Keramas Beach

-8.597550 N / 115.339083 O

Keramas Beach Surf Spot Guide, Indonesia

Keramas Beach delivers one of Bali's most electrifying right-hand reef breaks, firing over a shallow rocky bottom with steep take-offs into heaving barrels and long carving walls perfect for high-performance surfing. This world-class wave draws experienced surfers chasing those shampoo rides—Balinese slang for getting tubed—amid a backdrop of black sand and rice paddies that keeps the vibe raw and focused. Expect powerful sessions where aerials and maneuvers shine on clean faces, making it a bucket-list spot for anyone dialed into reef waves.

Geography and Nature

Nestled on Bali's east coast, Keramas stretches along a stunning 10-kilometer expanse of black volcanic sand beach, framed by lush rice fields and distant views of Mount Agung rising 3,000 meters high. The area feels rural and uncrowded compared to Bali's busier south, with a laid-back coastal landscape dotted by occasional farms and a serene, open shoreline backed by reefs. The beach itself mixes sand with flat rock sections offshore, creating a dramatic yet accessible entry to this high-performance playground.

Surf Setup

Keramas is a classic reef break dominated by a heavy right-hander that peels over sharp volcanic rock, offering steep drops into hollow barrel sections followed by open walls ideal for turns, airs, and speed lines. Optimal swells come from the south or southeast, wrapping in during the wet season, while northwest winds keep it offshore for glassy perfection, especially in the mornings. Mid to high tides are essential to cover the shallow reef and focus the waves properly, avoiding the bony low-tide slabs. On a typical session, you'll paddle out through an obvious channel north of the main peak, positioning for shifty take-offs that demand patience amid sets holding from 0.6 to 3 meters.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot boasts very high consistency, firing on about 150 days a year thanks to its east coast exposure catching southeast and east swells. The prime window is the wet season from November to March, when south-southeast pulses deliver the biggest, most powerful waves, often clean early before trade winds build. Dry season (May to October) offers funner smaller days in the mornings, but avoid midday when onshore trades chop it up; transitions at the start and end of seasons blend the best of both for reliable firing.

Crowd Levels

Weekdays see just a few surfers in the lineup, creating mellow sessions, while weekends draw bigger numbers as locals and visitors pack in. The mix includes a solid local crew alongside traveling surfers, keeping things active yet manageable outside peak times.

Who It's For

Keramas suits experienced surfers confident on reefs, shortboards, and handling steep drops with barrel potential up to 3 meters. Beginners should steer clear due to the rocky bottom and fast waves, but solid intermediates can tackle smaller head-high days for progression. Advanced riders thrive here, linking maneuvers on the walls or hunting perfect 10s in the tubes.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for the shallow reef that can deliver harsh wipeouts, strong currents pulling across the lineup, and occasional rips in bigger swells. Time your rides carefully to avoid the rocks, and respect the channel for safe entries and exits.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings warm waters averaging 27 to 29°C, so boardshorts or a rash guard suffice with no wetsuit needed. Winter from December to March sees temperatures dip slightly to 25 to 28°C, still calling for just trunks and sun protection. Spring and fall hover around 26 to 28°C, perfect for minimal gear like springsuits on cooler mornings if any.

How to Get There

Fly into Ngurah Rai International Airport (DPS), just 25 kilometers south, for the quickest access—a 30- to 45-minute drive north via Jalan By Pass Ngurah Rai, turning right at the monkey statue roundabout onto Jalan Prof. Dr. Ida Bagus Mantra, then following Komune Resort signs with a U-turn if needed. Paid parking sits right at the end of the dirt road, mere 20 to 50 meters walk to the beach and obvious channel. Taxis, ride-hailing apps, or rental scooters are straightforward from the airport or nearby Sanur, with no reliable public buses but plenty of surf shuttles from camps in Canggu or Seminyak.

( Reviews)

Your surfhouse is here

Nearby Spots

Reviews

( Reviews)

Keramas Beach Tuas Beach

Indonesia
-8.597550 N / 115.339083 O
Bali
Take a car
Short walk (5-15 mn)
OK
View Surf Spot
Level: Experienced surfers
Public access: Public access
Special access: 4x4

Keramas Beach Surf Spot Guide, Indonesia

Keramas Beach delivers one of Bali's most electrifying right-hand reef breaks, firing over a shallow rocky bottom with steep take-offs into heaving barrels and long carving walls perfect for high-performance surfing. This world-class wave draws experienced surfers chasing those shampoo rides—Balinese slang for getting tubed—amid a backdrop of black sand and rice paddies that keeps the vibe raw and focused. Expect powerful sessions where aerials and maneuvers shine on clean faces, making it a bucket-list spot for anyone dialed into reef waves.

Geography and Nature

Nestled on Bali's east coast, Keramas stretches along a stunning 10-kilometer expanse of black volcanic sand beach, framed by lush rice fields and distant views of Mount Agung rising 3,000 meters high. The area feels rural and uncrowded compared to Bali's busier south, with a laid-back coastal landscape dotted by occasional farms and a serene, open shoreline backed by reefs. The beach itself mixes sand with flat rock sections offshore, creating a dramatic yet accessible entry to this high-performance playground.

Surf Setup

Keramas is a classic reef break dominated by a heavy right-hander that peels over sharp volcanic rock, offering steep drops into hollow barrel sections followed by open walls ideal for turns, airs, and speed lines. Optimal swells come from the south or southeast, wrapping in during the wet season, while northwest winds keep it offshore for glassy perfection, especially in the mornings. Mid to high tides are essential to cover the shallow reef and focus the waves properly, avoiding the bony low-tide slabs. On a typical session, you'll paddle out through an obvious channel north of the main peak, positioning for shifty take-offs that demand patience amid sets holding from 0.6 to 3 meters.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot boasts very high consistency, firing on about 150 days a year thanks to its east coast exposure catching southeast and east swells. The prime window is the wet season from November to March, when south-southeast pulses deliver the biggest, most powerful waves, often clean early before trade winds build. Dry season (May to October) offers funner smaller days in the mornings, but avoid midday when onshore trades chop it up; transitions at the start and end of seasons blend the best of both for reliable firing.

Crowd Levels

Weekdays see just a few surfers in the lineup, creating mellow sessions, while weekends draw bigger numbers as locals and visitors pack in. The mix includes a solid local crew alongside traveling surfers, keeping things active yet manageable outside peak times.

Who It's For

Keramas suits experienced surfers confident on reefs, shortboards, and handling steep drops with barrel potential up to 3 meters. Beginners should steer clear due to the rocky bottom and fast waves, but solid intermediates can tackle smaller head-high days for progression. Advanced riders thrive here, linking maneuvers on the walls or hunting perfect 10s in the tubes.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for the shallow reef that can deliver harsh wipeouts, strong currents pulling across the lineup, and occasional rips in bigger swells. Time your rides carefully to avoid the rocks, and respect the channel for safe entries and exits.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings warm waters averaging 27 to 29°C, so boardshorts or a rash guard suffice with no wetsuit needed. Winter from December to March sees temperatures dip slightly to 25 to 28°C, still calling for just trunks and sun protection. Spring and fall hover around 26 to 28°C, perfect for minimal gear like springsuits on cooler mornings if any.

How to Get There

Fly into Ngurah Rai International Airport (DPS), just 25 kilometers south, for the quickest access—a 30- to 45-minute drive north via Jalan By Pass Ngurah Rai, turning right at the monkey statue roundabout onto Jalan Prof. Dr. Ida Bagus Mantra, then following Komune Resort signs with a U-turn if needed. Paid parking sits right at the end of the dirt road, mere 20 to 50 meters walk to the beach and obvious channel. Taxis, ride-hailing apps, or rental scooters are straightforward from the airport or nearby Sanur, with no reliable public buses but plenty of surf shuttles from camps in Canggu or Seminyak.

Wave Quality: World Class

Your surfspot is here

Meteo

Il link alle previsioni non è disponibile.

Webcam

Surf Conditions:

Wave type
Reef-rocky
Normal lenght: Short (< 50m)
Good day lenght: Normal (50 to 150m)
DIRECTION
Right and left
Good swell direction:
Good wind direction:
frequency
Very consistent (150 day/year)
Swell size: Starts working at 1.0m-1.5m / 3ft-5ft and holds up to 2.5m+ / 8ft+
power

Best Tide Position: Mid and high tide
Best Tide Movement: Rising and falling tides

Nearby surfspots

No Surf Spots found near Keramas Beach, Keramas.
We are working to add more soon!

Nearby surfhouses

No Surf House found in Keramas.
We are working to add more soon!

FAQ

The prime window for surfing Keramas Beach is the wet season from November to March, with high consistency firing on about 150 days a year. South-southeast swells deliver powerful waves up to 3 meters, best in mornings with northwest offshore winds and mid to high tides to cover the shallow reef. Dry season from May to October offers smaller fun days early before onshore trades, with transitions blending reliable conditions.
Keramas Beach suits experienced surfers confident on reefs, shortboards, and steep drops with barrel potential up to 3 meters. Beginners should steer clear due to the rocky bottom and fast waves, but solid intermediates can handle smaller head-high days for progression. Advanced riders thrive linking maneuvers on walls or hunting perfect tubes.
Keramas Beach features a heavy right-hand reef break over sharp volcanic rock with steep take-offs into hollow barrels and long carving walls for high-performance surfing. Optimal south or southeast swells from 0.6 to 3 meters, northwest offshore winds for glassy sessions, and mid to high tides to avoid shallow slabs. Paddle out through the channel north of the main peak for shifty take-offs.
Weekdays at Keramas Beach see just a few surfers for mellow sessions, while weekends draw more locals and visitors keeping it active yet manageable outside peaks. Fly into Ngurah Rai Airport 25 kilometers south for a 30- to 45-minute drive, follow signs to Komune Resort with paid parking at the dirt road end, then 20 to 50 meters walk to the beach and channel.
Keramas Beach stands out with its electrifying right-hand reef break offering steep drops into heaving barrels and long walls for aerials and maneuvers on a raw black sand beach backed by rice paddies. This world-class wave on Bali's rural east coast delivers high consistency and shampoo rides for experienced surfers, contrasting busier south spots with its focused high-performance vibe.

Reviews

(12.0 Reviews)
0 0 voti
Valutazione
Iscriviti
Notificami
guest
0 Commenti
Vecchi
Più recenti Le più votate
Feedback in linea
Visualizza tutti i commenti
chevron-down