Garden City Beach, South Carolina, offers one of the friendliest entry points to Atlantic surf along the Grand Strand. Private Surf Lessons meet at the Calhoun Dr. beach access (#14) where Calhoun and Waccamaw drive connect — a wide, gently sloping beach that catches consistent beginner-friendly peelers in summer. For over 50 years the instructors here have been spreading stoke, and these one-on-one sessions condense decades of local know-how into an hour-long progression that gets beginners standing, helps intermediates refine turns, and coaches experienced riders on timing and wave selection.
Sessions run Mondays from June through August with start times at 9 a.m., 11 a.m., and 1 p.m.; private lessons are priced at $70 per person and limited to small groups for focused attention. Instructors are CPR-certified and emphasize ocean safety and swim competency; participants should be at least six years old and comfortable in the surf. Lessons begin with a short beach briefing on paddling, positioning and reading the lineup, then move into water drills and assisted wave rides—by the end you’ll have practical skills you can repeat on your own.
What makes these lessons stand out is the pairing of local surf experience and a long-running program that returns students to the lineup with confidence. The Calhoun access sits near sandbars formed from the Waccamaw River outflow; that shifting bottom produces forgiving whitewater breaks ideal for learning. After class students are invited to stop by the shop for a complimentary T-shirt and a big shaka—small rituals that create a welcoming surf community and connect visitors to Murrells Inlet’s coastal culture.
Practical details: bring a towel, reef-safe sunscreen, and an appropriate swimsuit; ability to swim is required. Maximum group size is 15, but private lessons keep attention tight; plan for an hour in the water within a three-hour booking window. Private scheduling can be adjusted outside set days with advance notice.
Why go? If you’re staying in Murrells Inlet or anywhere along the Grand Strand and want a reliable, low-pressure way to learn, these lessons are efficient, safety-focused and rooted in local beach knowledge—ideal for families, solo travelers, or experienced surfers polishing skills. The ocean here offers warm water, predictable summer swell, and wide sandy beaches that make learning less intimidating. Whether you ride your first whitewash or refine your pop-up, these lessons turn a summer hour into a lasting skill.
Instructors often time sessions around tides and swell windows to maximize usable whitewater, and they adapt drills to suit wind direction and crowd conditions. Families appreciate the patient teaching style and the emphasis on safe entry and exit techniques, making the beach a practical classroom for confident, repeatable progress. Book early—summer lesson slots fill up very fast indeed.