Australia doesn't just have good surf — it has an entire coastline of it, wrapped around a culture that treats the morning surf check the way other countries treat coffee. For a backpacker, that's the opportunity of a lifetime: you can learn on some of the friendliest waves on earth, then spend the rest of your visa chasing better ones. Board and wetsuit hire is everywhere, lessons run $70–$90, and the ocean, gloriously, is free.

Here are the six spots every backpacker should know, from first-timer sandbanks to waves you should watch from the cliff with a coffee.

1. Byron Bay, NSW — the learner's paradise

Skill level: total beginner and up. Best season: year-round; cleanest in autumn–winter.

There's a reason every surf school in the country seems to have a Byron branch. The Pass peels long, slow rights around a headland when the swell lines up, and Main Beach and Clarkes serve up soft, forgiving whitewater for day one. Group lessons run $70–$90, multi-day packages drop that fast, and board hire is about $25–$40 a day. The crowd is half the experience — expect a lineup that's 50% backpackers on foamies, all falling off and grinning. Byron's hostels are the natural base; Hostelworld is where you'll find the ones with free board hire thrown in, which pays for itself in two days.

2. Bells Beach, VIC — the sacred one

Skill level: intermediate–advanced. Best season: autumn–winter (March–August).

An hour and a half from Melbourne on the Great Ocean Road, Bells is the spiritual home of Australian surfing — home to the world's longest-running surf contest (held every Easter since 1961). It's a big, walling point break over reef that rewards experience and punishes hesitation, and the water is cold (bring or hire a good wetsuit — 4/3mm in winter). Not a learner's wave, but paddling out at Bells — or just watching a solid swell from the famous cliff-top steps — is a rite of passage. Nearby Torquay has softer beach breaks and every surf shop imaginable.

3. Snapper Rocks, QLD — the Superbank

Skill level: advanced (watch from the sand otherwise). Best season: summer–autumn cyclone swells (Dec–May).

The southern end of the Gold Coast hides one of the best waves on the planet: the Superbank, a man-made sand phenomenon that can link Snapper Rocks through Greenmount to Kirra in one absurd, kilometre-long ride. It's also one of the most crowded, competitive lineups anywhere — world champions grew up here and still surf it. Beginners should head a few minutes north to Currumbin Alley or Greenmount's inside section instead, and save Snapper for spectating when a cyclone swell hits. It's the best free show in Queensland.

4. Noosa, QLD — longboard heaven

Skill level: beginner–intermediate. Best season: summer–autumn for points; year-round at the beach.

Five point breaks peel along the edge of a national park, which means you can watch koala trees slide past while you trim down a waist-high wall. Noosa's points (First Point, Tea Tree) are slow, mellow and perfect for your first real wave after graduating from whitewater — and Main Beach is one of the gentlest learning beaches in the country. Lessons run $75–$95. Fair warning: when the points are working, everyone knows it. Dawn patrol or walk further into the national park for space.

A clean Australian point break — the kind of wave that turns a lesson into an addiction

5. Margaret River, WA — the heavy hitter

Skill level: advanced (Main Break); beginners stick to Prevelly's inside banks. Best season: autumn–spring.

The west coast's marquee surf zone, three hours south of Perth, where Indian Ocean swells hit limestone reef with genuine force. Main Break and The Box are world-tour-grade waves — serious, powerful, and unforgettable to watch from the lookout. Learners aren't locked out, though: local schools run lessons on the protected beaches around $80–$100, and the region doubles as wine country, so flat days are handled. If you're doing regional work in the south-west, this is the dream posting.

6. Bondi Beach, NSW — the icon

Skill level: beginner–intermediate. Best season: year-round; best banks in autumn.

Yes, it's touristy. It's also a genuinely good beach break, patrolled year-round, ringed by lessons ($80–$100) and board hire, and reachable by bus from Sydney's hostels for a few dollars. Surf the flags-adjacent zones as a learner, do the Bondi-to-Coogee walk when the surf's junk, and tick off "surfed Bondi" with zero shame — everyone does it and everyone's glad they did.

Etiquette: the rules that keep you welcome

Australian lineups are friendly to learners who respect the basics — and frosty to those who don't. Non-negotiables:

  • Don't drop in. The surfer closest to the peak has right of way. One wave, one rider.
  • Paddle wide, around the break, not through the middle of the lineup.
  • Hang onto your board — a loose board in whitewater is a missile aimed at someone's head.
  • Wait your turn. Snaking (paddling around someone to steal priority) is the fastest way to make enemies.
  • Swim between the flags if you're not surfing, and never surf between them.

Respect the locals, take the scraps with a smile for your first few sessions, and you'll be amazed how quickly a lineup starts hooting you into waves.

Getting started

If you've never surfed, book a lesson at Byron, Noosa or Bondi — you'll stand up on day one, guaranteed by physics and soft-top foam boards. You can compare surf lessons and multi-day surf camps when you browse our surf experiences on the OzBackpacker tours page, and GetYourGuide covers all the major learner beaches with free cancellation. After that? Hire a board, chase the sandbanks, and accept that your travel plans now answer to the swell forecast. Welcome to Australia.

Tools, die wir dafür feiern

ActivitiesGetYourGuide

Reef days, skydives, k’gari 4WD — free cancellation.

Book the trip
HostelsHostelworld

The biggest backpacker hostel inventory in Australia.

Find a hostel