San Antonio (Regatas)

-12.671117 N / -76.664750 O

San Antonio (Regatas) Surf Spot Guide, Peru

Nestled in the heart of Peru's surf-rich coastline, San Antonio (Regatas) delivers a raw beach-break experience with powerful rights and lefts peeling over a sandy bottom scattered with rocks. This spot's hollow, fast, and ledgey waves demand respect, offering explosive sessions that reward committed surfers with high-line speed and occasional barrels. The overall vibe is pure, uncrowded bliss, where the ocean's energy takes center stage.

Geography and Nature

San Antonio (Regatas) sits in the Chorrillos district of Lima Province, Peru, just south of the capital along the Pacific coast. This semi-urban stretch features a rugged beach with a mix of sand and exposed rocks, backed by modest cliffs and urban fringes that fade into open coastal plains. The landscape feels accessible yet wild, with consistent swells wrapping into the bay-like setup amid Peru's dramatic desert-meets-ocean terrain.

Surf Setup

San Antonio (Regatas) fires as a classic beach break, unleashing both rights and lefts that stand out for their hollow, fast, powerful, and ledgey characteristics. Optimal swells roll in from the north, northwest, west, southwest, or south, building steep faces perfect for vertical attacks. Offshore winds from the east, northeast, or southeast clean up the waves best, while low to mid tides sharpen the peaks without draining the power. On a typical session, expect punchy 1- to 3-meter sets that section quickly, testing your rail work and tube-riding instincts amid very consistent conditions.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot shines with exceptional consistency, delivering rideable surf on about 150 days per year thanks to its exposure to multiple swell windows. Peak season runs from April to October, when southwest and west swells dominate, pushing waves to their most powerful; avoid November to March if chasing size, as conditions mellow with smaller, less reliable north swells. Time your trip for early mornings during the week to maximize clean faces before any sea breeze kicks in.

Crowd Levels

San Antonio (Regatas) stays remarkably empty, with weekdays often seeing just a handful of surfers and weekends remaining uncrowded overall. You'll share waves peacefully with a mix of locals and the occasional visitor.

Who It's For

Tailored for experienced surfers, this break's powerful ledges and fast lines require solid skills to navigate without getting pitched. Beginners should steer clear due to the intensity, while intermediates might find smaller days forgiving for progression. Advanced riders thrive here, linking sections on hollow rights and lefts that demand precise positioning and speed control.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for rocks exposed at low tide and potential rips pulling offshore on bigger swells, which can sweep you down the beach. Position carefully to avoid closeouts, staying alert to shifting sands.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings water temperatures of 16 to 19 degrees Celsius, calling for a 4/3mm fullsuit with booties for comfort during long sessions. Winter from December to March warms up to 20 to 23 degrees Celsius, where a 3/2mm shorty or springsuit suffices on most days. Spring and fall hover around 18 to 21 degrees Celsius, making a versatile 3/2mm wetsuit ideal to handle variable conditions.

How to Get There

Fly into Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) in Lima, just 25 kilometers north of the spot, then hop a southbound bus or taxi along the Pan-American Highway for a quick 40-minute drive. From central Lima, catch a combi or colectivo from Chorrillos district heading to San Antonio, dropping you within a 500-meter walk to the beach. Free street parking lines the access road, with easy shoulder parking even on busier days; no train options exist, but rideshares like Uber run affordably from the airport for about 50 soles.

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San Antonio (Regatas) San Antonio

-12.671117 N / -76.664750 O
Lima
Take a car
Long walk (>30 mn)
Easy to find
View Surf Spot
Level: Experienced surfers
Public access: Private access
Special access: Don't know

San Antonio (Regatas) Surf Spot Guide, Peru

Nestled in the heart of Peru's surf-rich coastline, San Antonio (Regatas) delivers a raw beach-break experience with powerful rights and lefts peeling over a sandy bottom scattered with rocks. This spot's hollow, fast, and ledgey waves demand respect, offering explosive sessions that reward committed surfers with high-line speed and occasional barrels. The overall vibe is pure, uncrowded bliss, where the ocean's energy takes center stage.

Geography and Nature

San Antonio (Regatas) sits in the Chorrillos district of Lima Province, Peru, just south of the capital along the Pacific coast. This semi-urban stretch features a rugged beach with a mix of sand and exposed rocks, backed by modest cliffs and urban fringes that fade into open coastal plains. The landscape feels accessible yet wild, with consistent swells wrapping into the bay-like setup amid Peru's dramatic desert-meets-ocean terrain.

Surf Setup

San Antonio (Regatas) fires as a classic beach break, unleashing both rights and lefts that stand out for their hollow, fast, powerful, and ledgey characteristics. Optimal swells roll in from the north, northwest, west, southwest, or south, building steep faces perfect for vertical attacks. Offshore winds from the east, northeast, or southeast clean up the waves best, while low to mid tides sharpen the peaks without draining the power. On a typical session, expect punchy 1- to 3-meter sets that section quickly, testing your rail work and tube-riding instincts amid very consistent conditions.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot shines with exceptional consistency, delivering rideable surf on about 150 days per year thanks to its exposure to multiple swell windows. Peak season runs from April to October, when southwest and west swells dominate, pushing waves to their most powerful; avoid November to March if chasing size, as conditions mellow with smaller, less reliable north swells. Time your trip for early mornings during the week to maximize clean faces before any sea breeze kicks in.

Crowd Levels

San Antonio (Regatas) stays remarkably empty, with weekdays often seeing just a handful of surfers and weekends remaining uncrowded overall. You'll share waves peacefully with a mix of locals and the occasional visitor.

Who It's For

Tailored for experienced surfers, this break's powerful ledges and fast lines require solid skills to navigate without getting pitched. Beginners should steer clear due to the intensity, while intermediates might find smaller days forgiving for progression. Advanced riders thrive here, linking sections on hollow rights and lefts that demand precise positioning and speed control.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for rocks exposed at low tide and potential rips pulling offshore on bigger swells, which can sweep you down the beach. Position carefully to avoid closeouts, staying alert to shifting sands.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings water temperatures of 16 to 19 degrees Celsius, calling for a 4/3mm fullsuit with booties for comfort during long sessions. Winter from December to March warms up to 20 to 23 degrees Celsius, where a 3/2mm shorty or springsuit suffices on most days. Spring and fall hover around 18 to 21 degrees Celsius, making a versatile 3/2mm wetsuit ideal to handle variable conditions.

How to Get There

Fly into Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) in Lima, just 25 kilometers north of the spot, then hop a southbound bus or taxi along the Pan-American Highway for a quick 40-minute drive. From central Lima, catch a combi or colectivo from Chorrillos district heading to San Antonio, dropping you within a 500-meter walk to the beach. Free street parking lines the access road, with easy shoulder parking even on busier days; no train options exist, but rideshares like Uber run affordably from the airport for about 50 soles.

Wave Quality: Sloppy

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Surf Conditions:

Wave type
Beach-break
Normal lenght: Short (< 50m)
Good day lenght: Short (< 50m)
DIRECTION
Right and left
Good swell direction: North, NorthWest, West, SouthWest, South
Good wind direction: Don't know
frequency
Very consistent (150 day/year)
Swell size: Starts working at 1.0m-1.5m / 3ft-5ft and holds up to 3m+ / 10ft+
power
Hollow, Fast, Powerful, Ledgey
Best Tide Position: Don't know
Best Tide Movement: Don't know

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FAQ

Peak season at San Antonio (Regatas) runs from April to October with powerful southwest and west swells. The spot offers rideable surf on about 150 days per year, shining with exceptional consistency from multiple swell windows. Optimal conditions feature north, northwest, west, southwest or south swells, offshore winds from east, northeast or southeast, and low to mid tides. Time early mornings during the week for clean faces before sea breeze.
San Antonio (Regatas) suits experienced surfers with its powerful ledges and fast lines. Beginners should steer clear due to the intensity, while intermediates might progress on smaller days. Advanced riders thrive, linking sections on hollow rights and lefts that demand precise positioning, speed control, rail work and tube-riding instincts amid punchy 1- to 3-meter sets.
San Antonio (Regatas) is a classic beach break with powerful rights and lefts over a sandy bottom scattered with rocks. Waves are hollow, fast, ledgey and section quickly, rewarding committed surfers with high-line speed and occasional barrels. Optimal swells from north, northwest, west, southwest or south build steep faces, best cleaned by east, northeast or southeast offshore winds at low to mid tides.
San Antonio (Regatas) stays remarkably empty, with weekdays seeing just a handful of surfers and weekends uncrowded overall. Fly into Jorge Chávez International Airport (LIM) 25 kilometers north, then take a 40-minute southbound bus or taxi along the Pan-American Highway. From Chorrillos, catch a combi or colectivo for a 500-meter walk; free street parking and rideshares like Uber for about 50 soles are available.
San Antonio (Regatas) offers pure, uncrowded bliss with raw beach-break power, hollow fast lines and explosive sessions that stand out. Its bay-like setup in Chorrillos delivers very consistent 1- to 3-meter waves amid desert-meets-ocean terrain, rewarding skill with barrels and speed unmatched in busier areas, where ocean energy takes center stage peacefully with locals and visitors.

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