See Exactly What's Holding You Back
Your coach sees it. With video analysis, now you will too.
Most surfers spend years repeating the same mistakes without ever knowing it. We film you in the water, then sit down together for a focused review breaking down your technique, correcting what's become habit, and giving you a clear plan forward. It's one of the fastest ways to stop guessing and start actually progressing.
Pick what fits your session
Whether you surfed solo, with a friend, or in a bigger group, we've got a pricing option that fits. Just pick the one that matches your session.
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One on one. Full focus on your surfing, your technique, your next steps.
$70 video footage & analysis -
Two people.
Share the session with a friend or two. Same detailed analysis, split across the group.$60 per person, video footage & analysis
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Three people and above.
$50 per person, video footage & analysis
Large group or want to bundle surf lessons with analysis? Get in touch for a custom quote. -
Just want the video? We'll film your session and hand you the footage to keep, share, or review on your own time.
$50 per person, duration 1h30
WHY surfers use video analysis?
Because you can't fix what you can't see
When you're in the water, you're focused on the wave, not on whether your back foot is too far forward, or whether you're looking down on the pop-up, or why your turns keep falling flat. Your coach can see it. But hearing feedback in the moment and actually watching yourself on screen are two completely different things.
During the session we film you from the beach. Afterward, we pull up the footage and go through it together — frame by frame if needed. You'll spot things immediately. Most people have a small laugh at themselves, then get serious, because it clicks fast. That's the point. One session of honest video feedback tends to do more for a surfer's progression than weeks of uncoached practice.
What to Expect
❋ what you get
Video footage of your surfing
A private or a group post-session review with your coach
Personalized technique breakdown: specific to your surfing, not generic tips
Your footage to keep: watch it back, track your progress over time, or share it
❋ Who This is For
Whether you've never stood on a board or you've been surfing for a few years and feel stuck, video analysis works at every stage. Beginners use it to build correct habits from the start the kind that are much harder to unlearn later. Intermediate surfers use it to finally understand why certain things aren't clicking and get a direct path forward. If you're putting in the time and not seeing the results, this is usually why.
❋ How it Works
You surf. We film. After the water session, we find a comfortable spot, pull up the footage on screen, and your coach walks you through what they're seeing. It's a conversation, not a lecture. You'll ask questions, we'll rewind and replay, and by the end you'll have a clear picture of two or three things to focus on that will genuinely move your surfing forward.
❋ where we surf
We teach along the North Pacific coast of Costa Rica, always choosing the spot that makes the most sense for the conditions and your level on the day.
Our home breaks are Playa Guiones, Playa Ostional, and Marbella. Depending on swell and tide, we also surf Playa Grande, Avellanas, and other breaks along the coast.
your questions, answered
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Your brain can't surf and self-correct at the same time. Video takes you out of the moment and puts you in the observer's seat — you see exactly what your body is doing, frame by frame, with your coach right there explaining what it means. Most people fix more in one viewing session than in weeks of uncoached water time.
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A coach in the water is valuable: real-time feedback, positioning, wave selection. But there's a limit to what verbal cues can do when you're mid-wave and focused on not falling. Video slows everything down. You see the exact frame where your weight shifts wrong, where your eyes drop, where the pop-up loses timing. Most people watch themselves for the first time and immediately understand something their coach has been trying to explain for an hour. The two work together, they're not the same thing.

