United States · North America
Create a free profile and let employers in Huntington Beach find you.
Create Profile →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.
We compare the 7-day forecast to the last 5 years of marine data for the same week at Huntington Beach. The delta tells you whether conditions are shaping up better, worse, or about the same as a typical early July.
We score each day of the 7-day forecast using the same algorithm as the leaderboard, and highlight the highest scorer.
Open-Meteo's Marine API (swell height, period, water temperature) and Weather API (wind and conditions).
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.
The best week for surf at Huntington Beach is the week of 30 November (score 3/5) with low crowds.
Proper groundswell lighting up the lineup. Long-period energy means powerful, well-spaced sets. Onshore chop spoiling the lineup. Best conditions early morning before the sea breeze arrives.
The air here is 54% cleaner than the average comparison city right now.
Noticeably cleaner air than a typical city. Good conditions for prolonged outdoor activity.
Not a pollutant. Ozone is naturally higher at altitude and near the coast, and lower in cities where traffic exhaust breaks it down. High readings here typically indicate clean air. Can cause short-term airway irritation during intense exercise but is not linked to the long-term health risks of particulate pollution.
Additive health score: each pollutant contributes points relative to its WHO 2021 guideline and long-term health impact (PM2.5 9, NO₂ 5, O₃ 3, PM10 2, SO₂ 1 at WHO limits). Data via Open-Meteo. City markers show live readings. Red line marks the WHO guideline. Updated 03:00
Crystal clear water: ~17m visibility
This guide was generated from conditions data. Know this spot? Submit your own tips below.
Huntington Beach, Surf City USA, is one of California's most iconic and consistent beach breaks. The massive concrete pier creates structured sandbars that produce reliable peaks year-round. The wave has hosted the US Open of Surfing for decades and the surf culture here is deeply embedded in the town's identity. The break offers workable A-frames that reward aggressive, progressive surfing on both the south and north sides of the pier.
Huntington picks up swell from virtually every direction. South-westerly summer swells (April-October) produce the most consistent waves on the south side of the pier. North-westerly winter swells (November-March) activate the north side. The wave works on anything from 2-8ft. North-easterly Santa Ana winds provide offshore grooming, most common in autumn and winter. The pier amplifies and structures whatever swell is running.
The best banks form adjacent to the pier pilings where the structure interrupts the littoral drift and accumulates sand. The south side typically has better shape on south swells. The north side works better on north-west swells. Position yourself 20-50 metres from the pier where the structured sandbars produce the most consistent peaks. The pier pilings create reference points for positioning.
The pier itself is a hard structure. Getting swept into the pilings is dangerous and occurs regularly on bigger swells. Strong longshore currents run parallel to the beach. The crowd is intense and board collisions are common. Stingrays inhabit the shallows from late spring through autumn. The compact sand can produce hollow, powerful shorebreak sections on bigger days.
Metered street parking and paid lots line Pacific Coast Highway. The beach is immediately accessible from the boardwalk with multiple entry points. Full facilities including showers, restrooms, shops, and restaurants are abundant. The pier provides an excellent vantage point for checking conditions before paddling out.
Huntington is one of the most crowded waves in California. On any rideable day, expect 50-100 surfers in the water near the pier. The US Open week in August is mayhem. The local crew is experienced and assertive. Weekday dawn patrol offers the best wave-to-surfer ratio. Moving away from the pier reduces crowd but also reduces wave quality.
The south side of the pier produces the best-shaped waves on a south swell with the tide dropping from high to mid. This is when the sandbars are most defined and the wave has maximum steepness. A standard performance shortboard works well. The Santa Ana wind events in autumn combine offshore conditions with south swell to produce the best surf of the year. Be prepared for territorial locals at the clam shell section, the most localised peak on the beach.
Surf at Huntington Beach
Your score
Forecast feel
Score this window against what you actually found.
No scored surf reviews in the last 24 hours.
No recent check-ins. Be the first to report.
Record your session, conditions and gear.
Daily scores over the last 12 months at Huntington Beach
Based on historical weekly averages
Conditions at Huntington Beach tend to be best between 06:00 to 09:00 in July.
Average score during this window: 70/100
See timing scores, school holiday busyness, and lift pass pricing to find the best time to book.
View Best Time to Go →Combining historical conditions with school holiday crowd pressure to find the sweet spot.
The timing score combines two signals: historical conditions quality (how good the skiing or surfing typically is in a given week, based on 5 years of weather data) and crowd pressure (how many of this destination's feeder markets have school holidays that week).
Crowd pressure is weighted by each feeder country's share of visitors. If 40% of a resort's visitors come from France and France is on holiday, that contributes 0.40 to the crowd pressure score. Crowds can reduce the timing score by up to 35%, ensuring conditions still matter most.
Scores: 5 = great conditions with low crowds (the sweet spot). 4 = great conditions with moderate crowds, or good conditions with low crowds. 3 = average. 2 = below average conditions or very crowded. 1 = poor conditions or peak holiday chaos.
Last 31 days of logged conditions.
Not enough data yet. Log a session to help build the accuracy score.