Destinations
55.018600 N / -1.424700 O

Black Middens Surf Spot Guide, UK

Nestled at the mouth of the River Tyne, Black Middens delivers a raw, powerful left-hand reef break over flat rocks that fires up into hollow, fast sections for those who crave commitment lines. This rocky setup creates a vibe of untamed North Sea energy, where experienced surfers find fast tubes and steep faces amid the dramatic coastal backdrop. It's a spot that rewards precision and punishes hesitation, offering pure adrenaline when the conditions align.

Geography and Nature

Black Middens sits at the River Tyne's entrance in North East England, near Tynemouth, framed by piers and rugged cliffs that drop into the churning North Sea. The landscape mixes industrial heritage with wild coastal exposure, featuring a rocky reef rather than sandy shores, surrounded by historic lighthouses and open headlands. Remote yet accessible from nearby towns, it feels exposed to the elements, with the infamous Black Middens rocks lurking just below the surface as a defining geographic hazard.

Surf Setup

Black Middens is a reef-rocky break firing consistent lefts over a flat rock bottom, shaping into hollow, fast, and powerful waves that demand strong positioning. It thrives on northeast swells, with ideal offshore winds from the north, northwest, west, east, or northeast to keep faces clean and groomed. Low and mid tides unlock the best lines, as higher water covers the reef less favorably. On a typical firing session, expect steep takeoffs leading to speedy walls and occasional barrels, lasting 100-200 meters for high-speed carves.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot breaks infrequently, relying on solid northeast swells to overcome its sheltered rivermouth position, making winter and spring the prime seasons from October to April when North Sea storms deliver the power. Avoid summer months when flat spells dominate and consistency drops off sharply. Target weekdays during low to mid tides in these cooler periods for the cleanest windows, as swells can push 1-3 meters on good days.

Crowd Levels

Black Middens sees few surfers overall, with sparse lineups on both weekdays and weekends. The mix includes locals and occasional visitors, keeping sessions uncrowded even on better days.

Who It's For

Black Middens suits experienced surfers who handle powerful reef waves with confidence. Beginners should steer clear due to the rocky bottom and fast-breaking nature, while intermediates might progress here with caution but risk wipeouts on the unforgiving rocks. Advanced riders revel in the hollow lefts, honing high-performance skills on the steep faces.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for the flat rock bottom that scrapes on falls, potential rips near the rivermouth, and strong currents from the piers. Approach with local knowledge to navigate safely.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings water temperatures of 12-16°C, calling for a 4/3mm fullsuit with booties for comfort on longer sessions. Winter from December to March drops to 6-10°C, requiring a thick 5/4/3mm steamer, hood, boots, and gloves to battle the chill. Spring and fall hover at 10-14°C, where a 4/3mm or 5/4mm suit with booties suffices for most.

How to Get There

Fly into Newcastle International Airport (NCL), about 20 kilometers south, then drive north via the A19 for 25-30 minutes to Tynemouth. Newcastle Central Station offers trains to Tynemouth Station, roughly 1 kilometer from the spot, with a short coastal walk. From Tynemouth, head to the coastguard station and follow paths down to the river mouth between piers; limited street parking exists nearby, so arrive early. Coastal walks from Tynemouth or North Shields cover under 1 kilometer to the break.

( Reviews)

Your surfhouse is here

Nearby surfhouses and spots

Nearby Surf Houses

Nearby Spots

Black Middens 

55.018600 N / -1.424700 O
Borders and NE England
Take a car
Instant access (< 5min)
OK
View Surf Spot
Level: All surfers
Public access: Public access
Special access: Don't know
CONDITIONS
Level
All surfers
BREAK TYPE
Reef-rocky
WAVE DIRECTION
Left
WAVE QUALITY
Regional Classic
FREQUENCY
Sometimes break
BOTTOM
Flat rocks
POWER
Hollow, Fast, Powerful
NORMAL LENGHT
Long (150 to 300 m)
GOOD DAY LENGHT
Long (150 to 300 m)
GOOD SWELL DIRECTION
NorthEast
GOOD WIND DIRECTION
North, NorthWest, West, East, NorthEast
SWELL SIZE
Starts working at 1.5m-2m /5ft-6ft and holds up to 5m / 16 ft and over
BEST TIDE POSITION
Low and mid tide
BEST TIDE MOVEMENT
Rising and falling tides
How to get there
COORDINATES
55.018600
-1.424700
DISTANCE
Take a car
WALK
Instant access (< 5min)
EASY TO FIND
OK
PUBLIC ACCESS
Public access
DANGERS
CROWD
WEEKEND CROWD
Few surfers
WEEK CROWD
Few surfers

Black Middens Surf Spot Guide, UK

Nestled at the mouth of the River Tyne, Black Middens delivers a raw, powerful left-hand reef break over flat rocks that fires up into hollow, fast sections for those who crave commitment lines. This rocky setup creates a vibe of untamed North Sea energy, where experienced surfers find fast tubes and steep faces amid the dramatic coastal backdrop. It's a spot that rewards precision and punishes hesitation, offering pure adrenaline when the conditions align.

Geography and Nature

Black Middens sits at the River Tyne's entrance in North East England, near Tynemouth, framed by piers and rugged cliffs that drop into the churning North Sea. The landscape mixes industrial heritage with wild coastal exposure, featuring a rocky reef rather than sandy shores, surrounded by historic lighthouses and open headlands. Remote yet accessible from nearby towns, it feels exposed to the elements, with the infamous Black Middens rocks lurking just below the surface as a defining geographic hazard.

Surf Setup

Black Middens is a reef-rocky break firing consistent lefts over a flat rock bottom, shaping into hollow, fast, and powerful waves that demand strong positioning. It thrives on northeast swells, with ideal offshore winds from the north, northwest, west, east, or northeast to keep faces clean and groomed. Low and mid tides unlock the best lines, as higher water covers the reef less favorably. On a typical firing session, expect steep takeoffs leading to speedy walls and occasional barrels, lasting 100-200 meters for high-speed carves.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot breaks infrequently, relying on solid northeast swells to overcome its sheltered rivermouth position, making winter and spring the prime seasons from October to April when North Sea storms deliver the power. Avoid summer months when flat spells dominate and consistency drops off sharply. Target weekdays during low to mid tides in these cooler periods for the cleanest windows, as swells can push 1-3 meters on good days.

Crowd Levels

Black Middens sees few surfers overall, with sparse lineups on both weekdays and weekends. The mix includes locals and occasional visitors, keeping sessions uncrowded even on better days.

Who It's For

Black Middens suits experienced surfers who handle powerful reef waves with confidence. Beginners should steer clear due to the rocky bottom and fast-breaking nature, while intermediates might progress here with caution but risk wipeouts on the unforgiving rocks. Advanced riders revel in the hollow lefts, honing high-performance skills on the steep faces.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for the flat rock bottom that scrapes on falls, potential rips near the rivermouth, and strong currents from the piers. Approach with local knowledge to navigate safely.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings water temperatures of 12-16°C, calling for a 4/3mm fullsuit with booties for comfort on longer sessions. Winter from December to March drops to 6-10°C, requiring a thick 5/4/3mm steamer, hood, boots, and gloves to battle the chill. Spring and fall hover at 10-14°C, where a 4/3mm or 5/4mm suit with booties suffices for most.

How to Get There

Fly into Newcastle International Airport (NCL), about 20 kilometers south, then drive north via the A19 for 25-30 minutes to Tynemouth. Newcastle Central Station offers trains to Tynemouth Station, roughly 1 kilometer from the spot, with a short coastal walk. From Tynemouth, head to the coastguard station and follow paths down to the river mouth between piers; limited street parking exists nearby, so arrive early. Coastal walks from Tynemouth or North Shields cover under 1 kilometer to the break.

Black Middens Surf Spot Guide, UK

Nestled at the mouth of the River Tyne, Black Middens delivers a raw, powerful left-hand reef break over flat rocks that fires up into hollow, fast sections for those who crave commitment lines. This rocky setup creates a vibe of untamed North Sea energy, where experienced surfers find fast tubes and steep faces amid the dramatic coastal backdrop. It's a spot that rewards precision and punishes hesitation, offering pure adrenaline when the conditions align.

Geography and Nature

Black Middens sits at the River Tyne's entrance in North East England, near Tynemouth, framed by piers and rugged cliffs that drop into the churning North Sea. The landscape mixes industrial heritage with wild coastal exposure, featuring a rocky reef rather than sandy shores, surrounded by historic lighthouses and open headlands. Remote yet accessible from nearby towns, it feels exposed to the elements, with the infamous Black Middens rocks lurking just below the surface as a defining geographic hazard.

Surf Setup

Black Middens is a reef-rocky break firing consistent lefts over a flat rock bottom, shaping into hollow, fast, and powerful waves that demand strong positioning. It thrives on northeast swells, with ideal offshore winds from the north, northwest, west, east, or northeast to keep faces clean and groomed. Low and mid tides unlock the best lines, as higher water covers the reef less favorably. On a typical firing session, expect steep takeoffs leading to speedy walls and occasional barrels, lasting 100-200 meters for high-speed carves.

Consistency and Best Time

This spot breaks infrequently, relying on solid northeast swells to overcome its sheltered rivermouth position, making winter and spring the prime seasons from October to April when North Sea storms deliver the power. Avoid summer months when flat spells dominate and consistency drops off sharply. Target weekdays during low to mid tides in these cooler periods for the cleanest windows, as swells can push 1-3 meters on good days.

Crowd Levels

Black Middens sees few surfers overall, with sparse lineups on both weekdays and weekends. The mix includes locals and occasional visitors, keeping sessions uncrowded even on better days.

Who It's For

Black Middens suits experienced surfers who handle powerful reef waves with confidence. Beginners should steer clear due to the rocky bottom and fast-breaking nature, while intermediates might progress here with caution but risk wipeouts on the unforgiving rocks. Advanced riders revel in the hollow lefts, honing high-performance skills on the steep faces.

Hazards to Respect

Watch for the flat rock bottom that scrapes on falls, potential rips near the rivermouth, and strong currents from the piers. Approach with local knowledge to navigate safely.

Water Temperature and Wetsuit Guide

Summer from June to October brings water temperatures of 12-16°C, calling for a 4/3mm fullsuit with booties for comfort on longer sessions. Winter from December to March drops to 6-10°C, requiring a thick 5/4/3mm steamer, hood, boots, and gloves to battle the chill. Spring and fall hover at 10-14°C, where a 4/3mm or 5/4mm suit with booties suffices for most.

How to Get There

Fly into Newcastle International Airport (NCL), about 20 kilometers south, then drive north via the A19 for 25-30 minutes to Tynemouth. Newcastle Central Station offers trains to Tynemouth Station, roughly 1 kilometer from the spot, with a short coastal walk. From Tynemouth, head to the coastguard station and follow paths down to the river mouth between piers; limited street parking exists nearby, so arrive early. Coastal walks from Tynemouth or North Shields cover under 1 kilometer to the break.

Wave Quality: Regional Classic

Meteo

Il link alle previsioni non è disponibile.

Surf Conditions:

Wave type
Reef-rocky
Normal lenght: Long (150 to 300 m)
Good day lenght: Long (150 to 300 m)
DIRECTION
Left
Good swell direction: NorthEast
Good wind direction: North, NorthWest, West, East, NorthEast
frequency
Sometimes break
Swell size: Starts working at 1.5m-2m /5ft-6ft and holds up to 5m / 16 ft and over
power
Hollow, Fast, Powerful
Best Tide Position: Low and mid tide
Best Tide Movement: Rising and falling tides

Photo gallery

Webcam

Webcam not available

Nearby surfhouses and spots

Nearby Surf Houses

Nearby Spots

Frequently asked on Wavesafari

Surf Black Middens from October to April during winter and spring on northeast swells of 1-3 meters with north, northwest, west, east, or northeast offshore winds at low to mid tides. This spot breaks infrequently due to its sheltered rivermouth position, so target weekdays in cooler periods for cleanest sessions when North Sea storms deliver power, avoiding flat summer months.
Black Middens suits experienced surfers confident in powerful reef waves, while beginners should avoid it due to the rocky bottom and fast-breaking nature. Intermediates might progress cautiously but risk wipeouts on unforgiving rocks, as advanced riders thrive on hollow lefts and steep faces to hone high-performance skills.
Black Middens offers a consistent left-hand reef break over flat rocks, delivering hollow, fast, powerful waves with steep takeoffs, speedy walls, and occasional barrels lasting 100-200 meters. It thrives on northeast swells with ideal offshore winds from north, northwest, west, east, or northeast, best at low to mid tides for groomed faces.
Black Middens has sparse lineups with few surfers, mixing locals and visitors even on better days across weekdays and weekends. Fly into Newcastle Airport 20 kilometers south, drive 25-30 minutes north via A19 to Tynemouth, or train to Tynemouth Station 1 kilometer away; walk under 1 kilometer from coastguard station to river mouth between piers with limited street parking.
Black Middens stands out with its raw, powerful left-hand reef break over flat rocks at the River Tyne mouth, firing hollow fast sections and tubes amid untamed North Sea energy near piers and cliffs. It rewards precision on steep faces for adrenaline commitment lines in a dramatic industrial-wild coastal setting, unlike sandy shores, with infrequent but high-quality waves.

Reviews

0 0 votes
Rating
Sign up
Notify me
guest

0 Comments
Old
Most recent Most voted
Online Feedback
View all comments
La tua iscrizione non può essere convalidata.
La tua iscrizione è avvenuta correttamente.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter and stay up to date.

Copyright © 2026 | ONE STAR LIMITED Unit 302 Parma House, Clarendon Road, London, N22 6XF | All rights reserved | GB984216793 | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Credits by Futuraweb Srl
crossmenuchevron-down