Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote

REVIEW · LANZAROTE

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote

  • 5.025 reviews
  • 4 hours (approx.)
  • From $84.33
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Operated by Longboard Gliders · Bookable on Viator

Surfboards are fun. Longboards are a whole different mood. This 4-hour lesson in Caleta de Famara is built for learning in small steps, not chaos. You’ll start with easy beach exercises, then move into the white water so you can build real confidence fast.

Two things I like a lot: the tight group size (max 4) with coaching matched to your surfing level, and the progression from soft boards to hardboards as you gain control. One thing to consider: the lesson depends on good weather, so you should plan to stay flexible if conditions aren’t right.

Longboard Gliders keeps it practical: warm-up and stretch for longboard surfing, core safety rules for both beach and ocean, then the basics—paddling, laying on the board, standing, takeoff timing, and turning. If you’re new, this structure helps your brain stop guessing and start doing.

Key highlights you’ll feel right away

  • Max 4 people, same level only, with no adult/kid mixing
  • Beach drills first, then white-water waves for safer practice
  • Soft board to hard board progression as skills improve
  • Lessons cover the full chain: paddle → stance → stand-up → takeoff → turning
  • You get a more personalised teaching method than typical big-group sessions
  • English instruction and a mobile ticket make planning simpler

Longboard Surfing in Caleta de Famara: Why This Lesson Works

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Longboard Surfing in Caleta de Famara: Why This Lesson Works

Lanzarote has a way of making surfing feel attainable. And longboarding, in particular, rewards calm, good technique more than brute strength. That’s exactly why this lesson is a smart first step if you want to understand longboard surfing without getting thrown into the deep end.

The lesson is set up to make you feel safe and capable early. You begin with simple exercises on the beach, then you practice in the white water—the part of the ocean where conditions are usually more controlled. That combo matters because it reduces that first-day panic. You’re learning movements while you still feel steady.

You’re also not stuck on one “forever beginner” board. The school starts you on soft boards and then progresses you to hardboards. That’s not just gear trivia. It’s the difference between learning by confidence versus learning by fear of falling.

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Small Group Coaching (Max 4) and Matching Your Level

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Small Group Coaching (Max 4) and Matching Your Level

Here’s one of the biggest practical advantages: your group stays small—maximum 4 people—and you’re grouped with the same surfing level. That means your instructor can actually watch what’s happening and correct the few things that are holding you back.

I like the way this helps you learn faster. In a larger class, you can do the right action for a minute and then spend the next 20 minutes waiting. With a max-4 setup, you get more time on the board, more chances to try the fix, and fewer hours of repeating the same mistakes out of pure boredom.

Another detail that’s easy to miss until you’re there: they never mix adults with kids. That keeps the pace and coaching style consistent. It also reduces the awkward in-between vibe that can happen when ages and expectations don’t match.

Your 4-Hour Longboard Session: What Happens, Step by Step

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Your 4-Hour Longboard Session: What Happens, Step by Step

The full session runs about 4 hours and starts and ends at the meeting point in 35558 Caleta de Famara, Las Palmas, Spain. It’s offered daily between 8:30 AM and 6:30 PM, so you can usually pick a time that fits your day.

Even though the exact flow can shift depending on conditions, the lesson follows a clear training path. Here’s what you can expect in a logical order:

Warm-up and longboard-focused stretching

Before you even touch the board, you’ll start with warming up and stretching specifically for longboard surfing. This matters because longboarding uses a lot of shoulder and core work for paddling, plus balance and leg control for the stand-up and turn.

If you tend to get stiff fast, take it seriously. A good warm-up makes the first attempts feel smoother instead of clumsy.

Longboard safety rules for beach and ocean

Next comes fundamental safety rules—not vague lecture stuff. You’ll cover how to handle a longboard on the beach and in the ocean. This is where you learn how to think about yourself and your board before you chase waves.

Safety lessons also help you relax. When you know what you’re doing, you can spend your energy on technique instead of anxiety.

Laying on the longboard correctly

Then you move into positioning: how to lay on a longboard correctly. This is a big one. Longboards sit differently under you than shortboards, and your body placement affects how easily you paddle and how well you can shift into your stance.

Paddle technique and body position for takeoff

After that, you work on paddle technique, plus stance on a longboard and how to stand up. This is where your coaching starts to feel “real.” Instead of random practice, you’re drilling the steps that lead to getting up safely and consistently.

And yes, the lesson doesn’t treat standing up as the whole victory. You also get instruction on timing of the takeoff—when to go for it so you’re not popping up too early or too late.

Turning: timing and direction control

Finally, you learn how to turn your longboard. Turning is what makes longboarding feel like surfing, not just balance training. Your instructor’s job here is to help you shift weight with intent instead of flailing.

From small waves to bigger ones (within reason)

Because longboards are typically longer and wider, the lesson can help you catch more waves, starting from smaller waves and building toward bigger waves as you gain confidence. The key is that the progression follows your level, not just the calendar.

Soft Boards to Hard Boards: The Confidence Ladder

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Soft Boards to Hard Boards: The Confidence Ladder

A lot of surf lessons treat the board like it’s fixed. This one treats board choice like part of the learning system.

You start with soft boards, which reduce the fear factor when you’re learning positioning and standing. You’re still practicing the same fundamental mechanics—paddling, stance, takeoff timing, turning—but you’re not constantly bracing for impact.

Then, as you improve, the lesson progresses to hardboards. That shift matters because hardboards demand more precision. Your stance has to be more deliberate, and your weight control becomes non-negotiable.

If you’re new, this ladder is a huge confidence builder. If you’ve tried surfing before and got stuck at the “always falling” stage, this approach can help you break the loop.

Safety and Control in White Water (Not Just Random Falls)

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Safety and Control in White Water (Not Just Random Falls)

You’ll practice in the white water, which is where longboard learning makes sense. That zone lets you focus on technique without dealing with the full unpredictability of open-ocean breaks.

And because the lesson includes safety rules for both beach and ocean, you’re not just grabbing a board and hoping. You’ll learn how to think about your board, your movement, and ocean basics before you’re asked to stand and turn.

One more thing I appreciate: the teaching emphasizes technique steps in sequence—laying properly, paddling, stance, stand-up, timing, turning. That step-by-step progression is the quiet secret of feeling safe. You’re not guessing. You’re following a method.

Instructor Quality: Patient Corrections and Getting Comfortable

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Instructor Quality: Patient Corrections and Getting Comfortable

The strongest praise in the experience is about the instructor’s ability to make you feel at ease while staying competent and patient. One review specifically mentioned Niccolò as both skilled and calm, saying he’s great at putting you at your comfort level on the board and teaching the spirit of the sport.

That lines up with what makes surf lessons work. You don’t just need information. You need feedback that doesn’t spike your stress. A patient coach can see the difference between a beginner who is trying hard and one who is just overwhelmed.

Also, a small group means your instructor can correct you more directly. You’re more likely to leave with a few clear takeaways instead of a bag full of vague tips.

Value: Is $84.33 Worth a 4-Hour Longboard Lesson?

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Value: Is $84.33 Worth a 4-Hour Longboard Lesson?

At $84.33 per person for about 4 hours, you’re not paying for a long performance show. You’re paying for time on the board with coaching structure.

Here’s why the price makes sense for the kind of learning you’re doing:

  • Max 4 people: you get a higher coaching ratio than many surf schools
  • Level-matched groups: you’re not competing with slower or faster students
  • Board progression: learning on soft boards first can reduce wasted sessions
  • Full skill chain: you cover paddling, stance, stand-up, timing, and turning
  • Private activity style: the listing notes only your group participates

If you’re the type who likes a plan and repetition, you’ll likely get more out of this than the “show up, try, hope” model.

If you’re only hoping for a quick photo and one wave, you might feel it’s a bigger commitment than you expected. But if you want to improve, the structure is the value.

Practical Tips for Your Lanzarote Longboard Day

Group Longboard Surf Lesson in Lanzarote - Practical Tips for Your Lanzarote Longboard Day

You’ll enjoy this lesson more if you prepare like a learner, not like a tourist watching from the shore.

Bring the basics for ocean time

You’ll be in the water and likely doing a warm-up plus stretching. Come ready to move. Wear what you can swim in comfortably.

Expect good-weather dependence

This experience requires good weather. If conditions aren’t suitable, the school will either offer another date or a full refund. So plan with flexibility if you can.

Timing: pick a time when you’re not rushing

With a session that’s about 4 hours, your day can get tight fast. Choose a start time that gives you breathing room before and after.

Use the lesson structure to your advantage

The instructor will likely run you through a method: beach work, white-water practice, then more wave opportunities as you improve. Don’t fight the order. The order is the learning.

Who This Longboard Lesson Is Best For

This longboard session is a strong fit if you:

  • Want a beginner-to-intermediate path with clear coaching steps
  • Prefer small-group learning where you’re not lost in a crowd
  • Like the idea of starting on soft boards and moving up
  • Care about technique: paddling, standing, timing, turning—not just chasing thrills
  • Are comfortable with group lessons conducted in English

It might be less ideal if you already longboard surf confidently and expect a freestyle-only session. This is built for foundations and early progression, not for polishing advanced maneuvers (based on what’s described).

Should You Book Longboard Gliders in Lanzarote?

I’d book it if you want a longboard lesson that feels organized and calm. The small group size, the soft-to-hard board progression, and the focus on real fundamentals (paddle, stance, stand-up, timing, turning) make it feel like a true learning experience instead of a random wave session.

Skip it or reconsider if you only have a tight schedule and can’t be flexible about weather-dependent conditions. Also, if you’re already advanced and expecting expert-level line pushing, this may feel too basic.

If you’re somewhere in the middle—curious, nervous, or ready to level up—this is a practical way to get into longboarding on Lanzarote without guessing your way through.

FAQ

FAQ

How long is the longboard surf lesson?

It’s about 4 hours.

Where is the meeting point for the lesson?

The meeting point is 35558 Caleta de Famara, Las Palmas, Spain.

What’s the price per person?

The price is $84.33 per person.

How many people are in the group?

The group is limited to a maximum of 4 people.

Is the lesson offered in English?

Yes, the lesson is offered in English.

Do you start on soft boards or hard boards?

You start with soft boards and then progress to hardboards.

What skills are taught during the lesson?

You’ll practice warm-up and stretching, longboard safety rules, how to lay on the board, paddle technique, stance and how to stand up, takeoff timing, and turning.

Are adults and kids mixed in the same lesson?

No. Adults and kids are never mixed.

What happens if the weather is poor?

If the experience is canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

What’s the cancellation policy?

You can cancel for a full refund if you cancel at least 24 hours in advance of the experience’s start time. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded.

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