here
1.66mCross-onshore
Good
Kuta Lombok
11.9 miles1.86mOnshore
Good

Crowd report

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Session journal

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Recent form

Last 17 days of logged conditions.

30-day average
3.8/10
Days firing
3
Score 6 or higher
Best day recently
8.8/10
29 Apr
Days logged
17

Spot guide

This guide was generated from conditions data. Know this spot? Submit your own tips below.

## The spot Desert Point on Lombok is widely considered one of the longest, most mechanically perfect left-hand barrels on the planet. The wave reels along an incredibly shallow, flat coral reef with robotic consistency, producing a high-speed tube that simply does not stop. When conditions align, the barrel runs for 200 metres or more without interruption. The setting is remote and arid, with only basic facilities and a small community of surfers drawn by the wave's legendary reputation. This is a pilgrimage destination for barrel hunters. ## When it works Desert Point is notoriously fickle, requiring a specific south-westerly swell direction to wrap around the peninsula and engage the reef at the correct angle. The season runs from May through September. The wave needs at least 4-6ft of swell and the direction must be precise. South-easterly trade winds blow offshore. The wave breaks only at specific tides (mid-tide is optimal). When conditions align, it is perfect; when they do not, it is either unsurfable or dangerously shallow. ## Where to sit The take-off zone is concentrated at the top of the reef where the deep water meets the shallow shelf. The wave pitches immediately into a high-speed barrel that reels down the reef. Position yourself exactly on the boil at the reef edge. The barrel section begins from the first moment; there is no warm-up section. The deep-water channel at the end of the reef provides the exit and paddle-back route. ## Hazards The reef is critically shallow with live coral exposed at lower tides. The wave speed frequently outpaces the surfer, resulting in getting clipped by the lip and driven onto the reef. Any wipeout guarantees contact with the coral. The remote location means extremely limited medical facilities. Infections from coral cuts develop rapidly. The sheer speed of the wave makes it one of the most technically demanding barrels in the world. ## Parking and access Desert Point is at the south-western tip of Lombok. Basic warungs and simple accommodation exist near the break. The road from Kuta Lombok takes approximately 2 hours. The walk from the accommodation to the break is short. The paddle-out via the channel is straightforward but can be current-affected. ## The crowd The fickle nature of the wave and remote location limit numbers. When conditions align, expect 10-20 surfers, many of whom have been waiting days or weeks for the swell to arrive. The concentrated take-off zone makes even a small crowd competitive. Priority goes to the deepest surfer. The atmosphere is intense; everyone present knows what they are waiting for. ## Local tips Patience is the primary requirement. Desert Point may only break properly a handful of times per month. Many surfers camp nearby and wait. When it does fire, be in the water at first light. The wave is faster than you expect; it will outrun you multiple times before you calibrate. A longer board (6'4" to 6'8") with extra speed provides better odds of matching the wave's pace. Reef boots, helmet, and comprehensive first aid supplies are essential. The barrel rewards a low stance and high-line trim rather than pumping.
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Frequently asked questions

How often is this page updated?

Current conditions refresh every 3 hours when the cron runs. Hourly data updates every 30 minutes. The 7-day forecast, luck factor, and packing notes are all pre-computed at the same time.

What is the luck factor?

We compare the 7-day forecast to the last 5 years of marine data for the same week at Desert Point. The delta tells you whether conditions are shaping up better, worse, or about the same as a typical late May.

How is 'best session' picked?

We score each day of the 7-day forecast using the same algorithm as the leaderboard, and highlight the highest scorer.

Where does the data come from?

Open-Meteo's Marine API (swell height, period, water temperature) and Weather API (wind and conditions).

Does the score capture local knowledge?

Honestly, no. Every break has tide windows, swell directions and reef contours that a global model cannot see. Treat the score as a starting point, then check a local cam.

When is the best time to surf Desert Point?

Check our timing score heatmap above for a week-by-week breakdown combining surf conditions with crowd pressure.