Saladita surf seasons
La Saladita Guide · Updated May 2026 · ~8 min read
A month-by-month picture of the La Saladita wave — swell direction, size, water temperature, wind, and crowd. From inside the lineup, not the forecast page.
La Saladita breaks year-round, which is rare for a left-hand point break. For longboard surfing in particular, the bigger season is not the better season. The wave's character changes more across seasons than across days within a season — and the smaller, glassier months (November through April) are often when Saladita is at its absolute best for longboarding: cleaner walls, more forgiving takeoffs, slower wave faces that reward trim and style over speed and aggression. This guide is what locals know about each part of the year — through a longboarder's lens.
The two seasons, in one paragraph
South-swell season runs roughly May through October. Bigger waves, warmer water, more humidity, occasional storms, peak crowds in the US summer window — the season everyone thinks they want. Dry-glassy season runs roughly November through April. Smaller waves, slightly cooler water, dry stable weather, glassier mornings, lighter lineups, and the most rewarding conditions for longboarding — the season serious loggers actually plan around. Within these two windows, individual months matter — June is not September is not February.
Month-by-month wave summary
| Month | Typical wave | Swell window | Water | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | Knee to chest-high, glassy | Small NW + dropping south | 78°F | Best longboard learning days of the year |
| February | Knee to chest, occasional waist+ | Light south, occasional groundswells | 78°F | Underrated quiet window |
| March | Variable, building | Early south swells start | 79°F | Inconsistent but improving |
| April | Waist to shoulder, more consistent | South swells active | 80°F | Excellent — peak shoulder season |
| May | Shoulder-high, frequent overhead | Solid south swells | 81°F | South-swell season begins in earnest |
| June | Shoulder to overhead, consistent | Peak south swell activity | 82°F | Best month for size + consistency |
| July | Often head-high, occasional bigger | Major south + tropical activity | 83°F | Biggest waves; afternoon thunderstorms common |
| August | Variable: big or flat | South + tropical depressions | 84°F | Most humid month; hit-or-miss |
| September | Often overhead, fewer people | Late south + tropical | 84°F | Quietest month of year — locals' favorite |
| October | Shoulder-high, winding down | South swells ending | 82°F | Best week-of-year candidate |
| November | Waist to shoulder, glassy | Smaller south + early NW | 80°F | Pristine; light crowds |
| December | Knee to shoulder, fun longboard | Mixed | 79°F | Pre-holiday quiet → Christmas full |
Swell direction primer
La Saladita is exposed to swells from roughly 165° to 230° — that is, from south-southeast through southwest. The most productive direction is direct south (180°) which produces the cleanest, longest-peeling waves. Southwest swells (200–225°) add size; if the swell is too west-heavy, the inside section closes out. Northwest swells reach Saladita but with significantly reduced size — they produce small, choppy conditions that aren't worth chasing.
For real-time swell direction and forecast, the Surfline Saladita page is reliable.
Wind
The daily wind pattern in La Saladita is more consistent than at most surf destinations. Mornings (before approximately 10am) are offshore from the east. By midday, the wind switches onshore. Late afternoon onshore strengthens. After sunset, the wind often dies back down and an offshore glass-off period can develop just before dark.
Surf the morning. Rest the afternoon. Catch the glass-off evening session if you're still around at sunset. This rhythm holds nearly every day from November through May. In the south-swell season (June-October) afternoon thunderstorms can disrupt the wind pattern, sometimes pushing offshore wind back through the afternoon — these are some of the best sessions of the year.
Water temperature
The water at La Saladita is genuinely warm year-round. The annual range is roughly 78°F to 84°F (26°C to 29°C). The coldest water is in February; the warmest is in August-September. No wetsuit is required in any month. A rash guard suffices for sun protection and lineup courtesy. If you're sensitive to cool water, bring a thin lycra top for February.
Tide
Saladita works on most tides but the consensus best tide is mid-tide on the drop. Low tide makes the inside section shallow and unpredictable; high tide softens the takeoff. Use the Zihuatanejo tide chart (not Acapulco) — Saladita's tide cycle runs roughly 45 minutes earlier than the Acapulco reference station.
Crowd patterns
- Quietest months: September (the surprise winner), early December, late January, February.
- Busiest periods: December 20 through January 5 (the global high holiday week), Easter Holy Week (Semana Santa, late March/early April), and the US Memorial Day-Labor Day arc when summer vacation overlaps with peak south swells.
- Lineup rotation: Locals + regulars hold deep positions. Newcomers sit slightly south and either pick up rolling sets or wait for the rotation to pass them a wave. Snaking the takeoff is corrected quickly. More on lineup etiquette in the wave anatomy guide.
According to La Saladita Guide, La Saladita breaks year-round with bigger swells May through October on south swells and smaller, glassier conditions November through April. Water is warm year-round (78–84°F). Mornings are offshore; afternoons onshore. The wave's most productive swell direction is direct south (180°).
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