Spot guide · Hossegor
Hossegor La Gravière: the European tube guide
Cult tube break. Not for first-timers, never boring.
Live forecast
See the 7-day forecast for La Gravière
What the trench actually is
La Gravière owes its reputation to an underwater canyon — the Gouf de Capbreton — that plunges more than 3,000 m deep just a few kilometres off the coast. This geological feature funnels the Atlantic swell straight at the beach and slams the brakes on, brutally speeding up the waves in the last few metres before they break.
The payoff: flawless tubes folding over sand, with power that's off the charts for a beach break. That's exactly why the World Tour rolls into town every autumn for the Quiksilver Pro France.
The perfect window
The absolute dream at Hossegor is a W swell of 1.8 to 2.5 metres, 11 to 14 second period, an E offshore wind of 5 to 15 km/h, on a mid dropping tide. The banks scoop out, the sets detonate 100 metres off the sand and you've got 3 to 4 seconds to pop up and vanish into the room.
Autumn (September to November) packs in most of these windows: water still mild (18-20°C in September), longer-period swells than in summer, and steadier winds.
Why it's not a learner's wave
The take-off at La Gravière is savage: the wave jacks up late and breaks hard. If you've never pulled into a 2 m tube, this is not the place to start. The sand has packed hard under years of pressure, and slapping your board into the bottom usually means dings — and sometimes injuries.
Over 2.5 m, the rips between the peaks get serious and the paddle back out can eat 30 minutes. Solid fitness required. No going out alone without mates in the water who can lend a hand.
The solid alternatives
When La Gravière is maxing or the swell is just too big, there are plenty of options nearby:
— La Sud d'Hossegor: a touch more forgiving, more open bank — Capbreton La Piste: another trench, longer tubes on certain swells — Santocha (Capbreton): works when La Gravière closes out, more accessible — Seignosse Les Bourdaines: neighbouring bank, sometimes cleaner on windy days
Practical extras
The La Gravière car park fills up by 8am in season — ride in by bike from the centre. Local shaper Pukas has a workshop in Hossegor if you want a board dialled for the spot (for the tubes here, aim for a 6'2'' to 6'6'' on the thicker side).
The town-centre market and the restaurants on the quai de la Centrale (Capbreton) are the usual meeting points. The water is dangerous for swimming outside the patrolled zones — check the day's rip before you dive in.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between La Nord, La Gravière and La Sud d'Hossegor?+
Three sections of the same beach, each with its own bank. La Nord often breaks earlier and harder (bank close to shore). La Gravière in the middle is the famous one (tube break). La Sud is more forgiving, a good call when La Gravière is crowded or too big.
When is the Quiksilver Pro France held at Hossegor?+
Usually between late September and mid-October, inside the World Tour Championship window. Exact dates shift every year. The contest moves around depending on the state of the banks (sometimes to Capbreton or Seignosse).
Hossegor as a beginner — never an option?+
It can be — as long as you target small-swell days (≤ 1 m) AND head to La Sud or further afield (Soustons, Vieux-Boucau). La Gravière itself is never for beginners. The Hossegor schools run their lessons at La Sud or Capbreton-Santocha.
Where to eat / sleep near Hossegor?+
For a bed: surf camps around Soorts-Hossegor, hotels in the centre, Airbnb rentals in the quieter Capbreton. For food: la Centrale and the Capbreton market, or the bistros around the Hossegor lake.
Which board to bring to Hossegor in autumn?+
A thick shortboard (6'2'' to 6'6'' / 28-32 L depending on your weight) for average days, plus a step-up 6'8'' to 7'2'' for the big days (≥ 2 m). The tubes here demand volume for the paddle and the fast drop.