Weather Forecast
18.80°C
Current Temperature
20.00km/h
Wind speed
19.18°C
Water Temperature
0.99m
Swell
0.54m
Tide
8/11
UV
Swanbourne Beach (WA 840A) begins at the rocks that separate it from North Cottesloe and runs due north to midway into ‘No Mans Land’ (WA 840B) the undeveloped dune area north of the clubhouse in front of Campbell Barracks. The Swanbourne-Nedlands Surf Life Saving Club is located 500 m north of the rocks. The development of the beach followed the construction of a limestone road to the beach in 1930 with the Surf Club formed in 1932. Today the beach has a large surf club, car park and patrol tower. The beach usually has low waves, averaging 0.5 to 1 m and a wide beach fronted by a steep swash zone and attached bar. During summer the bar is usually continuous with few rip holes, however during winter and following higher wave rip channels will cut across the bar every 100-200 m. The North Swanbourne ‘No Man Lands’ area of beach is backed by a 10-20 m high foredune containing several blowouts, then the Campbell Barracks. City of Perth SLSC patrols a 2.5 km section of the beach from the northern end of ‘No Mans Land’ up to the two groynes that lie either side of the club house and which demark the main 500 m long City Beach
Beach Length: 5km
General Hazard Rating: 3/10

Patrolled Beach Flag Patrols

Sun
02 Nov
Mon
27 Oct
Tue
28 Oct
Wed
29 Oct
Thu
30 Oct
Fri
31 Oct
Sat
01 Nov
Swanbourne Nedlands SLSC Inc
-
-
-
-
-
08:15 -14:15
08:15 -14:15

Information

Formal parking area
Formal parking area
Park
Mobile Phone Coverage
Artificial shade
Bike path
Cafe
Shelters
Shade
Picnic
BBQ
Kiosk
Showers
Toilets Block Disabled
Toilets Block M/F
Train
Bus
Groyne

Regulations

Camping Prohibited
Bicycles Allowed
No Littering
No Spear Fishing
No Trailbikes
No Vehicles
Picking Plants Prohibited
PWC's Prohibited
No Horses
Vessels Prohibited
No Golf
Fires Prohibited
No Alcohol
No Cats or Dogs
No Dogs Allowed
No Firearms

Hazards

Heavy shorebreak
Flash rips
Rocks

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.