Weather Forecast
17.10°C
Current Temperature
13.00km/h
Wind speed
23.58°C
Water Temperature
0.66m
Swell
2.05m
Tide
10/11
UV
Anna Bay is a 2 km wide southeast-facing bay bordered by the rocky shores of Fingal Head to the north and Moana Point in the south. In between is a curving 2 km long section of sand containing two exposed beaches (NSW 231 & 232), most of which are located in Tomaree National Park. The northern Samurai beach (NSW 231) curves gently to the southwest for 1.1 km to Samurai Point, a small boundary headland. It is backed by active dunes rising to 30 m and extending 800 m inland (Fig. 4.136). The beach is accessible to 4WD and a popular spot for beach driving. It is also an official nude beach. The southern One Mile Beach (NSW 232), also known to surfers as Anna Bay, is 1.3 km long and curves round to face the east against the southern rocks. It also has dunes reaching 400 m inland at its northern end. At the southern end the dunes narrow and are backed by a caravan park, a shaded parking and picnic area and a kiosk. Wave height is low in the south averaging 0.5 m, but increases up the beach to 1.5 m along the central and northern half of One Mile and along Samurai. A single bar dominates One Mile with a strong permanent rip against the southern rocks, and 3-4 beach rips increasing in size up the beach. The more exposed Samurai has two bars, the inner usually cut by four rips, while the outer has 2-3 large rips, including a permanent rip against the northern headland.
Beach Length: 1.3km
General Hazard Rating: 5/10

Patrolled Beach Flag Patrols

Sun
04 May
Mon
28 Apr
Tue
29 Apr
Wed
30 Apr
Thu
01 May
Fri
02 May
Sat
03 May
One Mile (Port Stephens) (Lifeguards)
09:00 -16:00
09:00 -16:00
09:00 -16:00
09:00 -16:00
09:00 -16:00
09:00 -16:00
09:00 -16:00

Information

Formal parking area
Formal parking area
Public phone
Kiosk
Shops
Park
BBQ
Drinking water
Showers
Change Rooms
Toilets Block M/F
Bus

Regulations

Hazards

Weather

SLSA provides this information as a guide only. Surf conditions are variable and therefore this information should not be relied upon as a substitute for observation of local conditions and an understanding of your abilities in the surf. SLSA reminds you to always swim between the red and yellow flags and never swim at unpatrolled beaches. SLSA takes all care and responsibility for any translation but it cannot guarantee that all translations will be accurate.