Surfing in two hours sounds bold. The good part is how focused it is—private coaching in Punta de Mita with the right gear ready for you. I like that the lesson works for all levels, including first-timers, and that you get the surfboard and rash guards so you can travel light. One thing to plan for: there’s no hotel pickup, so you’ll need to make your own way to the beach meeting point.
The first stretch is smart: in the first 10 minutes you do a balance test and practice the pop up technique right at the beach area near the office. You’re also taught the body posture basics before you ever chase waves, which makes the ocean part feel less chaotic.
You’ll be with instructors Alex Jr, Diego (the guide’s sons), and Alejandro. The format is a private activity for your group, with a maximum of 12 people per booking, offered in English. Lessons run with start times at 10am or 5pm, within local hours listed as 8:00 AM–6:00 PM.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- Punta de Mita Setup: Getting There From Puerto Vallarta
- The 2-Hour Flow: From Balance Test to Your First Stand
- Step 1: The first 10 minutes on land
- Step 2: Surf safety and reading the ocean
- Step 3: Going out for coached tries
- Step 4: Wrap up back at the meeting point
- Meet the Instructors: Alejandro, Alex Jr, and Diego
- Equipment and Safety: What’s Included and Why It Helps
- Rash guards for comfort and function
- Safety teaching that stays practical
- Morning or Afternoon: Picking 10am vs 5pm
- Who This Private Punta de Mita Lesson Fits Best
- Price and Value: Where Your Money Actually Goes
- How to Prepare for a 2-Hour Surf Session (Without Overthinking It)
- Quick Reality Check: When Surf Lessons Feel Great vs Frustrating
- Should You Book This Surf Lesson in Punta de Mita?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the Punta de Mita surf lessons?
- How long is the surf lesson?
- What time do lessons start?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- What equipment is provided?
- Are the lessons offered in English?
- What is the minimum age and fitness level needed?
- Is there free cancellation?
- Is this a private tour/activity?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- 10-minute technique warmup: balance test and pop up practice start right on the beach near the office
- All gear included: surfboard plus rash guards, so you’re not hunting equipment on arrival
- Ocean reading + safety: you’ll learn how to determine your surf area and stay aware out there
- Small group energy: max 12 per booking, and it’s private for your group
- Family-team instruction: Alejandro, Alex Jr, and Diego coach together, so you get close attention
- First-timer friendly: the lesson is set up for all experience levels, with a minimum age of 8
Punta de Mita Setup: Getting There From Puerto Vallarta
This experience is based in Punta de Mita, in the larger Puerto Vallarta area. The meeting point is Av. El Anclote 13, Mita, 63734 Corral del Risco, Nay., Mexico, and the activity ends back there. That end-back detail matters: you’re not dragged into extra stops or long transfers after you’re tired and salty.
Also, you’ll want to factor in the lack of hotel pickup. If you’re staying in Puerto Vallarta proper, you’ll likely be arranging your own transport to reach Punta de Mita. The good news is that the meeting point is described as near public transportation, which can make it easier if you’re not renting a car.
Because it’s a small, focused lesson, arriving on time helps. If you show up late, you lose the opening technique portion that sets you up for your first real attempts on the water.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Puerto Vallarta
The 2-Hour Flow: From Balance Test to Your First Stand

This is a tight, two-hour session, and the timing is built for results. Here’s what that typically means for your experience once you check in with your mobile ticket.
Step 1: The first 10 minutes on land
The lesson begins with a balance test and pop up technique practice at the beach area near the office. Instead of jumping straight to paddling, you work on body position and posture. This is one of the biggest reasons the lesson can work even if you’ve never surfed before.
If you’ve ever tried surfing by instinct, you know what happens next: you end up standing too fast, feet wrong, or your hips drift. Starting with balance and pop up mechanics gives you a chance to correct those common errors before you add wave timing.
Step 2: Surf safety and reading the ocean
After the warmup, the instruction shifts to surf basics with safety and “reading the ocean” skills. The goal is to help you determine your surf area. In plain terms, this is about figuring out where you can realistically sit, paddle, and try without getting tossed into the wrong zone.
You don’t need to know surf science to benefit. You just need a clear plan for where you’re practicing and how you’re staying aware.
Step 3: Going out for coached tries
Once your surf area is set, you go into the water for instruction and attempts. This is where having multiple instructors matters. With Alejandro plus Alex Jr and Diego, coaching tends to stay close and practical. You get feedback in real time, rather than waiting for someone to notice you’re doing something off.
This is also where you’ll feel the value of the private format. It’s not a lecture. It’s corrections, encouragement, and repeat tries.
Step 4: Wrap up back at the meeting point
The activity ends back at the meeting point at the beach area. That’s helpful for planning your day. You know exactly where you’ll be when the two hours are done.
Meet the Instructors: Alejandro, Alex Jr, and Diego

One of the best parts of this surf lesson is the team setup. It’s not just one instructor handing you off to a helper. You’re coached by a group that includes Alejandro along with Alex Jr and Diego.
That matters because surf is fast. Small mistakes show up instantly—where your weight is, how you paddle, how you time the pop up. With more eyes on you, you’re more likely to get corrections before bad habits harden.
From what you can expect during instruction, the vibe leans friendly and respectful. There’s also a real focus on getting you surfing, not just standing around. One example shared in instructor-focused feedback was how a student who had been trying for years was up and surfing quickly, even on a day when conditions were challenging.
Also keep in mind: if waves are not cooperating, instructors may help you work out a better time. Surf depends on conditions, so flexibility is part of the deal, even when the lesson structure is set.
Equipment and Safety: What’s Included and Why It Helps
You get all necessary equipment: surfboard and rash guards. That inclusion is more than a convenience perk—it changes the whole trip experience.
If you’ve surfed elsewhere, you know how annoying it can be to deal with board rental quality, wrong size gear, or last-minute outfitting. Here, you can show up focused on learning. You’re not spending your first hour figuring out how to fit into the right equipment.
Rash guards for comfort and function
Rash guards are provided, which helps you stay comfortable and reduces friction during repeated attempts. If you’re learning, you’ll likely wipe out a few times. That’s normal. The rash guard helps you stay in the game.
Safety teaching that stays practical
The lesson includes surf and safety guidance plus instruction on reading the ocean. You’re not expected to become an expert. You’re being taught enough to make smart choices about where to practice and how to approach the water.
For first-timers, this is huge. When you understand the basics of where to surf and what to watch for, the whole experience feels safer and less random.
Morning or Afternoon: Picking 10am vs 5pm
You can choose your preferred lesson time when booking. Lessons start at 10am or 5pm, and the listed operating window is 8:00 AM–6:00 PM. In other words, you’re not stuck waiting around all day.
How should you decide?
- If you want a smoother start and more daylight on the beach, the 10am lesson can fit your morning energy.
- If your day is packed, the 5pm lesson can be an easier add-on once you’ve handled sightseeing or dinner plans.
The bigger reality is this: surf conditions can change. So when you pick a time, also pick with your schedule flexibility in mind. One lesson can be great on one day and tougher the next, and that’s part of surfing.
Who This Private Punta de Mita Lesson Fits Best
This is designed for all experience levels, including first-timers. That makes it a strong choice if you’re trying to learn from scratch, or if you’ve surfed before and want more direct coaching.
It’s also described as safe for families, with a minimum age of 8. If you’re traveling with kids, this matters because the format is built for learning steps, not just throwing everyone into the lineup.
There’s also a note that travelers should have a moderate physical fitness level. That’s a good heads-up. Surf involves paddling, balance, and getting up repeatedly. You don’t have to be an athlete, but you should be comfortable with basic physical effort in the water.
Finally, group size is capped at 12 people per booking, and it’s a private activity for your group. That private-for-your-group detail is a big quality marker. You’re not competing with dozens of people for instructor time.
Price and Value: Where Your Money Actually Goes

You’re paying for a focused 2-hour learning session that includes instruction plus all the key gear. That’s the core value here.
In practical terms, you should compare this lesson to options where you might rent equipment separately or where instruction time is diluted in bigger groups. Here, the equipment is included—surfboard and rash guards—so you aren’t adding extra rental costs or dealing with mismatched gear.
The one value tradeoff is transport. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included. If your lodging is far from the meeting point, you’ll need to budget time and transport costs of your own. But if you’re already close, or you’re using public transportation, that downside shrinks fast.
Overall, the lesson’s structure—land warmup for balance and pop up, then coached time in the water—supports your chances of progressing quickly within a single session.
How to Prepare for a 2-Hour Surf Session (Without Overthinking It)

You don’t need a complex surf wardrobe here because the essential water gear is provided. Still, come ready for what this experience asks from you.
Plan for the fact that:
- You’ll do some on-the-beach technique practice first (balance and pop up).
- You’ll then spend time in the water while your instructor determines the surf area.
- You should be comfortable with a moderate level of physical effort, since surf learning requires paddling and repeated attempts.
If you’re bringing kids (minimum age 8), make sure they can handle basic beach and water activity for the full 2 hours. If you’re a first-timer, take comfort in the step-by-step approach: it’s not just “go catch waves.” You start with fundamentals and build from there.
Also, choose your lesson time (10am or 5pm) based on your energy. If you go at a time when you’re rushed or exhausted, you’ll absorb less instruction.
Quick Reality Check: When Surf Lessons Feel Great vs Frustrating
Surf lessons feel amazing when the ocean cooperates and you’re already warmed up with good mechanics. If conditions are rough or waves are limited, you may still work through technique and safety, but the “how many waves you actually catch” part can vary.
That’s why a private, instructor-led lesson helps. Your coaching doesn’t disappear when conditions change. And in at least one described experience, when waves weren’t there on the planned day, the lesson was adjusted and scheduled again a couple days later.
So treat the ocean like the boss. Your job is to show up, listen, and stay flexible.
Should You Book This Surf Lesson in Punta de Mita?
Yes—if you want a practical, beginner-friendly surf experience with real coaching and gear included. This is a good fit for families (minimum age 8), first-timers, and anyone who learns better with direct feedback.
Consider booking with a day that gives you a little breathing room, since surf depends on conditions and you might need to adjust. And be sure you’ve got a plan to reach the meeting point on Av. El Anclote 13, because hotel pickup isn’t part of the deal.
If you want to get on a board with structured technique, safety teaching, and an instructor team that stays close, this is a strong choice.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the Punta de Mita surf lessons?
The meeting point is Av. El Anclote 13, Mita, 63734 Corral del Risco, Nay., Mexico. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.
How long is the surf lesson?
It’s approximately 2 hours.
What time do lessons start?
Lessons start at 10am or 5pm. The listed operating hours are 8:00 AM–6:00 PM.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
What equipment is provided?
All necessary surf gear is provided, including the surfboard and rash guards.
Are the lessons offered in English?
Yes, the lesson is offered in English.
What is the minimum age and fitness level needed?
The minimum age is 8 years. Travelers should have a moderate physical fitness level.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is this a private tour/activity?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.



























