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Live conditions

Bamburgh

United Kingdom Β· Atlantic Europe

Updated 54 min ago
☁️
Type:beach
Shelter:exposed
Difficulty:intermediate
Tide:all tides
Facing:E

Forecast accuracy at Bamburgh

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Best time to go

No great windows in the next 2 days

Best available option is Tomorrow around 9pm (score: 22). Conditions are below the Good threshold but may still be surfable.

Crowd report

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Session journal

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Recent form

Last 18 days of logged conditions.

30-day average
0.8/10
Days firing
0
Score 6 or higher
Best day recently
1.5/10
16 May
Days logged
18

Spot guide

Local knowledge and community tips for Bamburgh

## The spot Bamburgh is a vast, wild beach break beneath one of England's most dramatic castles. The sand stretches for miles along the Northumberland coast, with shifting banks creating multiple peaks that move around week to week. It faces east-northeast into the North Sea, picking up wind swells from autumn through spring. The water is brutally cold year-round and the setting feels genuinely remote, even though the village is just behind the dunes. ## When it works You need a solid northerly or north-easterly swell, which typically comes from intense North Sea low-pressure systems between September and March. A south-westerly wind blows offshore here and cleans things up nicely. The waves are short-period and punchy rather than long, rolling groundswell. Best at chest to head high; above that it tends to close out across the bay. ## Where to sit The peaks shift constantly with the sandbanks, so walk the beach and watch for 10 minutes before paddling out. The section in front of the main castle car park often has a defined channel. Look for the deeper water between peaks and use it to paddle out without fighting the whitewater. ## Hazards The cold is the biggest danger. Water temperatures drop to 5 or 6 degrees in winter, so a quality 5/4mm wetsuit, boots, gloves and hood are essential. Strong lateral currents run along the beach and can drift you several hundred metres during a session. The beach is exposed to weather with no shelter, and conditions can deteriorate rapidly. ## Parking and access The main car park sits directly behind the beach near the castle. It is pay-and-display and can fill up in summer with tourists, though in surf season you will have no trouble. From the car park it is a short walk over the dunes to the sand. ## The crowd Almost non-existent. Even on good days you will rarely share a peak with more than a handful of surfers. The cold, the remoteness, and the fickle nature of North Sea swell keeps numbers very low. Weekends might bring a few locals from Alnwick or Newcastle but nothing approaching crowded. ## Local tips Check the swell direction carefully. Due east swells often close out, while a more northerly angle wraps in much cleaner. The banks near the rocks at the north end of the beach sometimes produce a more defined left. Bring a flask of something hot for after your session because the wind chill on this coast is savage.

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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 Bamburgh. 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 Bamburgh?

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