Best Surf Camps in Canggu for Beginners — 2026 Comparison-2

Best Surf Camps in Canggu for Beginners

we are one of the surf camps in this comparison, so you should know that before reading any further. We have done our best to write about the other camps honestly — based on their public information and what their guests say about them — and to let the numbers speak for themselves. If Sōleïa is not the right fit for you, this article will still help you find the camp that is.

This guide is for people who are planning their first surf trip and are trying to make sense of what looks like very similar options. A week in a Canggu surf camp. Some combination of lessons, accommodation, yoga, and social life. Similar photos of pools and tropical gardens. Wildly different prices. What are you actually comparing?

That is the question this article answers.

What to look for in a beginner surf camp

Best Surf Camps in Canggu for Beginners — 2026 Comparison

Before you look at any specific camp, these are the criteria that matter for a beginner. Use them as your checklist.

Coaching quality and certification

Are the instructors ISA-certified or equivalent? Certification is not a guarantee of a good coach, but it is a baseline. It means the instructor has been assessed on technique, safety, and teaching methodology to a recognised standard.

Instructor-to-student ratio

In Canggu, the local Banjar (community association) enforces a maximum of 3 students per instructor in the water. Any reputable camp operates within this. The question is not the ratio itself but what it means for your session quality.

How sessions are structured

Is there land practice before entering the water? Video analysis after? Surf theory? A beginner who goes straight from the carpark to the ocean without preparation is losing 30% of the session before they even stand up. Structure matters.

What “sessions” actually means

Some camps advertise two sessions per day. For a beginner, two full coached sessions daily is unrealistic — both physically and in terms of wave conditions. Most morning offshore conditions in Canggu deteriorate by 10–11am. Check whether “two sessions” means two coached lessons or one coached lesson and one guided trip to the beach.

What is actually included at the listed price

Some camps list a “from” price that excludes surf lessons — which is the entire reason someone books a surf camp. Always confirm whether the price shown includes coaching, equipment rental, airport transfer, and meals before comparing numbers.

The social environment

The majority of surf camp guests are solo travellers. Whether you make friends — genuine connections you stay in touch with — depends largely on the size of the camp and how it is structured socially. A smaller, tighter camp tends to produce closer friendships.

Quick comparison

Criteria Kima Wavehouse Lapoint Sōleïa
7-night price (shared room) ~€739 ~€738 ~€549 €424
Lessons included at listed price Guided surf trips included. Coaching add-on. Yes — coaching included Yes — coaching included Yes — coaching included
ISA-certified coaching Not confirmed publicly Not confirmed publicly Not confirmed publicly Yes — ISA-certified
Max instructor ratio 3:1 (Banjar standard) 2–3:1 (self-stated) 6:1 at Level 1 2–3:1 guaranteed
Sessions per day 2 guided trips daily 2 coached sessions 5 coached sessions/week 1 coached session (3h) + daily land training
Video analysis Yes Yes Not listed Yes
Yoga included Yes (1x daily) Yes Yes Yes (6x/week)
Breakfast included Yes Yes Yes Yes
Camp size Large — 200+ guests Boutique — ~30 guests Medium — ~50 guests Small — ~25 guests
Social vibe Resort-style, independent Curated, community-focused International social scene Close-knit, family atmosphere

The camps

Canggu · Large resort camp
Kima Surf
kimasurf.com →
7 nights shared room: ~€739 · includes accommodation, breakfast, 5-day Learn to Surf coaching, guided surf trips twice daily, yoga, surf theory and video analysis

Kima is the biggest, most established surf camp in Canggu — and probably the most recognised name in Bali surf camps globally. The facilities are premium: three pools including a 5-metre deep diving pool, a 15-metre climbing wall, fully equipped gym, and a large restaurant. The camp can host hundreds of guests across its various accommodation types, from budget dorms to private villas. For surfers who want the hotel-resort experience within a surf context, Kima delivers it consistently.

One distinction worth understanding: Kima's core offering is surf guiding — small groups are taken to the best break for conditions and level, twice daily, seven days a week. The 7-night package includes the 5-day Learn-to-Surf coaching programme for beginners alongside those guided trips. One thing guests mention in reviews is that Kima's instructors operate under a policy that restricts socialising with guests outside of sessions — worth knowing if a closer relationship with coaches is part of what you are looking for.

Works well for
  • Premium facilities at a resort level
  • Large groups or those who want lots of social options
  • Experienced surfers who want guided wave discovery across Bali
  • Wide variety of room types and add-ons
Worth knowing
  • One of the highest prices on the island
  • Large guest numbers mean a less intimate atmosphere
  • Guided trips are the core product — coached beginner lessons are a separate programme
Best for: Surfers who want premium facilities, a resort atmosphere, and access to Bali's surf spots across all levels. Those who prioritise the hotel experience alongside the surf experience.
Canggu · Boutique camp
Wavehouse
wavehousebali.com →
7 nights shared room: ~€738 · includes accommodation, breakfast, coaching twice daily, yoga, video analysis, social activities

Wavehouse occupies a quiet corner of Canggu — rice terrace surroundings, a short walk from Berawa Beach — and describes itself as a boutique surf camp. The design philosophy is visible in everything from the open-air restaurant to the room finishes: natural materials, considered spaces, an aesthetic that sits closer to a design hotel than a traditional surf hostel. Guests consistently praise the food, the yoga programme, and the social atmosphere.

The coaching offer is strong — two sessions daily with a 2–3:1 instructor ratio, video analysis, and theory classes. At roughly €738 for a week, it is one of the higher-priced options in Canggu, and the experience reflects that. If what you are looking for is a curated, high-quality environment where everything has been thought through, Wavehouse delivers that consistently.

Works well for
  • Boutique experience with high attention to design
  • Strong coaching structure with twice-daily sessions
  • Good food and wellness programme
  • Community atmosphere at a manageable scale
Worth knowing
  • Premium price at the top of the Canggu range
  • Two coached sessions daily is ambitious for absolute beginners — confirm how they structure beginner days
Best for: Surfers who want a boutique, well-designed camp experience with a complete coaching offer and are comfortable spending at the top end of the market.
Canggu · International brand
Lapoint
lapointcamps.com →
7 nights shared room: ~€549 · includes accommodation, breakfast, daily surf lessons, yoga, social activities

Lapoint is a Scandinavian-founded surf camp brand with locations across Europe, Sri Lanka, and Bali. They have built a loyal following — particularly among European solo travellers — around a social formula that works: fixed Monday arrival days so everyone starts together, evening activities built into the week, and a community-first approach to the whole experience. The Canggu camp sits on Echo Beach, one of the more active stretches of the Canggu coastline.

One thing to know before booking: Lapoint's Bali camp has a strong Scandinavian guest base, which is a feature for some travellers and a potential limitation for others. If you are coming from outside that community and hoping for a mixed international crowd, it is worth reading recent reviews to see what the current mix looks like. The social programme is well-organised, and guests consistently praise the atmosphere.

Works well for
  • Strong community focus — social programme is a genuine feature
  • Mid-range price with solid inclusions
  • Well-organised brand with camps in multiple destinations
  • Good for those who want structure to the week
Worth knowing
  • Strong Scandinavian guest base — language mix can skew
  • Level 1 beginner group ratio is 6:1 per instructor
  • Fixed Monday arrivals — no flexibility on start day
Best for: Solo travellers who prioritise the social experience and want a structured, community-oriented week. Particularly strong for European travellers who are comfortable in a Scandinavian-influenced camp culture.

How to choose

The four camps above represent genuine options, not filler. The right choice depends on what you are actually optimising for. Here is a simple framework.

If your priority is
Premium facilities and scale
Kima is the clear answer. Three pools, a climbing wall, a gym, hundreds of guests, a restaurant, a bar. If the resort experience is part of what you are paying for, Kima provides it.
If your priority is
Boutique quality at any price
Wavehouse. Considered design, strong food, attentive coaching. The most complete high-end experience in Canggu at a comparable price to Kima.
If your priority is
International community and social structure
Lapoint. The fixed-arrival model and organised social programme create a genuine group dynamic. Strong choice if meeting people from across Europe is part of the goal.
If your priority is
Real progression, genuine connection, best value
Sōleïa. Structured coaching, ISA certification, a camp small enough that you actually know everyone, and a price that is roughly half of the premium alternatives — with everything included.

“The ocean is big enough for everyone. Choose the camp that fits who you are, not the one with the best photos.”

One final practical note: all four camps are in Canggu, all within a few kilometres of each other, and all close to the same beginner-friendly breaks. Location is not a differentiating factor at this level. The waves you will learn on are the same. What differs is everything that happens between sessions.

Sōleïa Surf Academy · Canggu, Bali · ISA-certified
€424 for a full week.
Everything included.
No surprises.

One price. Six days of coached surfing per week, yoga, breakfast, equipment, theory, video analysis, Saturday BBQ, and social events organised throughout the week.

ISA-certified coaching 2–3:1 instructor ratio Video analysis Surf theory Yoga 6x/week Breakfast daily Equipment included Saturday BBQ
See our packages →

Frequently asked questions

Will I meet people and make friends at a surf camp?

Almost certainly yes — and more easily than most social situations because you are all doing the same thing, at the same level, from day one. Surf camps attract solo travellers by a large majority. The friendships formed tend to be fast and genuine. Smaller camps (Sōleïa, Wavehouse) tend to produce closer groups because everyone knows everyone. At larger camps, you will meet more people but may need to be more proactive about building those connections.

How many surf sessions per day is right for a beginner?

One coached session of two to three hours is the right amount for a beginner. Two full coached sessions per day is physically demanding and also depends on wave conditions being suitable for beginners twice in the same day — which in Canggu is rare. Morning offshore conditions typically deteriorate by mid-morning. Some camps offer two sessions in the sense of one coached lesson plus one guided trip to the beach, which is a different thing.

What should a surf camp include for beginners?

At minimum: equipment rental, ISA-certified or equivalent coaching, a maximum 3:1 instructor ratio, surf theory, video analysis, and accommodation. A good camp will also run land practice before every water session and give you specific objectives for each day rather than just repeating the same exercises. The progression system matters — you should finish each week knowing exactly what you improved and what to work on next.

When is the best time for a surf camp in Bali?

April to November is the reliable window. The dry season (April to October) offers the most consistent conditions for beginners — offshore winds in the morning, reliable small to medium swell, warm water. June to August is peak season: excellent conditions but higher prices and more crowded camps. April–May and September–October are the sweet spot — good surf, lower prices, quieter lineups. November sits at the edge of the transition and is generally still fine. December to March is the wet season, and while the surf itself can be excellent — particularly on the East Coast and Nusa Dua, which stay clean and consistent when the West Coast is onshore — there is one real practical issue: plastic pollution. Heavy rains wash enormous volumes of plastic and debris from inland areas into the ocean, and the West Coast beaches (including Canggu) can be severely impacted during these months. It is not dangerous, but it is unpleasant and not the Bali surf experience most people have in mind. At Sōleïa, during the wet season we move sessions to Nusa Dua or the East Coast, where the water stays clean. If you are booking a camp for December to March, ask what their wet-season strategy is.

Is Canggu good for learning to surf?

Yes — it is one of the best places in the world to learn. The beach breaks at Batu Bolong and Berawa are forgiving and consistent, the water is warm, the coaching infrastructure is world-class, and there are waves suitable for every level within a few kilometres of each other. The main caveat for beginners is timing: morning sessions before the onshore wind picks up are significantly better than afternoon sessions.

What should I bring to a surf camp in Bali?

Reef-safe sunscreen (standard suncream dissolves quickly in salt water and harms coral), a rash guard for longer sessions, flip flops, a reusable water bottle, and a basic first aid kit including antiseptic for reef cuts. Equipment — boards, leashes, fins, wax — will be provided. Leave room in your bag for the inevitable souvenir and the inevitable board wax that gets everywhere.

How much spending money do I need on top of the camp price?

At Sōleïa the honest answer is: very little. Breakfast, coaching, equipment, and yoga are all included. Evening meals in Canggu range from €3 for a warung to €15 for a restaurant — budget around €10–15 per day for food and drink outside the included meals. Transport is cheap (scooter taxi €1–2 per trip). A week in Canggu outside the camp price costs most people €100–150 in daily spending.