Surf, Paddle, Sail and Swim: The Water-Sport Scene on the Sunshine Coast
With world-class point breaks at Noosa, calm river systems at Maroochydore and Noosa, and patrolled ocean beaches stretching the length of the coast, water sport is woven into everyday life here.
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The Sunshine Coast is one of Australia's great water-sport destinations, and not just for visitors. Locals treat the ocean, rivers and estuaries as their backyard playground, with surf, paddling, sailing, ocean swimming and surf life saving all thriving year-round. The variety of waterways means beginners and elite athletes alike find what they are looking for within minutes of home.
Surfing is the sport most synonymous with the Sunshine Coast, and for good reason. Noosa Heads is famous across the world for its long, peeling right-handers at the national park point, which produce some of the most enjoyable waves in Australia for surfers of all levels. The Noosa Festival of Surfing, held each autumn, is a major event on the Australian surf calendar celebrating longboarding, alternative crafts and the community spirit that makes Noosa surf culture so distinctive. Further south, Coolum, Maroochydore, Alexandra Headland and Mooloolaba all have reliable beach breaks. Learn-to-surf schools operate at several beaches and cater to complete beginners through to those wanting to sharpen existing skills.
Surf Life Saving is a proud institution along this coastline. Clubs at Noosa, Coolum, Maroochydore, Alexandra Headland, Mooloolaba, Kawana and Caloundra run patrol rosters through summer and offer Surf Rescue Certificate training, nippers programs for children and competitive carnival programs for all ages. Joining your local surf life saving club is one of the most meaningful ways to become part of the Sunshine Coast community.
The Maroochy River, Noosa River and the lakes around Noosa create a vast network of calm water perfectly suited to stand-up paddleboarding, kayaking, outrigger canoeing and sailing. Clubs at Mooloolaba and on the Noosa River offer sailing lessons and social racing, while paddle clubs cater for recreational paddlers through to serious outrigger competitors. The Mooloolaba Mile ocean swim, held each year, draws hundreds of competitors ranging from serious open-water swimmers to first-timers completing their first ocean event.
Getting started in any water sport on the Sunshine Coast is straightforward. Surf Life Saving Queensland, the local paddle clubs and sailing clubs all have welcoming entry programs. The council's sport and recreation pages list affiliated clubs across the region, and most hold open days at the start of each summer season.
This article was produced by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial desk and covers sport in Sunshine Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.
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