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About Waihi Beach
Waihi Beach is nine kilometres of open sandy beach at the southern end of the Coromandel Peninsula, facing northeast into the same Pacific swells that power Whangamatā and Whiritoa to the north. The beach produces consistent peaks along its length, with the left off the rocks at the northern end the standout wave when a clean NE swell sets up at mid to high tide. The long beach handles a wide range of swell sizes, from gentle 0.5m days at the southern end through to punchier 2m sets at the north, making Waihi one of the more user-friendly setups for every level on the east coast. Mōtītī Island and the Coromandel headlands offer some shelter, so Waihi typically sits a foot smaller than the Mount on the same swell.
Waihi Beach has a long-established surf-town character, sitting on the rohe of Ngāi Te Rangi at the boundary of the Coromandel and Bay of Plenty. It is one of the safer, more welcoming beaches on the coast, patrolled through summer and with the crowd spreading thin once you walk away from the main carpark, and the sunrise across the open Pacific is one of the most celebrated on the east coast.
More of Waihi Beach
Local tips
- Walk north from the main carpark for 10 to 15 minutes and both the crowd and the closeouts drop away, with the best and least busy banks up toward the Orokawa headland.
- Waihi sits a foot smaller than the Mount or Pāpāmoa thanks to the shelter of Mōtītī Island and the Coromandel headlands, so it is the call when the Mount is maxed and flat when the Mount is small. A pure NE lights up the north end, an E wraps into the southern end near Bowentown, and W to SW is the offshore.
- Mid-week is quietest, with summer weekends filling the main beach and carpark, so drive south past Bowentown for emptier peaks; and the Waihi Beach sunrise over the open Pacific is worth setting an alarm for, in the water as the sun comes up.
- On a flat day, walk the 45 minutes over the headland to Orokawa Bay, an isolated bush-backed beach and one of the best easy hikes in the Bay, or soak at the Athenree Hot Springs 10 minutes south at the Bowentown end.
- Waihi Beach is on the rohe of Ngāi Te Rangi at the Coromandel and Bay of Plenty boundary, and the Bowentown headland at the southern end holds pā sites from a significant pre-European settlement, with the Bowentown Lookout walk taking in Tauranga Harbour and out to Mayor Island.
Things to know
- Rips run between the peaks on the bigger swells, so read the channels from the beach before you paddle out and use them rather than fighting them, and do not overcommit on a big set.
- Where the wave breaks off the rocks the inside runs shallow at lower tides, so a late takeoff or sitting too deep can clip you on rock; mind it especially under a metre at low tide.
- The beach is patrolled only in summer and only at the flagged sections, so anywhere else along its length, especially the quieter banks south of Bowentown, you are in unpatrolled water with patchy mobile coverage and help further away.
- The Bowentown harbour entrance has strong outgoing-tide currents. Stay clear of the bar itself unless you know what you're doing, the current can pull you straight out of the bay.
Access & facilities
Getting there
Waihi Beach is on SH2 between Waihi town and Tauranga. About 1 hour 45 minutes from Auckland CBD via SH1/SH2 and the Karangahake Gorge, or 35 minutes from Tauranga via SH2 north. Waihi town is 10 minutes inland with the closest full town services. Athenree and Bowentown sit at the southern end of the beach.
Parking
Multiple beach access carparks along The Esplanade, with the main lifeguard access at the surf club end (Wilson Road). Additional access points at Island View (7 Tuna Avenue) and Bowentown at the southern end. Free. Fills early on summer weekends and New Year week.
Toilets & showers
Public toilets at multiple beach access points: Albacore Avenue, Island View Esplanade Reserves (7 Tuna Avenue), The Esplanade and Seaforth Road Recreational Reserve. Outdoor showers at the main beach. Waihi Beach Lifeguard Services patrols three sections of the beach in summer (Main Beach, Island View, Bowentown) with weekend cover Labour Weekend to Easter, daily 20 December to 31 January.
Shops, cafes & fuel
Waihi Beach village has a Four Square, cafes, restaurants and shops within walking distance of the beach. Waihi town, 10 minutes inland, has larger supermarkets, fuel and full town services, and Athenree at the southern end has a small store.
Accommodation
Tasman Holiday Parks Waihi Beach (formerly the TOP 10) is the main holiday park, with cabins, powered sites and family villas. Bookabach and Airbnb options are dense through the village, with motels along The Esplanade and the Athenree Holiday Park 10 minutes south. Beaches Motel rents surfboards as well as rooms.
Camping
The Western Bay of Plenty District Council allows certified self-contained freedom camping at designated district sites, with a KiwiCamp self-contained facility at Waihi Beach. Tasman Holiday Parks Waihi Beach is the main paid camping option.