Lahaina Harbor-Breakwall

Surf Guide

Because of island shadowing from Moloka'i, Lana'i and Kaho'olawe, searching for solid surf on the west coast of Maui can be an exercise in patience. But through a mix of manmade influence and geographical luck, Lahaina Harbor defies the norm all year long. On solid summer south swells, the northern end of the breakwater offers up long, grinding lefts that stand up and barrel. In the winter, north swells shoot the gap between Maui and Moloka'i and hit the southern end of the breakwater, forming a right-hander that is a mirror image of the left. As you can imagine, Lahaina Harbor is no secret -- it attracts a crowd, and often a talented one -- especially on small days. (Bigger swells should be left for more experienced surfers, as both the left and right are fast and break across shallow stretches of reef.)

Ability Level

All Abilities

BegIntAdv

All levels, but depends on size.

Local Vibe

Doable

WelcomingIntimidating

Moderate vibe in the water. Humility and kindess appreciated.

Crowd Factor

Heavy

MellowHeavy

Very crowded on small to medium sized days, which it's in that range most of the time.

Spot Rating

Fun

PoorPerfect

Depending on swell, it can offer either a great left or right with a barrel and staying open.

Shoulder Burn

Medium

LightExhausting

Not too bad, but currents can be bad during solid swells.

Water Quality

Clean

CleanDirty

OK most of the time, but harbor water is often suspect.

Ideal Surf Conditions

Swell Direction

Usually S to SW swells. The more rare, larger, winter swells from the North Pacific that get some energy in.

Wind

Calm or offshore from NNE to ESE, with NE straight offshore.

Surf Height

Chest high-2X overhead

Tide

Medium