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About Otama
Otama is a north-facing beach break that needs a solid N or NE groundswell to come alive, which is exactly why it stays so quiet. It is sheltered from any E or SE in the water but exposed enough to pick up the wrap when the swell is right. The bottom is soft sand with no rocks to worry about, and the peaks are mellower than Hot Water down the coast, so on its day it is a forgiving wave that suits longboards and learners as much as anyone. When the bank lines up with a clean S or SW offshore, Otama produces some of the friendlier waves in Mercury Bay.
The 2km beach sits 20km north of Whitianga on the Kūaotunu loop road, reached down Black Jack Road, in the rohe of Ngāti Hei. It is backed by a large protected dune system and wetland reserve that the Otama Reserves Group manages alongside DOC, with endangered New Zealand dotterel breeding through spring and summer, so the beach is left wild and largely undeveloped. A handful of baches sit behind the dunes and the rest is reserve, and the lineup is usually empty, which is much of the appeal: this is a beach you surf for the solitude as much as the wave.
More of Otama
Local tips
- Otama needs a real N or NE groundswell to work, so on a small or southerly day Whangapoua or Matarangi up the coast, or Hot Water Beach 30 minutes south, are the better calls.
- Pair Otama with Opito Bay, 10 minutes further east on the gravel road, a similarly quiet bach beach with a toilet and a boat ramp but no shop, so stock up at the Kūaotunu store on the way in. Between the two there is almost always a workable option.
- The Otama Reserves Group runs a bush-to-beach conservation corridor here, so keep cars and dogs out of the dunes, take your rubbish home, and stick to the marked paths to help keep the beach the way it is.
Things to know
- Otama is unpatrolled, with the nearest patrolled beaches well south down the coast, so surf within your ability and ideally with company, especially on bigger N swells when rips can run hard between peaks.
- Banks shift between seasons, so read the lineup before paddling out, pick the channel between peaks for the easier paddle, and check where the rip is running before committing.
- On a solid N or NE swell the inside can close out when the tide drops, so stay outside, hold position out the back, and let the sucky sets pass through before paddling for one.
- The dunes are active New Zealand dotterel breeding habitat through spring and summer, so stay on the marked paths and keep dogs on leads where signposted.
- Black Jack Road is sealed from SH25 to the start of Otama and gravel beyond toward Opito, narrow and single-lane in places, so allow extra time after rain.
Access & facilities
Getting there
20km north of Whitianga via SH25 to Kūaotunu, then Black Jack Road, sealed to the start of Otama Beach and gravel beyond toward Opito. About 3 hours from Auckland, so the upper Coromandel rewards a long weekend over a day trip.
Parking
Small unsealed car park at the beach access, with roadside parking along the bach community. Usually plenty of space outside peak summer.
Toilets & showers
Public toilet at the reserve at the eastern end of Otama Beach, with another at the Black Jack Scenic Reserve on the way in at Kūaotunu. No outdoor surf showers at the beach.
Shops, cafes & fuel
No shop, cafe or fuel at the beach. The Kūaotunu general store 10 minutes back has the basics, and Whitianga, about 25 minutes south, has full supplies, cafes, restaurants and fuel.
Accommodation
Limited rental baches at Otama itself, with more at Kūaotunu, Matarangi about 25 minutes west or Whitianga about 25 minutes south.
Camping
There is no designated freedom camping at Otama or Opito under the TCDC bylaw. The closest legal option is the Kūaotunu Campground a few minutes back, or the holiday parks at Whitianga.