Wakesurf Season
Best time to wakesurf in Colorado
The best time to wakesurf in Colorado runs June–September. That window is derived from Open-Meteo warm-month air-temperature climatology across 6 of Colorado's 6 documented spots — it reflects when water is comfortably warm, not day-to-day forecasts.
Wakesurfing needs warm, calm water, so timing matters as much as the spot. The window below is built from temperature climatology rather than guesswork: for every Colorado spot we have data for, we mark the months whose mean daily high is comfortably warm, then surface the months that clear that bar across the state. It is a planning guide derived from long-run normals — always confirm current local water and air temperatures before a session. See the full methodology →
Statewide season window
In Colorado, the typical wakesurf window is June–September (warm at a majority of 6 mapped spots).
- JanOff
- FebOff
- MarOff
- AprOff
- MayOff
- JunIn season
- JulIn season
- AugIn season
- SepIn season
- OctOff
- NovOff
- DecOff
A month is shown “in season” when at least half of Colorado’s spots with temperature data are comfortably warm that month.
Best season by spot
- Dillon Reservoir
near Dillon
Best season: July
- Horsetooth Reservoir
near Fort Collins
Best season: June–September
- Imondi Wake Zone
near Fruita
Best season: May–September
- Lake Granby
near Granby
Best season: July–August
- Lake Pueblo
near Pueblo
Best season: May–September
- Mile High Cable Park
near Milliken
Best season: June–September
Frequently Asked Questions
Wakesurf season in Colorado typically runs June–September. These are the months when at least half of the state's documented spots see comfortably warm conditions, based on Open-Meteo air-temperature climatology. Individual lakes can open earlier or run later — check each spot's own window.
We compute each spot's best-season window from Open-Meteo air-temperature climatology — the months whose mean daily high is comfortably warm for the sport. The statewide window is the set of months that clear that bar at a majority of Colorado's documented spots. It is a climatology-based guide, not a forecast. See our methodology for the full method.