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Live conditions

Hookipa

United States Β· Pacific Islands

Updated 43 min ago
🌧️
Type:reef
Shelter:exposed
Difficulty:advanced
Tide:mid-high
Facing:N

Forecast accuracy at Hookipa

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Best time to go

No great windows in the next 2 days

Best available option is Today around 5am (score: 19). Conditions are below the Good threshold but may still be surfable.

Nearby spots right now

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Recent form

Last 18 days of logged conditions.

30-day average
0.7/10
Days firing
0
Score 6 or higher
Best day recently
2.0/10
8 May
Days logged
18

Spot guide

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

## The spot Ho'okipa is a raw, windswept reef break on Maui's north shore, globally famous as the birthplace of windsurfing and tow-in surfing. The wave breaks over a jagged, shallow volcanic coral reef that produces powerful, fast peaks in conditions that would render most spots unsurfable. The relentless north-east trade winds that plague most breaks are embraced here by the wind-sports community, creating a unique environment where surfers, windsurfers, and kiters share the same swells. When the wind drops, the reef produces world-class conventional surfing waves. ## When it works North-westerly winter groundswells from November through March deliver the biggest and most powerful waves. The reef handles serious size, breaking from 4-15ft. Southerly offshore winds provide the cleanest surfing conditions but are rare; most sessions involve managing the prevailing trade winds. The early morning window before the trades strengthen (typically before 10am) offers the best chance of cleaner conditions for surfing. ## Where to sit The reef has multiple peaks. Pavilions on the east side produces fast, hollow rights. The Point on the west side offers longer, more workable lefts. Middles provides a variety of peaks. The take-off zones are concentrated over the shallowest reef sections. Position yourself on the outside of the reef platform and watch for sets refracting off the reef's uneven contours. The sandy channels between reef sections provide paddle-out routes. ## Hazards The volcanic reef is extremely sharp and shallow. Falls result in severe cuts. The waves break with significant power and the turbulent trade wind chop makes duck-diving difficult. Strong currents sweep across the reef. Windsurfers and kiters share the water, creating collision risks. Sea turtles haul out on the beach; give them wide berth. The power and shallow reef make this high-consequence surfing. ## Parking and access A public car park with views directly over the break serves the east side. Additional parking exists along the access road. The walk to the waterline descends through dirt paths to the rocky shore. Entry to the water requires crossing slippery reef rocks. Facilities at the park include picnic areas and toilets. Watching from the cliff is a worthwhile spectacle even without surfing. ## The crowd Ho'okipa has an established local hierarchy among surfers, windsurfers, and kiters. The afternoon is traditionally ceded to wind sports. Surfers dominate the early morning glass window. The local crew is experienced and territorial. Showing respect and surfing within your ability earns acceptance. Do not paddle out unless you are comfortable in powerful, shallow reef break conditions. ## Local tips The morning glass window is precious and short. Be in the water by 6:30am to maximise clean conditions before the trades establish. A shorter, wider board handles the choppy conditions better than a standard performance shortboard. Reef boots are essential for both entry and protection during wipeouts. The wave is significantly more powerful than it appears from the cliff due to the offshore wind holding the faces up. Study the reef from the lookout point to identify channels and hazards before your first paddle out.
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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 Hookipa. 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 Hookipa?

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