Wakesurf Spot · North Dakota
Belcourt Lake Beach
A 827-acre reservoir in Rolette County, North Dakota — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
Belcourt Lake Beach sits in Rolette County, North Dakota that covers about 827 acres. That surface area is generous enough to fit a wake-boat setup where local rules allow.
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.
Belcourt Lake Beach appears here on the strength of its size and public access, not any reputation for surfing. Wake-boat regulation varies by state and by individual lake, so verify the North Dakota rules and the local ordinance first.
Source: North Dakota Game and Fish. Specifications reflect published figures and can change by model year — verify before purchase.
More wakesurf spots in North Dakota
A 953-acre reservoir in Logan County, North Dakota — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
A 827-acre reservoir in Rolette County, North Dakota — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
A 240-acre reservoir in Towner County, North Dakota — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
A 1,750-acre reservoir in Bowman County, North Dakota — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
A 990-acre reservoir in Pierce County, North Dakota — large enough for wake boating where local rules allow.
Frequently Asked Questions
The typical warm-weather window at Belcourt Lake Beach runs June–August, based on Open-Meteo 2019–2023 daily-high climatology. Mornings are usually calmest.
Belcourt Lake Beach covers roughly 827 acres, giving it room for a wake-boat setup when conditions cooperate. Public access varies — confirm a launch before you go. North Dakota sets statewide wakesurf rules, and individual lakes often add no-wake zones, hours, or horsepower limits — check the North Dakota rules page and the local ordinance before launching. North Dakota: No wake-surf-specific rule. Always confirm the current local rules before launching.