San Xurxo (San Jorge)

43.536033 N / -8.295533 O

San Xurxo (San Jorge) Surf Spot Guide, Spain

Nestled in Galicia's wild north coast, San Xurxo (San Jorge) delivers classic beach-break action with punchy rights and lefts over a sandy bottom dotted with rocks. This hollow wave gem offers an uncrowded vibe that feels like a secret stash, perfect for sessions where you can score long walls without the hustle. Surfers come back for its reliable peelers that light up under the right swell, blending raw power with that authentic Spanish coastal soul.

Geography and Nature

San Xurxo sits in the Ferrol area of Galicia, about 30 kilometers north of A Coruna, forming a stunning crescent-shaped beach stretching roughly 2.5 kilometers long. Backed by lush wooded hills and facing the open Atlantic, it's a remote-feeling paradise far from urban sprawl, with pristine water quality at the northern end where north-south currents keep things clean. The wide sandy expanse mixes with scattered rocks, creating a dramatic yet approachable coastal landscape that's one of northern Spain's prettiest surf frontiers.

Surf Setup

This beach break fires both rights and lefts, often shaping into hollow A-frames that barrel on the right days, with peaks scattered along the beach favoring lefts toward the point. It thrives on northwest, west, or southwest swells wrapping in from the Atlantic, while southwest, south, southeast, or east winds hold it clean and offshore. All tides work here, from low to high, letting you paddle out anytime without much fuss. Expect a typical session to deliver chest-to-head-high hollow rides with room to maneuver, especially at the northern peaks where the waves stand up best.

Consistency and Best Time

San Xurxo boasts very consistent surf year-round thanks to its exposed position catching windswells and groundswells equally, but it peaks in fall and spring when northwest swells roll in without winter's full fury. Aim for September to November or March to May for the cleanest, most powerful days up to 2 meters; summer brings smaller, fun waves while avoiding overcrowded winter storms. Steer clear of dead-flat calms in high summer lulls, though even then, a pulse can surprise.

Crowd Levels

Weekdays keep it empty, giving you solo sessions, while weekends draw just a few surfers, mostly locals. The mix stays chill with traveling surfers welcome alongside the steady home crew.

Who It's For

Suited for all levels, from beginners honing basics on mushy days to advanced rippers chasing hollow tubes. Newcomers love the forgiving sandy peaks and all-tide access for easy whitewater practice, intermediates get rippable shoulders for turns, and experts thrive on the power when it hollows out over rocks.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for occasional strong currents, marked by lifeguard flags in season, and mind the rocky patches under the sand that can sneak up on bigger sets. No major shark or urchin issues reported, just standard beach-break respect.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October sees water around 17 to 20 degrees Celsius, calling for a 3/2mm shorty or springsuit for comfort. Winter from December to March drops to 13 to 15 degrees Celsius, so boot up with a 5/4/3mm fullsuit plus gloves and hood. Spring and fall hover at 15 to 18 degrees Celsius, where a 4/3mm chestzip with boots handles the chill perfectly.

How to Get There

Fly into A Coruna Airport (LCG), just 26 kilometers south, or Santiago Airport (SCQ) 71 kilometers away for more flights. From A Coruna, drive north on the AP-9 toll road toward Ferrol for about 30 minutes, exiting at San Xurxo signs onto local roads leading straight to the beach. Free, plentiful parking lines the access points, with a short 200-meter walk to the sand. Public buses from Ferrol run seasonally, dropping you within 1 kilometer of the waves.

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San Xurxo (San Jorge) 

Spain
43.536033 N / -8.295533 O
Galicia
Take a car
Instant access (< 5min)
Easy to find
View Surf Spot
Level: All surfers
Public access: Public access
Special access: Don't know

San Xurxo (San Jorge) Surf Spot Guide, Spain

Nestled in Galicia's wild north coast, San Xurxo (San Jorge) delivers classic beach-break action with punchy rights and lefts over a sandy bottom dotted with rocks. This hollow wave gem offers an uncrowded vibe that feels like a secret stash, perfect for sessions where you can score long walls without the hustle. Surfers come back for its reliable peelers that light up under the right swell, blending raw power with that authentic Spanish coastal soul.

Geography and Nature

San Xurxo sits in the Ferrol area of Galicia, about 30 kilometers north of A Coruna, forming a stunning crescent-shaped beach stretching roughly 2.5 kilometers long. Backed by lush wooded hills and facing the open Atlantic, it's a remote-feeling paradise far from urban sprawl, with pristine water quality at the northern end where north-south currents keep things clean. The wide sandy expanse mixes with scattered rocks, creating a dramatic yet approachable coastal landscape that's one of northern Spain's prettiest surf frontiers.

Surf Setup

This beach break fires both rights and lefts, often shaping into hollow A-frames that barrel on the right days, with peaks scattered along the beach favoring lefts toward the point. It thrives on northwest, west, or southwest swells wrapping in from the Atlantic, while southwest, south, southeast, or east winds hold it clean and offshore. All tides work here, from low to high, letting you paddle out anytime without much fuss. Expect a typical session to deliver chest-to-head-high hollow rides with room to maneuver, especially at the northern peaks where the waves stand up best.

Consistency and Best Time

San Xurxo boasts very consistent surf year-round thanks to its exposed position catching windswells and groundswells equally, but it peaks in fall and spring when northwest swells roll in without winter's full fury. Aim for September to November or March to May for the cleanest, most powerful days up to 2 meters; summer brings smaller, fun waves while avoiding overcrowded winter storms. Steer clear of dead-flat calms in high summer lulls, though even then, a pulse can surprise.

Crowd Levels

Weekdays keep it empty, giving you solo sessions, while weekends draw just a few surfers, mostly locals. The mix stays chill with traveling surfers welcome alongside the steady home crew.

Who It's For

Suited for all levels, from beginners honing basics on mushy days to advanced rippers chasing hollow tubes. Newcomers love the forgiving sandy peaks and all-tide access for easy whitewater practice, intermediates get rippable shoulders for turns, and experts thrive on the power when it hollows out over rocks.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for occasional strong currents, marked by lifeguard flags in season, and mind the rocky patches under the sand that can sneak up on bigger sets. No major shark or urchin issues reported, just standard beach-break respect.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October sees water around 17 to 20 degrees Celsius, calling for a 3/2mm shorty or springsuit for comfort. Winter from December to March drops to 13 to 15 degrees Celsius, so boot up with a 5/4/3mm fullsuit plus gloves and hood. Spring and fall hover at 15 to 18 degrees Celsius, where a 4/3mm chestzip with boots handles the chill perfectly.

How to Get There

Fly into A Coruna Airport (LCG), just 26 kilometers south, or Santiago Airport (SCQ) 71 kilometers away for more flights. From A Coruna, drive north on the AP-9 toll road toward Ferrol for about 30 minutes, exiting at San Xurxo signs onto local roads leading straight to the beach. Free, plentiful parking lines the access points, with a short 200-meter walk to the sand. Public buses from Ferrol run seasonally, dropping you within 1 kilometer of the waves.

Wave Quality: Normal

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Surf Conditions:

Wave type
Beach-break
Normal lenght: Normal (50 to 150m)
Good day lenght: Long (150 to 300 m)
DIRECTION
Right and left
Good swell direction: NorthWest, West, SouthWest
Good wind direction: SouthWest, South, SouthEast, East
frequency
Don't know
Swell size: Starts working at Less than 1m / 3ft and holds up to 3m+ / 10ft+
power
Hollow
Best Tide Position: All tides
Best Tide Movement: Rising and falling tides

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FAQ

Surf San Xurxo (San Jorge) year-round with peaks in fall and spring from September to November or March to May for clean, powerful waves up to 2 meters. It thrives on northwest, west, or southwest swells with southwest, south, southeast, or east offshore winds, staying consistent on windswells and groundswells. All tides work, delivering chest-to-head-high rides, though summer offers smaller fun waves and avoid high summer lulls.
San Xurxo (San Jorge) suits all levels from beginners to advanced surfers. Newcomers enjoy forgiving sandy peaks and all-tide access for whitewater practice on mushy days, intermediates find rippable shoulders for turns, and experts chase hollow tubes and power over rocks. Its beach break setup makes it approachable yet challenging when waves stand up.
San Xurxo (San Jorge) is a classic beach break with punchy rights and lefts over a sandy bottom dotted with rocks, forming hollow A-frames that barrel on good days. Peaks scatter along the 2.5 kilometer crescent beach, favoring lefts toward the point, thriving on northwest, west, or southwest Atlantic swells with all tides working for chest-to-head-high hollow rides.
San Xurxo (San Jorge) stays uncrowded with empty weekdays for solo sessions and just a few locals and travelers on weekends in a chill vibe. Fly into A Coruna Airport 26 kilometers south or Santiago 71 kilometers away, then drive 30 minutes north on AP-9 from A Coruna exiting to beach signs. Free plentiful parking and a 200-meter walk lead to sand, with seasonal buses from Ferrol within 1 kilometer.
San Xurxo (San Jorge) stands out as an uncrowded secret stash in Galicia's wild north coast with reliable peelers, long walls, and hollow waves blending raw power and authentic Spanish coastal soul. Its remote 2.5 kilometer crescent beach backed by wooded hills offers pristine northern waters, consistent year-round surf, and a pretty frontier feel far from urban areas.

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