Wakesurf Spot · New York
Brantingham Lake
A 327-acre reservoir in Lewis County, New York — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
Located in Lewis County, New York, Brantingham Lake is a public lake that covers about 327 acres. It is on the smaller side, so usable wake-boat water depends heavily on local rules and traffic.
No public access point is listed, so confirm how (and whether) you can legally launch. Its typical warm-weather window runs June–August, based on Open-Meteo 2019–2023 daily-high climatology.
Because this entry comes from public lake data rather than rider reports, treat it as a size-and-access reference, not a recommendation. Confirm the current New York statewide rules and any lake-specific restrictions before riding.
Source: New York State DEC. Specifications reflect published figures and can change by model year — verify before purchase.
More wakesurf spots in New York
A 369-acre reservoir in Rensselaer County, New York — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
A 657-acre reservoir in Ontario County, New York — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
A large lake in southwestern New York with wide-open waters and multiple public launch points.
The westernmost of the Finger Lakes, a year-round water-recreation destination in Livingston County, New York.
A 465-acre reservoir in Allegany County, New York — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
Frequently Asked Questions
The typical warm-weather window at Brantingham Lake runs June–August, based on Open-Meteo 2019–2023 daily-high climatology. Mornings are usually calmest.
Brantingham Lake covers roughly 327 acres, giving it room for a wake-boat setup when conditions cooperate. Public access varies — confirm a launch before you go. New York sets statewide wakesurf rules, and individual lakes often add no-wake zones, hours, or horsepower limits — check the New York rules page and the local ordinance before launching. New York: Local/lake-specific rules only. Always confirm the current local rules before launching.