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Surf Report

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Stay dialed in with the Kona Surf Co. Surf Report, featuring two live surf cams streaming straight from the heart of the Jersey Shore. Check real-time conditions from the North Wildwood 15th Avenue Lifeguard Station and the Paradise Ocean Resort in Wildwood Crest to see what the waves are doing before you paddle out. Whether you’re chasing clean lines on the East Coast, planning a beach day in Cape May County, or just keeping tabs on the local swell, our surf cams make it easy to stay connected to the Wildwood surf scene. Perfect for East Coast surfing, these live feeds give you the most accurate look at tides, weather, and wave activity so you’re always ready to make the most of your next session.

North Wildwood 15th Avenue Lifeguard Station

Check out the action in real time with our North Wildwood 15th Avenue Lifeguard Station live camera! This stream brings the sights and sounds of the ocean straight to you. Tune in anytime to see the surf, sand, and lifeguards keeping our beach safe.

Paradise Ocean Resort, Wildwood Crest

Catch a perfect view of the shore with our live camera at Paradise Ocean Resort in Wildwood Crest! Huge thanks to Paradise Ocean Resort for allowing us to share their incredible beachfront view with you. This live feed brings the beauty of the Crest right to your screen.

Adventurer Motor Inn Wildwood Crest, NJ

This live webcam overlooks the Wildwood Crest Boardwalk from Cresse Ave, offering a full view of the beach and surf in front of the Wildwood Convention Center. The camera pans from Cresse Ave to Burke Ave, giving a sweeping look down the entire stretch of sand. Perfect for checking the surf, tides, and beach crowds — this cam delivers one of the best angles of Wildwood Crest’s shoreline.

The Cove, Cape May

Tucked south of Broadway Beach, The Cove sits deep in Cape May’s south-facing pocket — one of the few spots that can actually handle a legit NE wrap. When the rest of Jersey’s blown out, The Cove can turn on hard. Mid to incoming tide and NE wind are the go-tos, lighting up those dredge-fed sandbars with heavy, spitting shorebreak barrels. It’ll hold a few feet overhead before it starts to close out, but when it’s on, you’re staring down below-sea-level lefts that run three tubes deep. Wide swell window from NE through SE keeps it in play more often than you’d think.

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