๐ โAm I Too Old to Learn Surfing?โ
Yes, you can learn to surf at 40, 50 or even 60 โ but the way you approach it matters more than your age.
This is one of the most common questions people ask.
And it usually comes with something underneath it:
๐ โWhat if Iโm too late?โ
๐ โWhat if I look stupid?โ
๐ โWhat if I canโt do it?โ
The truth?
๐ Youโre not too old.
But you do need to do a few things differently.
๐ My Reality Learning to Surf at 28
I started surfing at 28 on the Gold Coast.
Which sounds youngโฆ until youโre out there.
I learnt at places like Snapper โ which, honestly, I hated at the time.
Itโs world-classโฆ but also:
- super competitive
- fast
- and hard to get waves
Most sessions?
๐ Iโd catch one waveโฆ maybe.
Sometimes none.
Iโd come in frustrated, throwing my board on the sand like:
๐ โIโm never surfing again.โ
And I meant it.
๐ค The Part No One Talks About
Surfing has one of the slowest learning curves of any sport.
Way slower than something like kite surfing where you can progress quickly.
With surfing:
- you wait
- you miss waves
- you get it wrongโฆ a lot
And that messes with your head.
๐ง The Real Struggle Isnโt Physical โ Itโs Mental
For me, it wasnโt just the waves.
It was the thoughts:
- โIโm not good enoughโ
- โI donโt deserve this waveโ
- โEveryone else is better than meโ
And being in a lineup where you donโt feel like you fit in?
๐ That amplifies everything.
Especially when you donโt look like the typical 20-year-old surfer girl.
๐ If this sounds familiar, this is worth reading:
How to Stop Negative Thoughts While Surfing
๐โโ๏ธ The Biggest Mistake I Made (And Most People Do)
I was put on a tiny, high-performance board from the start.
Because I was told:
๐ โThis is what you need to get good.โ
It made learning:
- harder
- slower
- more frustrating
It took me YEARS to realise:
๐ Board choice is the fastest way to improve your surfing.
๐ก What Actually Matters (This Is the Truth)
If you want to learn surfing later in life, focus on this:
๐ฅ 1. Board Selection (Most Important)
A bigger board with more volume will:
- help you catch more waves
- make standing up easier
- build confidence faster
๐ This alone can change everything
๐ฅ 2. Fitness (Especially for Women)
As a surf coach, I see this all the time.
The biggest struggles:
- upper body strength (for paddling + pop-up)
- balance
- flexibility
If your body isnโt ready:
๐ surfing feels 10x harder than it should
๐ Start here:
How to Improve Your Surf Pop-Up
๐ฅ 3. Time in the Water
Thereโs no shortcut for this.
You need:
- repetition
- exposure to waves
- time reading conditions
Even things like:
- body surfing
- using a handplane
- learning tides and swell
๐ all build your understanding faster
๐ง 4. Mindset (This Is the Hidden One)
This is where most people quit.
Not because they canโt do itโฆ
๐ but because they donโt believe they can.
Things like:
- scarcity mindset (โthere arenโt enough wavesโ)
- comparison
- feeling like you donโt belong
๐ will stop your progress before your body does
Helpful articles :
๐ฌ๏ธ Confidence Changes Everything
One of the biggest shifts in surfing is confidence in the water.
Especially when it comes to:
- wipeouts
- hold-downs
- bigger surf
When you feel more comfortable underwater:
๐ you commit more to waves
๐ This is where breathwork becomes powerful:
How to Build Breath Hold Confidence for Surfing
๐โโ๏ธ Longboard or Shortboard? (And What You Actually Want From Surfing)
One of the biggest decisions early on is:
๐ What kind of surfing do you actually want to do?
Because that determines:
- the board you ride
- how fast you progress
- and how much you actually enjoy the process
๐ข Longboarding (Great โ If Thatโs What You Want)
If your goal is:
- cruising
- catching lots of waves
- smooth, relaxed surfing
๐ then a longboard makes perfect sense.
Theyโre:
- stable
- easy to paddle
- great for building confidence
But hereโs where I see a lot of people go wrongโฆ
๐ด If You Want to Shortboard โ Donโt Stay on a Longboard Too Long
The common advice is:
๐ โStart on the biggest board possibleโ
And yes, that helps you catch wavesโฆ
But if your goal is to shortboard?
๐ It can actually slow your progression.
Because youโre not learning:
- how to paddle into waves properly
- how to position yourself
- how to duck dive
- how a smaller board feels in real conditions
๐ก What I Recommend Instead
If your goal is to shortboard:
๐ Start on something slightly bigger than what you want to end up on โ not massively bigger.
Think:
- mid-lengths
- funboards
- or just a few steps up in volume
This allows you to:
- still catch waves
- but actually learn the skills youโll need later
I see this all the time as a coach.
People spend years on big boardsโฆ
๐ then struggle massively when they try to step down.
๐ง My Experience
I was put on a small, high-performance board early on.
It made everything:
- harder
- slower
- more frustrating
But on the flip side, I also see people go too far the other way and stay on oversized boards for too long.
๐ Both extremes slow you down.
โ๏ธ The Real Goal
Itโs not about:
- the easiest board
- or the hardest board
๐ Itโs about choosing a board that challenges you just enough while still letting you progress.
๐ Learn in the Right Environment
Your environment matters just as much as your board.
If you want to improve faster:
๐ choose places with:
- consistent waves
- less crowds
- forgiving conditions
Places like Lombok are ideal for this.
You get:
- warm water
- consistent surf
- more time actually riding waves
๐ I break this down more here:
How to Score the Best Waves in Lombok
๐โโ๏ธ Surf Camps & Retreats (Fast Track Option)
If you want to speed things up:
๐ surf camps or retreats can help massively
Because you get:
- structured progression
- coaching
- more time in the water
Just make sure:
๐ they align with your level and your goals
๐ Where You Learn Matters
Not all surf spots are equal.
Places like:
- Snapper
- crowded point breaks
๐ can slow your progress massively
Instead:
- smaller waves
- quieter beaches
- forgiving conditions
๐ will help you improve much faster
๐ This guide will help you choose:
Beginner Surf Spots in Australia
๐ Starting Again After Time Off (Where Iโm At Now)
Right now, Iโm actually preparing for my own comeback.
I havenโt surfed properly since having my son โ heโs 5.5 now.
My whole goal has been:
๐ getting him into surfing so I can get back into it too
Thatโs the dream.
At the moment:
- Iโve been on Magnetic Island (no surf)
- doing paddle boarding and kayaking
- rehabbing a back injury
- rebuilding strength
Because the reality is:
๐ nothing gets you surf fit like surfing
And Iโm giving myself about 4 months to build back up before heading to Indonesia and getting back into it properly.
๐ Final Thought
The biggest mistake isnโt choosing the โwrongโ boardโฆ
๐ itโs not being clear on what kind of surfer you actually want to become.
Once you understand that:
๐ everything else gets a lot easier.
โ FAQ
Can you learn to surf at 40, 50 or 60?
Yes โ but you need:
- the right board
- the right conditions
- realistic expectations
Why is surfing so hard to learn?
Because itโs not just physical:
๐ itโs timing, positioning, and reading the ocean
Whatโs the fastest way to improve?
๐ Board selection
๐ consistency
๐ working on your pop-up
Is surfing harder for women?
It can be โ especially due to:
- upper body strength
- confidence in the lineup
But with the right approach:
๐ you can progress just as well