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La côte de Biarritz vue depuis la falaise, avec le phare de Biarritz et la ville à l'horizon

Spot guide · Pays Basque

Surfing Côte des Basques in Biarritz: where French surf was born

Unsplash · Mathias Reding

The beach where European surfing took its very first paddle stroke.

Beach breakDébutant friendlySpot mythique
Season
Autumn to spring for the size, summer to learn in peace
Swell
W to NW, long-period, 0.5 to 1.5 m ideal
Wind
E to SE offshore, well sheltered from W winds
Tide
Low to mid-tide — the beach vanishes at high tide
Crowd
Crowded in summer and on weekends, quieter at dawn patrol and off-season
Region
Pays Basque · Pyrénées-Atlantiques

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The beach where it all kicked off (for real)

Drop your board on the sand at Côte des Basques and you're literally standing at ground zero of European surfing. Back in 1956, American screenwriter Peter Viertel rolled into Biarritz to shoot "The Sun Also Rises," the Hemingway adaptation. He grabbed a board from a Californian buddy, paddled out right here, and the Basque coast was never the same again. Three years later, in 1959, the very first surf club in France, the Waïkiki Surf Club, was born on this beach.

The detail that seals it: one of the club's founders was Georges Hennebutte, the guy who invented the leash. Yep, that cord on your ankle that saves you a 200-meter sprint after your runaway board was dreamed up right here, on this sand. And Joël de Rosnay, future big-name scientist and science communicator, was part of that first crew too. Not bad for a beach.

So surfing here isn't just ticking a spot off the list. It's paddling in the wake of history. The cliff above, the Belle Époque villas, the evening light hitting the water: you get why the pioneers fell head over heels for this place real quick.

A mellow wave, but a tide that calls all the shots

Côte des Basques is a long, stretched-out beach break with three peaks spread along the sand. On the south side, near the rocks, it peels in soft, patient lefts, perfect for dialing in your first turns. On the north side, the rights pack a bit more punch. Overall you're looking at a friendly, mellow, forgiving wave, the polar opposite of a reef that bites.

But here's the one thing to tattoo on your brain: the beach completely vanishes at high tide. The water creeps right up to the cliff and there's not a single grain of sand left. Bottom line, you only get a window of roughly six hours around low tide. Miss the slot and you're left high and dry, board under your arm, watching the sea swallow your spot.

The dream combo: a long-period W to NW swell, somewhere between 0.5 and 1.5 m, an offshore easterly wind glassing off the surface, and a low-to-rising tide. That's when it peels clean and you can rack up wave after wave without a fight. For today's exact window, check the Yosurf forecast, the tide window shifts every single day.

When it's not working (and where to bail)

Let's be honest: Côte des Basques does not like it big. The second a heavy swell rolls in, the shore break turns nasty at the foot of the cliff, the sideways currents wake up, and the spot loses all its beginner-friendly charm. Once it's pushing well past a solid meter and a half, it's no longer the place to level up.

Bad news too when a westerly settles in and chops up the surface, or when you show up at dead high tide: there's simply no beach left. No point forcing it.

The local move: if Côte des Basques is maxing out or the sea's too big, you swing over to the Grande Plage right in the center, more exposed and punchier, or you head south toward Ilbarritz and Bidart for sandbanks that handle size better. And when NOTHING works on the exposed coast, the Landes up north always grab a touch more swell. The beauty of the Basque Country is that a backup spot is always ten minutes away.

Level, safety, and the rock trap

This is THE spot to learn on the Basque coast, and that's not marketing fluff: soft wave, sandy bottom, long whitewater on the northeast side for your first goes. Dozens of surf schools plant their flags here every summer, and they've earned it.

But don't get lulled to sleep. At low and mid tide, rocks poke up on the south side, right where those fun lefts break. Keep your eyes peeled and clock them on the dropping tide. And above all, watch out for the lateral currents that quietly drift you way down from where you started without you even noticing: pick a marker on the cliff and check regularly that you're not getting dragged.

Last point, and not a small one: the cliff above the beach is unstable. The town has been running reinforcement works against rockfalls for years, a project slated to run until 2027. Don't set up or walk at the foot of the sections under construction, respect the barriers. Basque rock is gorgeous but it moves.

Access, parking, and the killer sunset move

Côte des Basques sits just south of downtown Biarritz, a few minutes' walk from the Port-Vieux. You drop down a switchback road along the cliff, with parking along the promenade, and fair warning: in summer and on sunny weekends, it's all-out war to find a space. The pro move is the dawn patrol: roll in early, settle in nice and easy, surf the morning tide and clear out before the crowds land.

The spot is loaded: showers, board rentals, schools, terraces overlooking the beach. The vibe is unapologetically seaside, a little chic but cool, with the neo-medieval silhouette of the Villa Belza perched on its rock between Côte des Basques and Port-Vieux, built between 1880 and 1895. Once you're out of the water, go grab a drink and watch the evening roll in: it's one of the best sunset spots on the entire Atlantic coast, and the locals never get tired of it.

For food, head down toward the Port-Vieux and the center for Basque pintxos, Bayonne ham and gâteau basque. You're in Biarritz: between two sessions, the area is just as much about life on land as it is in the water.

Frequently asked questions

Is Côte des Basques a good spot to learn to surf?+

Yes, it's one of the best spots in Biarritz to learn. The wave is mellow, the bottom is sandy, and the long whitewater on the north side lets you progress stress-free. It's exactly why a ton of surf schools run their lessons here in summer. Just stay sharp around the rocks on the south side at low tide.

What tide do you surf Côte des Basques on?+

Low tide to mid-rising tide, no question. The quirk of the spot is that the beach disappears completely at high tide: the water climbs right up to the cliff and there's no sand left. So you surf on a window of roughly six hours around low tide. Check the tide times before you head out.

What's the best season to surf in Biarritz?+

For consistent size, fall and winter pack the best swells. But to learn at your own pace at Côte des Basques, summer and spring serve up smaller waves and warmer water. The downside is the crowds in high season: go early in the morning.

Why is Côte des Basques the birthplace of surfing in France?+

Because it all started here. In 1956, American Peter Viertel surfed here while shooting "The Sun Also Rises," introducing surfing to Europe. In 1959, the first surf club in France, the Waïkiki Surf Club, was founded on this beach. The leash was even invented by one of its founding members, Georges Hennebutte.

Where do you park at Côte des Basques in Biarritz?+

You park along the promenade and the switchback road dropping down the cliff, a few minutes from the Port-Vieux and the center. In summer and on weekends it fills up fast. Your best bet is still rolling in early for a dawn patrol session and snagging a spot without the hassle.

What do you do if Côte des Basques isn't working?+

If the sea's too big or it's high tide with no beach, swing over to the Grande Plage in central Biarritz, or head south toward Ilbarritz and Bidart, which handle size better. As a last resort, the Landes beaches up north often grab more swell. A backup spot is always ten minutes away.

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