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Surf forecast for Pacific City

Tide
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Timezone:
America/Los_Angeles
Forecast updated:
29/06, 17:00
Wind: SN UNITY Atmos
(20260630 00z)
Waves: SN UNITY WAVE
(20260630 00z)
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Timeline

Pacific City Surf Forecast Guide

Overview

Pacific City is a flat-bottomed, user-friendly beachbreak at Cape Kiwanda with sand underfoot and right- and left-breaking waves. Itโ€™s generally soft and can be kinda fun, especially for surfers who want approachable waves rather than heavy barrels.

The inner beachbreak is heavily surfed. When the swell increases, a bigger outside right can start breaking off the barren cape.

When It Works

Pacific City works from 1.5 m / 5 ft to 2.1 m / 7 ft. Swell from south-southwest through west to northwest is usable, and the main season runs through summer into autumn, with June to September called out.

Itโ€™s best when conditions are small and glassy, with sandbars producing shapely rights and lefts.

Wind and Tide

The workable wind window is northeast to east-southeast, with east-northeast offshore. Mid tide is optimal, and a rising tide is better.

Local Tips

Pacific City suits beginners, intermediates, and experts, with shortboards, funboards, longboards, and fish all fitting the wave. Paddling is not too bad.

It gets busy, especially on weekends when the surf is not giant or strong south winds are not in play. The lineup can feel reserved. Keep tsunami risk and a moderate shark factor in mind.

Access

From Highway 101, take Three Capes Scenic Loop to Pacific City. At the north end of town on Cape Kiwanda Drive, use the wide paved parking lot by the brewery and park anywhere in the lot.

Surf spots near Pacific City

Cape Lookout
Oregon, United States
Beach break
Tue 30
Wed 1
Thu 2
Fri 3
Sat 4
Pacific City
Oregon, United States
Beach break
Tue 30
Wed 1
Thu 2
Fri 3
Sat 4
Gas Chambers - Pacific City
Oregon, United States
Beach break
Tue 30
Wed 1
Thu 2
Fri 3
Sat 4
Toilets - Pacific City
Oregon, United States
Beach break
Tue 30
Wed 1
Thu 2
Fri 3
Sat 4
Cape Kiwanda - Pacific City
Oregon, United States
Reef break
Tue 30
Wed 1
Thu 2
Fri 3
Sat 4

Frequently asked questions

What are good surfing conditions for Pacific City?

Pacific City is usually best with south-southwest through west to northwest (SSW-W-NW) swell around 1.5 m / 5 ft to 2.1 m / 7 ft, wind from northeast to east-southeast (NE-ESE), with east-northeast (ENE) offshore, and mid tide. Mid tide is the preferred tide.

Where is the surf spot Pacific City?

Pacific City is a surf spot in Pacific City, Oregon, United States.

What is the surf break like at Pacific City?

Pacific City is a right-and-left beach break over sand. Expect a busy crowd and a reserved lineup.

What season is best for surfing Pacific City?

The main surf season at Pacific City is summer and autumn.

What surfing skill level is Pacific City suitable for?

Pacific City can suit beginner, intermediate, and expert surfers.

Is Pacific City beginner friendly for surfing?

Yes. Pacific City can suit beginner surfers when conditions are manageable.

What surfboards work at Pacific City?

Shortboard, Funboard, Longboard, and Fish are common choices at Pacific City.

What surf spots are near Pacific City?

Other nearby surf spots are Gas Chambers - Pacific City, Toilets - Pacific City, Cape Kiwanda - Pacific City, and Cape Lookout.

What swell direction works for surfing at Pacific City?

Pacific City can work with swell from south-southwest through west to northwest (SSW-W-NW).

What swell size works for surfing at Pacific City?

Pacific City usually works with swell around 1.5 m / 5 ft to 2.1 m / 7 ft.

What wind direction is best for surfing at Pacific City?

Pacific City usually works with wind from northeast to east-southeast (NE-ESE); east-northeast (ENE) is offshore.

What wind direction is offshore for surfing at Pacific City?

East-northeast (ENE) is offshore at Pacific City.

What tide works best for surfing at Pacific City?

Pacific City works best around mid tide. Mid tide is preferred. A rising tide is usually better here.

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Confidence

Confidence tells you how much the weather models agree on the forecast.

  • High confidence: Models agree closely; forecast is reliable.
  • Medium confidence: Some disagreement; conditions may shift slightly.
  • Low confidence: Models diverge; treat forecast with caution.

We calculate the wind confidence by comparing wind speed, gust and direction from multiple models (like GFS, ECMWF, Arome, and Harmonie) and seeing how closely they match. For wave certainty we compare height, period and direction, also on multiple models. They are weighted, meaning that some models count more than others, depending on how good they are for a certain spot.

Readme

Welcome! If youโ€™re new to surf forecasting, check out this quick guide.

Forecast Table

The forecast table (the section on the page with all the numbers) is designed to pack as much information in the screen as possible. Although intimidating at first, it will help you make informed decisions about the waves faster, trust me :D. The table consists of roughly four sections, time and predictions, wind, waves, and tides:

๐Ÿ”ฎ Time and predictions section

Here we show the forecast thour and the overall surf quality prediction. This is determined based on the wave, wind and tide quality prediction. These individual predictions can be found on the forecast map.

๐Ÿ’จ Wind section

The first row on the table (with the ๐Ÿ’จ icon) shows wind speed, direction and gust. The more the wind speed the more aggressive the color (from blue, green, orange to red).

๐ŸŒŠ Wave section

The waves section consists of three rows, one for wave height and direction, one for period and one for wave energy. Our algorithm chooses the "dominant wave" using spot-adjusted surf energy (depth + directional fit). This is usually the first swell partition, but during local storms it can switch to wind waves. If that happens, values are shown in gray and italic.

๐ŸŒ’ Tide section

The tide section consists of a row with the actual heights per hour (measured at the half hour) and a table that displays the flow of the tide and the extremes (lows and highs).

Forecast map

The forecast map consists of arrows. These arrows represent all wave partitions (swell partitions and wind wave partition) and the wind. This allows you to see things like: a secondary swell or wind waves messes up the surf, or the wind is just a tick offshore so very surfable. Click a metric label in the bottom left to bring that arrow to the front โ€” handy when arrows overlap.

Forecast Cheat Sheet

Short on time? Focus on wave energy. Itโ€™s the best single metric to gauge how big and powerful the waves will be.

Click any table cell to jump to that forecast hour. The map will update with forecast arrows, so you can see if wind and swell direction are lining up.

Use the table sidebar to switch units for height and speed.

Log your surf sessions to compare forecasts with real sessions and sharpen future predictions.

Models and Updates

Surfnerd blends multiple global and local wind and swell models using advanced interpolation and spatial techniques to create an "ensemble" forecast. Forecasts are refreshed hourly.

Surf Predictions

Our AI-driven algorithm scores surf quality, shown by green, orange, and gray dots. Each forecast hour is rated for wind, swell, and tide quality, then combined into an overall score. Hereโ€™s the scale:

Perfect
Good
Average
Bad or No Data

Session logs also feed the algorithm โ€” the more you log, the smarter your forecasts get.

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