The ISA World Para Surfing Championship 2025 to be held in Oceanside
Juan José Saldaña
September 8, 2025

Oceanside, California, is preparing to welcome the best Para Surf athletes in an event that promises to be unforgettable. From November 2 to 7, 2025, the city will host the tenth edition of the ISA World Para Surfing Championship, a competition that has marked a before and after in the history of adaptive sport. What began as a platform to open doors in 2015 has now become a global movement that fuels dreams, challenges limits, and amplifies voices.

In the 2024 edition, nearly 150 athletes from 25 nations showed that adaptive surfing is not only growing in numbers but also in quality and competitiveness. With emerging rivalries and performance levels improving year after year, the expectation for Oceanside 2025 is more than just a sporting event: it is an opportunity to celebrate resilience, diversity, and the transformative power of sport.

A path toward inclusion and the Paralympic Games

The growth of Para Surfing in less than a decade reflects the commitment of the International Surfing Association (ISA) to consolidate a solid competitive system aligned with international standards. From implementing a homologated classification system to encouraging its 119 member nations to organize national tournaments, the discipline has rapidly evolved. The support of the International Paralympic Committee in 2023, which recognized the sport’s competitive viability, opened the door to an even greater dream: seeing Para Surfing included in the Paralympic Games in Brisbane 2032.

For many athletes, the WPSC is more than a championship: it is a stage where their stories of resilience find global resonance. Each wave surfed is a symbol of strength and dignity, a reminder that sport does not distinguish physical boundaries but instead rewards courage and perseverance. Oceanside will not only host champions; it will welcome ambassadors of inclusion.

Oceanside: a place with history and future

The choice of Oceanside is no coincidence. This Californian city was already in the spotlight in 2015 when it hosted the ISA World Junior Surfing Championship, where a young Leonardo Fioravanti made history for Italy by winning gold. A decade later, it once again becomes the stage for a milestone, this time for Para Surfing, with the promise of writing new chapters filled with emotion and inspiration.

ISA President Fernando Aguerre sums it up clearly: this championship is a celebration of talent, but also of resilience and the boundless spirit of surfing. Although the discipline was not considered for Los Angeles 2028, the path toward Brisbane 2032 remains strong. In the meantime, Oceanside 2025 is shaping up to be the best WPSC yet—an event that will not only crown champions but also continue to consolidate Para Surfing as a sport of global impact.