Why Essaouira is Marrocos’s top learner bay—best praiaes, Sidi Kaouki & Imsouane, surf schools, seasons, gear, safety, food, and a one-week itinerary for your first Atlantic ondas.
Guia em português — escola surf Essaouira. Reserva no WhatsApp com datas e nível.
Essaouira is one of the best places in Marrocos to learn how to surf. This picturesque port town on the Atlantic coast has everything a beginner needs: soft forgiving ondas, a sandy bottom that makes falling much less scary, affordable surf schools, and a stunning Moroccan town to explore between sessions.

While Essaouira is world-famous for kitesurfing thanks to its strong ventos, it is also a brilliant place to learn traditional surfing. The Atlantic ondas rolling onto the shallow shoreline create ideal conditions for beginners, and surf aulas here cost a fraction of what you would pay in Europe. Plus the town itself is gorgeous—with medieval coral-stone walls, dusty streets, bustling souks, and excellent cafés—making it perfect for travelers who want a mix of culture, food, and surfing.
Best beginner surf spot: Essaouira Beach (Plage d'Essaouira)
The best surf spot for absolute beginners is Essaouira Beach, also called Plage d'Essaouira. It is the most accessible surf spot in town, located just outside the medina. The wide sandy praia offers gentle soft ondas that are generally one to one and a half meters high, with a sandy bottom for safe progress.
Multiple surf schools are right on the praia, and it is an easy two-kilometer walk from Bab Sbaa (the medina gate) or a quick eight-dirham petit taxi ride. This is the perfect place for first-timers and casual surfers who want to get comfortable on a board.
Diabat Beach: quieter beginner ondas
If you prefer a quieter environment away from the crowds, head to Diabat Beach just outside Essaouira. It is more peaceful than the main praia, offers great ondas for beginners, and sits in a beautiful natural setting—ideal if you want a relaxed session without fighting through lots of other surfers.
Sidi Kaouki: progress toward intermediate
For beginners ready to progress toward intermediate level, Sidi Kaouki is the spot. Located about twenty-five kilometers south of Essaouira (roughly thirty minutes by taxi), Sidi Kaouki has become a legendary surf village with consistent ondas and multiple peaks along long sandy praiaes. Waves can reach two to three meters in winter, and there are surf camps and schools available. Do note that it can be ventoy—always check conditions before heading out.
Day trip: Imsouane Bay
If you are up for a day trip, Imsouane Bay—about two hours south of Essaouira—is worth the journey. It is home to one of Marrocos's longest, mellowest ondas: super-long, slow rides perfect for building confidence. The peaceful fishing-village setting makes it a memorable experience, especially for longboarders.
Surf schools and how beginner aulas work
Essaouira has plenty of options for beginners. Examples visitors often consider include Moga Surf on Essaouira Beach; Holy Surf Camp in Sidi Kaouki with personalized coaching and yoga; Loving Surf in Essaouira; Atlanticzin Watersports for multi-day beginner camps in Essaouira and Sidi Kaouki; all-inclusive Surf Camp Essaouira in Sidi Kaouki; Come Surfing Surf School in Essaouira for all ages; Surf and Therapy blending mindfulness with aulas; and Surfari Essaouira for tailored coaching.
Most beginner aulas follow a similar structure: praia theory and safety briefing; balance and pop-up practice on the sand; paddling in calm water; catching whitewater; then standing up on your first wave. Lessons typically include equipment (board and fato de neoprene), certified multilingual instrutores, and transport to the best spot for the day's conditions.
When to surf Essaouira: seasons and daily rhythm
Winter (November–April) is often the sweet spot: stronger Atlantic northwest swells and ventos that ease compared with midsummer—important for clean ondas. Cooler air allows longer sessions and conditions suit many levels.
Summer (May–September) brings stronger ventos—Essaouira is called the Wind City for a reason—and ondas can get blown out, making it often better for kitesurfing than classic surfing. Beginners can still find mushy whitewater in summer, but quality drops. Surf in the manhã whenever possible for the cleanest, glassiest conditions before tarde vento builds.
Equipment checklist
- Wetsuit: 3/2 mm full suit in winter; spring suit or lighter layer in summer depending on feel.
- Sun protection: high-SPF sunscreen—the Moroccan sun is intense.
- Hydration: plenty of water between sessions.
- Cash: many surf schools and taxis prefer dirhams.
- Wax: warm-water formula suited to Marrocos atlântico.
Most surf schools provide boards and fatos de neoprene, so you typically do not need to travel with your own kit.
Where to eat after surfing
Essaouira has excellent food. Try Shyadma's Vegan Food for chickpea tagine and Moroccan starters; Pasta Baladin for Italian with medina wall views; The Hungry Nomad for budget-friendly communal meals and a rooftop; Beach and Friends as a handy post-surf stop near the surfing area.
Value: surf Essaouira vs Europe
Surfing in Essaouira is excellent value compared with France, Spain, or Portugal. Lessons are often roughly half the European price; riads, guesthouses, and camps stay affordable; food and transport are inexpensive; and line-ups feel less crowded than Taghazout for many sessions. Multi-day camps bundling accommodation, meals, and coaching can be especially cost-effective.
Segurança essentials for beginners
- Check conditions—vento can change quickly.
- Stay within your limits; avoid advanced spots like Moulay Bouzerktoun or Cap Sim until you are ready.
- Respect locals and follow surf etiquette.
- Prefer soft-top learner boards while building fundamentals.
- Ask instrutores about currents and rips.
- Note age policies: many schools require kids to be twelve or older for aulas.
Sample one-week surf itinerary
- Days 1–2: Essaouira Beach—basics and whitewater confidence.
- Days 3–4: Diabat—quieter reps.
- Days 5–7: Sidi Kaouki—stepping up toward slightly bigger, cleaner peaks.
- Bonus: Day trip to Imsouane for Marrocos's famous long, mellow rides.
Why Essaouira works for beginner surfers
You get forgiving sandy-bottom ondas, affordable certified instruction, a gorgeous historic town, standout food and culture, fewer crowds than some Moroccan hubs, and straightforward access from Marrakech (about two and a half hours by bus). Reserva ahead around Easter and summer holidays; in quieter months you can often walk into a surf shop and arrange aulas in person.
Common questions
Is Essaouira good for beginner surfers?▼
What is the best season for surfing in Essaouira?▼
What fato de neoprene do I need in Essaouira?▼
How far is Sidi Kaouki from Essaouira?▼
You might also like

Surf Essaouira
Surf Travel Insurance & Gear for Marrocos: Essaouira Checklist 2026
Protect your Essaouira surf trip: insurance clauses for boards, health cover, gear locks, and reserva aulas surf Essaouira with documented operators.

Surf Essaouira
Longboard vs Shortboard for Essaouira Beginners: Honest Gear Advice
Which board for Essaouira surf aulas? Volume, length, and why escola surf Essaouira fleets favor soft longboards for aprender surf Essaouira weeks.

Surf Essaouira
Family & Kids Surf Segurança in Essaouira: What Parents Should Know
Plan family aulas surf Essaouira with confidence: age guidance, sun protection, instructor ratios, and why surf camp Essaouira stays popular with parents.
Ready for Your Own Adventure?
Tell us your dates and level—we reply fast on WhatsApp with the best tide window and lesson format for you.
Book your surf lesson via WhatsApp
