The best surfing in Panama for beginners is at Playa Venao — a long, consistent sandy beach break on the Azuero Peninsula with forgiving waves year-round and no dangerous reef. El Palmar is the top pick if you're staying near Panama City. Both spots have warm water (no wetsuit needed), soft sand bottoms and surf instruction available on the beach.
Is Panama Good for Beginner Surfers?
Yes — and significantly better than most people expect. Panama doesn't have the global surf reputation of Costa Rica or Bali, but for beginners that's actually an advantage. The lineups are emptier, the instructors have more time for you, and the waves at the beginner spots are genuinely excellent for learning.
What makes Panama particularly good for first-timers comes down to four things: warm water year-round (26–29°C — no wetsuit, no cold shock), sandy-bottom beach breaks at the beginner spots (falling off doesn't hurt), consistent swell that gives you plenty of rideable waves every session, and uncrowded lineups where you're not competing with experienced surfers for every wave.
The one thing to be aware of: Panama has a wide range of surf spots from mellow beginner beaches to genuinely dangerous advanced reef breaks. Choosing the right spot for your level is everything — and that's exactly what this guide is for.
"The lineups are emptier, the instructors have more time for you, and the waves at the beginner spots are genuinely excellent for learning. Panama is one of the best-kept secrets in beginner surf travel."
The 6 Best Beginner Surf Spots in Panama
These six spots are ranked specifically for beginners — prioritizing safe, forgiving conditions over wave quality for experienced surfers. Each one has something different to offer depending on where you're based and when you're visiting.
The undisputed number one for beginner surfing in Panama and one of the best beginner surf destinations in all of Central America. Playa Venao sits in a protected horseshoe bay on the Azuero Peninsula — the shape of the coastline works with the swell to produce long, consistent, peeling waves that are almost always manageable for beginners regardless of the season. The bottom is soft sand throughout, which matters enormously when you're learning and falling off your board repeatedly. There's no reef to worry about, no dangerous currents at normal swell sizes, and the waves consistently give you enough push and time to practice standing up without being overwhelming. The surf community here is welcoming to learners, several surf schools operate right on the beach, and the town has a pure surf culture vibe with accommodation at every price point. If you have one week in Panama and want to learn to surf, this is where you should spend it.
The best beginner surf spot near Panama City and a Panamanian classic. El Palmar sits just 90 minutes from the capital along the Interamerican Highway, making it the obvious choice for surfers who are based in Panama City or want to fit a surf session into a shorter trip. The beach has three distinct breaks — Frente Palmar, Punta Palmar and Hawaiisito — giving beginners options across different conditions. The waves here are forgiving on smaller days and can build to genuine fun sizes on medium swell, which makes it a useful progression beach as your confidence grows. A surf school operates on the beach and boards are available to rent. Locals surf here regularly, which gives it a real, non-touristy feel that you don't always get at the more visitor-heavy spots. If you're only in Panama for a few days and want to surf without a long drive, El Palmar is your answer.
Panama's most accessible beginner surf spot and a great first introduction to the ocean for absolute first-timers. Punta Chame sits on a peninsula about 80 kilometers west of Panama City and produces some of the most mellow, manageable waves in the country. The protected bay setting means the waves rarely get too powerful for beginners — even when the Pacific is firing elsewhere, Punta Chame tends to stay gentle. The sandy bottom and calm conditions make it ideal for people who have never been on a surfboard and want to get comfortable in the water before committing to a longer journey south to Venao. It's also one of the world's best kitesurfing destinations, so the beach has a lively atmosphere year-round even when the surf is small. A perfect warm-up spot at the start of a Panama surf trip.
The best beginner surf spot in Bocas del Toro and the go-to introduction to Caribbean reef surfing. Paunch breaks over a coral reef on Isla Colón, but at beginner-friendly sizes the wave is forgiving, fun and a completely different experience to the Pacific beach breaks — the water is crystal clear, the setting is tropical paradise, and the wave gives you a taste of what reef surfing feels like without the heavy consequences of the more advanced breaks nearby. Getting there by water taxi from Bocas Town is part of the experience. Paunch is only surfable during the Caribbean season (December through March), so it's the go-to if you're visiting Bocas and want to surf during that window. A good guide will take you to Paunch when it's small and fun, and keep you away from the heavier breaks until you're ready.
A reliable all-levels beach break just 90 minutes from Panama City and one of the easiest surf days to organize for anyone staying in the capital. Río Mar doesn't have the consistency or the length of Venao, but it works well for beginners on most days during the Pacific season and is a great option for a low-commitment surf session without a major journey. The beach is relatively uncrowded, the vibe is relaxed and local, and the waves are fun without being intimidating. Best used as a day trip introduction to surfing in Panama — get your first sessions here, then commit to the longer trip south to Venao once you know you want more. Many guided surf trips use Río Mar as the opening and closing session that bookends the main destinations.
Santa Catalina is Panama's most famous surf town and home to genuinely world-class advanced waves — but it also has a dedicated beginner section called El Estero, a sandy-bottom beach break just outside town that's suitable for learners. It ranks sixth here because Santa Catalina is primarily an advanced destination, and beginners who end up there without knowing which break to use can find themselves out of their depth quickly. But if you're visiting with a guide or as part of a group that includes more experienced surfers, El Estero gives you a real beginner surf experience in one of Panama's most special places. You can learn in the morning at El Estero and watch the experienced surfers get barreled at La Punta in the afternoon — and that contrast is genuinely inspiring. Just don't wander into the main break without experience.
Quick Comparison — All 6 Spots
| Spot | Beginner Rating | Bottom | Distance from Panama City | Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Playa Venao | ★★★★★ | Sand | 4 hrs | Year-round |
| El Palmar | ★★★★★ | Sand | 90 min | Apr – Oct |
| Punta Chame | ★★★★★ | Sand | 80 km | Apr – Oct |
| Paunch (Bocas) | ★★★★★ | Reef | Fly to Bocas | Dec – Mar |
| Playa Río Mar | ★★★★★ | Sand | 90 min | Apr – Oct |
| Santa Catalina (El Estero) | ★★★★★ | Sand | 6 hrs | May – Aug |
What to Expect as a Beginner Surfer in Panama
You Will Stand Up on Your First Day
At the right spot with the right instruction, almost every beginner stands up on a surfboard within their first session. Panama's warm, forgiving beginner waves are genuinely ideal for this — the wave gives you a long push, you have time to find your footing and the soft sand bottom means falls are painless. Expect your first day to feel chaotic and exhausting and exhilarating all at once. By day three, you'll be reading waves and catching them on your own.
Equipment — What You Need
- A foam board (soft top) — wider, more stable and buoyant than a performance board. All beginner lessons use these.
- A rash guard — not for warmth (the water is 27°C+) but for sun protection during long sessions.
- Reef booties if surfing at Paunch in Bocas del Toro — the reef bottom requires foot protection.
- Boardshorts or a bikini — that's genuinely all you need in terms of clothing.
- Sunscreen rated SPF 50+ — reapply every hour. The equatorial sun is intense.
You Don't Need to Bring a Board
All beginner surf spots in Panama have board rental available on the beach, and any guided surf package includes equipment. There is no reason to pay airline surfboard fees as a beginner — the foam boards you'll learn on are not the kind of boards you'd travel with anyway. Travel light and rent locally.
The single biggest thing that separates a great beginner surf experience from a frustrating one isn't the spot — it's having someone in the water with you who knows when to push you into a wave, where to position you in the lineup and how to read the conditions for your level.
A good guide will have you catching waves in your first session that you wouldn't find on your own for days. They also keep you out of spots and situations that are above your ability — which matters more than most beginners realize until they've been held down by a wave they had no business being near.