How to Bodyboard: Your Complete Guide to Surf and Safety
Posted by POD Team on 19th Nov 2025
The Essential Guide to the Australian Beach Lifestyle
Bodyboarding is one of the most accessible and enjoyable ways to experience Australia's coastline. Whether you are a first-time beachgoer, a visitor from overseas, or someone looking to build ocean confidence, bodyboarding offers a genuine connection to the water. It is a sport for all ages and experience levels, from kids catching their first whitewash to adults discovering the ocean for the first time.
From patrolled beaches to remote stretches of golden sand, Australia offers conditions for every rider. This guide covers everything you need - choosing the right gear, reading beach signs, staying sun-safe, and understanding ocean conditions - so you can ride with confidence from the first session.
Why Bodyboarding Is the Perfect Way to Experience Australia's Coast
Bodyboarding gives you a direct connection to the ocean. You do not need years of experience, expensive equipment, or elite fitness. With the right size board, rubber swim fins, and a bodyboard leash, anyone from kids to adults can enjoy catching waves within a single session.
It is also a strong introduction to ocean awareness. You learn how waves work, how tides move, and how to navigate the beach environment safely. For travellers, families, and new ocean-goers, bodyboarding offers an engaging way to connect with the water without diving straight into advanced surf sports.
Choosing the Right Bodyboard
A well-matched bodyboard makes a significant difference. It affects your speed, control, buoyancy, and ability to catch waves consistently.
When choosing a board consider
- Rider height and weight - A board that is too small sinks and slows you down. One that is too large becomes difficult to manoeuvre and steer.
- Your experience level - Beginners generally do better with boards that offer more volume and stability.
- Core material and durability - Look for strong cores such as EPS, PE, or PP, durable rails, and a smooth slick bottom surface for consistent speed. A well-shaped board responds better and lasts longer.
- Deck grip and comfort - A comfortable deck keeps you stable when paddling and turning. Surfboard wax can also improve hand grip on the deck.
For beginners or riders on a summer holiday, a durable and buoyant board suits most conditions. More experienced riders may prefer stiffer boards with performance tail shapes for sharper turning and speed.
Why Swim Fins Matter More Than You Think
Swim fins are the engine of bodyboarding. They help you paddle faster, catch more waves, and move confidently through whitewash. For newcomers, fins are often the difference between struggling in the impact zone and connecting with waves consistently.
Look for fins that offer
- Comfort and fit - Snug but not painful. Neoprene fin socks help prevent rubbing and keep your fins securely in place across longer sessions.
- Balanced thrust - Power without overwhelming your legs, allowing a relaxed and steady kicking action throughout the session.
- Soft foot pockets with firm blades - Suited to longer sessions in variable Australian surf conditions.
- Security - Always use fin savers to secure your fins so they do not get lost in strong currents or powerful waves. Conditions in Australian surf can change quickly and fin loss is a real risk without retention.
For tourists and casual riders, a comfortable all-round fin works across most conditions. More advanced riders may look for specific stiffness, blade shapes, or symmetric versus asymmetric designs depending on their riding technique.
Accessories and Leashes - Safety and Control
While your board and fins are the primary focus, a few additions make a meaningful difference to safety, comfort, and convenience - particularly when travelling or spending full days at Australian beaches.
- Leashes - A leash is your connection to your board during wipeouts. It keeps the board attached so you can recover quickly and safely. Read the Bicep vs Wrist Bodyboard Leash guide to find the right fit for your riding style.
- Fin savers - These secure your swim fins and prevent loss in strong currents or after a heavy wave. A small detail with a significant impact on your session.
- Waterproof backpacks - Useful for travellers and anyone spending a full day at the beach. A sealed waterproof bag keeps your phone, valuables, towel, and clothing dry while you are in the water.
Protecting Your Ears - Preventing Swimmer's Ear
Swimmer's ear is common in Australia's warm, sandy waters. Repeated duck dives and wipeouts trap moisture and sand in the ear canal, leading to irritation or infection. For some people, this never becomes an issue.
For others, it is enough to keep them out of the water for days or weeks.
The straightforward solution is proper watersports earplugs.
Good earplugs
- Prevent trapped water from becoming a problem
- Block sand and debris from entering the ear canal
- Keep your ears comfortable in cold or windy conditions
- Reduce the risk of recurring irritation across regular sessions
The POD EarSeal Pro Triple-Flange is built for watersports, providing a secure, comfortable seal with a durable neck bungee cord for easy handling between sessions. Ear protection is one of the most overlooked pieces of bodyboarding gear and one of the most useful for regular ocean users.
Sun Protection - Understanding the Options
Australia has among the world's highest UV levels. Even on cool or cloudy days, sun exposure here can cause significant damage in a short time. Sunscreen remains an important part of staying protected, though many beachgoers are increasingly aware of concerns about certain chemical ingredients and their effect on sensitive skin and coral ecosystems.
Regardless of where you stand on that question, physical coverage remains the most reliable form of sun protection. Rash guards, wetsuits, long-sleeve tops, and broad-brim hats provide consistent UV protection without relying on chemicals or reapplication. They also protect the shoulders, back, and chest - the areas most exposed when lying on a bodyboard.
Your face, neck, and hands still need a high-quality sunscreen - zinc-based or formulated for sensitive skin works well and holds up in water. Combining fabric-based UV protection with targeted sunscreen gives you the most reliable overall defence, particularly for families and travellers spending long days in the sun.
Tourists - Understanding Patrolled vs Unpatrolled Beaches
Australia's coastline is vast, beautiful, and incredibly diverse, but not all beaches are the same. Each has its own characteristics and changes with the tides and weather conditions. Confusion among tourists about beach safety is common.
Patrolled beaches - suited to beginners
Patrolled beaches have lifeguards, flags, signage, and lifesaving equipment to keep visitors safe. Always swim or bodyboard between the red and yellow flags where conditions are actively monitored. This is the safest environment for anyone new to the ocean.
Unpatrolled beaches - experienced riders only
Remote beaches are often stunning but can be unpredictable. Hidden currents, strong rips, uneven sandbanks, reef breaks, and changing swells can challenge even experienced local riders.
Before entering the water at any beach - especially unpatrolled ones - check the following:
- Beach access signage and local advice
- Swell and tide conditions before entering
- How confident do you feel in a remote location in moving water
If you are unsure, choose a lifeguard-patrolled beach.
Reading Waves and Ocean Conditions
Understanding the ocean makes your sessions safer and more enjoyable. Sit back, relax, and take a few minutes to watch the waves before entering. Pick a wave break that suits your experience level. Experienced riders do this every session. Beginners should too.
Look for
- Sandbanks - Your take-off points. A clean sandbank creates predictable waves that break consistently and are easier to read and time.
- Rips - Channels of water pulling back toward the ocean. They often appear as turbulent ripples, darker or deeper patches, or areas where the water looks different from the surrounding surf. Experienced riders sometimes use rips to paddle out easily to breaking waves. If caught in a rip, stay calm, swim parallel to the beach, and signal for help if needed.
- Whitewash vs unbroken waves: broken waves close to shore suit beginners and kids. Unbroken green or blue waves offer longer, cleaner rides across the wave face and suit more experienced riders.
Getting Started - Techniques Every Beginner Should Know
Basic warm-up routine
A five-minute warm-up helps prevent cramps and supports endurance across the session. Light dynamic movements - shoulder circles, arm swings, and gentle ankle mobility - prepare your paddling and kicking before you enter the water.
Positioning on the board
Lie with your hips slightly above the tail. Too far forward and the nose dives. Too far back and you lose speed. Keep your chin up, eyes forward, and grip the nose lightly with both hands rather than holding too tightly. Gripping too hard is a common mistake that causes instability on the wave.
How to paddle and kick efficiently
Bodyboarding uses both kicking and paddling. Use your fins efficiently.
- Kick from your hips, not your knees - hip-driven kicks generate stronger, deeper power with less fatigue
- Keep your fins submerged - kicking at the surface splashes water and reduces thrust
- Use your arms to paddle when needed, keeping your body as streamlined as possible through the water
Catching the wave
Walk out backwards to knee or waist depth, looking over your shoulder for breaking waves. Lie on your board facing the beach. Start kicking strongly as a wave approaches. Keep the nose up slightly and stay centred on the board. Let the wave lift you and carry you toward shore.
Riding the face - steering and control
Once riding, control comes from weight distribution and rail pressure.
- Lean gently in the direction you want to go
- Keep one elbow pressed lightly on the inside rail
- Lead with your hips rather than your shoulders
As a beginner, focus on straight rides until you feel stable on the board. From there, you can explore angled lines, trimming, and the basic bottom-turn technique.
Staying Safe in the Surf
Bodyboarding is safe when approached with awareness. Keep these basics in mind.
- Know your limits - do not push into conditions that make you uncomfortable
- Enter and exit the water away from rocks, jetties, and gutters
- Never turn your back on the ocean - always keep an eye on incoming waves
- Watch others around you and keep a safe distance from surfers and swimmers
- Take breaks when tired, stay hydrated, and protect yourself from the Australian sun throughout the day
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Avoiding these will improve your progress and keep your sessions safer.
- Holding the board too tightly
- Kicking fins at the surface rather than through the water
- Nose-diving from leaning too far forward on the board
- Riding unpatrolled beaches before building ocean experience
- Underestimating the power of the Australian surf
- Choosing a board that is the wrong size for your body weight and height
Riding with Respect - Surf Etiquette
Bodyboarders, surfers, and swimmers share the same ocean. A standard set of etiquette guidelines keeps everyone safe and ensures an enjoyable experience for all. Following these earns respect and keeps the lineup welcoming.
- Do not drop in - do not take a wave if someone is already riding it. The rider already on the wave has the right of way.
- Give way to surfers on unbroken waves - surfers riding the green wave generally have priority in the lineup.
- Keep your board close - hold onto your board in crowded areas to prevent it from becoming a hazard during a wipeout.
- Respect locals and patrolled zones - follow all signage and lifeguard directions without exception.
- Keep it clean - take everything you brought to the beach home with you.
The Joy of the Journey
Bodyboarding brings the coastline to life. It is the first clean ride of the morning, sharing waves with friends, teaching your kids, or finding a beach you have never seen before. It is one of the most rewarding ways to connect with Australia's ocean environment and one of the easiest to start.
Once you are confident with the basics - board choice, fins, safety, sun care, and technique - you can progress naturally to bigger whitewash, angled rides, basic trimming, and learning where to position yourself in the lineup. The ocean keeps offering more the further you go.
The Ocean Is Waiting
If you need help choosing the right gear or want to explore further guides and tips, visit the POD Bodyboarding range. From swim fins and leashes to fin accessories and ear protection, the full range supports every stage of the journey.
For more on the gear that makes bodyboarding safer and more enjoyable, read Bicep vs Wrist Bodyboard Leash - The Best Fit for Your Ride and Why Earplugs Fail in Surf and Open Water.