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Live conditions

G-Land

Indonesia Β· Indo-Pacific

Updated 38 min ago
🌧️
Type:reef
Shelter:semi_exposed
Difficulty:advanced
Tide:mid
Facing:S

Forecast accuracy at G-Land

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Best time to go

Today 5am-7am

quiet before the morning rush, conditions building through the session

79
Head high+OnshoreEmpty
Tomorrow 5am-8am

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

Head high+OffshoreEmpty
76
Tomorrow 5pm-7pm

quiet evening session, conditions building through the session

Head high+Cross-onshoreEmpty
75

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Session journal

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Recent form

Last 19 days of logged conditions.

30-day average
3.5/10
Days firing
3
Score 6 or higher
Best day recently
7.2/10
29 Apr
Days logged
19

Spot guide

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

## The spot G-Land, Grajagan, is one of surfing's most iconic left-hand reef breaks, situated on the edge of Alas Purwo National Park in East Java. The wave reels along a perfectly aligned volcanic coral reef for hundreds of metres, connecting through three distinct sections: Kongs on the outside, Money Trees in the middle, and Speedies on the inside. Backed by impenetrable jungle teeming with wildlife, G-Land offers a surfing experience that feels genuinely wild and remote despite the established surf camps. ## When it works The dry season from April through October delivers consistent south-westerly Indian Ocean groundswells. June through August typically sees the largest and most powerful swells. The wave needs at least 4-6ft to properly activate all sections, and it handles size up to genuine 12ft before becoming too fast to ride. The south-easterly trade wind blows directly offshore, and these are most reliable and consistent during the dry season, providing all-day grooming. ## Where to sit Kongs is the outside section, handling the biggest swells with a steep drop into a long, winding wall. Money Trees is the middle section where the barrel becomes more defined and the reef shallows. Speedies is the inside section and the most intense: a fast, shallow, mechanical barrel that spits violently. On a connecting day, you take off at Kongs and ride through all three sections. The channel between the reef and shore provides entry. Sit on the outside edge of the reef where the water colour shifts from deep blue to turquoise. ## Hazards The coral reef is extremely shallow and razor-sharp throughout. Wipeouts at Speedies are particularly dangerous due to the minimal water depth and intense wave velocity. The jungle behind the beach harbours venomous snakes, leopards, and wild boar. Strong currents sweep along the reef and can push you into shallower zones. The nearest hospital is hours away by boat and road. Infections from coral cuts develop rapidly in the tropical climate. ## Parking and access Access is by boat from Grajagan village, a journey of approximately one hour through the mangroves and along the coast. Several established surf camps operate on the jungle fringe, providing accommodation and boat transfers. Independent access is theoretically possible through the national park but impractical. Booking a surf camp is the standard approach. ## The crowd The camps control numbers to some extent, but on prime swells G-Land can see 30-40 surfers spread across the sections. Kongs and Money Trees absorb more bodies due to wider take-off zones. Speedies is naturally limited by the concentrated peak and the consequence of the wave. The camp system creates a social atmosphere on shore, with surfers sharing the lineup camaraderie. ## Local tips Speedies is significantly heavier than it looks from shore. Watch for a full set cycle from the channel before paddling into the inside section. A step-up board (6'4" to 6'8" for most surfers) handles the speed and power better than a standard shortboard. Reef boots are essential. Bring a comprehensive first aid kit with antiseptic, waterproof dressings, and antibiotics; any coral cut will become infected without immediate treatment. The afternoon trades are relentless and perfect, so don't waste energy fighting the morning crowd when the wind is still variable.

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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 G-Land. 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 G-Land?

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