WSL in Portugal — History and Results

WSL in Portugal — History and Results

Surf Index — Competition · Events, Circuits & Results

Portugal hosts two World Surf League events every year: the MEO Rip Curl Pro Portugal, a Championship Tour (CT) stop at Supertubos in Peniche, and the EDP Ericeira Pro, a Challenger Series (CS) event at Ribeira d'Ilhas in Ericeira. One is the elite tier of professional surfing; the other is the path to get there. Both have been running since 2021 with full men's and women's draws, and both consistently produce some of the most competitive surfing in Europe.

How does the WSL circuit work?

The World Surf League runs three main tiers of professional competition. The Championship Tour (CT) is the top level — around 10 events per year where the world's best surfers compete for the world title. Below that is the Challenger Series (CS), a six-event circuit that runs annually and determines who qualifies for the CT the following year. Below the CS is the Qualifying Series (QS), a global network of regional events. Portugal hosts one stop at each of the two top levels: Peniche for the CT, Ericeira for the CS.

Championship Tour — MEO Rip Curl Pro Portugal, Peniche

Supertubos, Peniche

A powerful, hollow beach break on Portugal's central-west coast, approximately 90 km north of Lisbon. Supertubos fires up from October through March, producing some of the thickest barrels on the entire CT circuit. The wave is fast, critical, and unforgiving — which is exactly what makes it one of the most anticipated stops of the year. The event has been held here every year since 2010, except 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19.

2010
First CT edition
14
CT editions held
CT #3
2025 Tour position
March
Typical window
Key moments — CT in Peniche
2010

Inaugural edition — Kelly Slater wins

The Rip Curl Pro Portugal launched with Kelly Slater beating Jordy Smith in the final (13.33 to 11.43). Carissa Moore won the women's inaugural edition over Stephanie Gilmore. The wave made an immediate impression on Tour — nothing like the beach breaks in Australia or Hawaii.

2018–19

Italo Ferreira's back-to-back — the first in event history

Brazilian Italo Ferreira became the first surfer to win in Peniche in consecutive years. His 2019 final score of 18.43 against Jordy Smith (6.17) remains the most dominant performance in the event's history. Women's competition also returned to Peniche in 2018 after nine years in Cascais.

2022

Return after COVID — closest final on record

After two years of cancellations, the event returned with Griffin Colapinto beating Filipe Toledo by just 0.14 points — 14.34 to 14.20 — the smallest margin in event history. Tatiana Weston-Webb won the women's final.

2023

Two first-time CT winners on the same day

João Chianca beat world number one Jack Robinson (17.57 to 15.14), becoming the first Brazilian to win in Peniche. On the women's side, 17-year-old rookie Caitlin Simmers claimed her first career CT win over Courtney Conlogue.

2025

Yago Dora & Caroline Marks — most successful women's champion

Yago Dora won the men's final over Italo Ferreira (13.37 to 12.43). Caroline Marks won the women's title for the second time — alongside her 2019 win, making her the most successful women's champion in the event's history. The 2026 CT edition moves to October 22–November 1.

CT results — all-time champions, Peniche
Year Winner Score Runner-up Score
2025 🇧🇷 Yago Dora 13.37 🇧🇷 Italo Ferreira 12.43
2024 🇺🇸 Griffin Colapinto 17.94 🇦🇺 Ethan Ewing 11.13
2023 🇧🇷 João Chianca 17.57 🇦🇺 Jack Robinson 15.14
2022 🇺🇸 Griffin Colapinto 14.34 🇧🇷 Filipe Toledo 14.20
2019 🇧🇷 Italo Ferreira 18.43 🇿🇦 Jordy Smith 6.17
2018 🇧🇷 Italo Ferreira 15.93 🇫🇷 Joan Duru 10.77
2017 🇧🇷 Gabriel Medina 13.26 🇦🇺 Julian Wilson 10.94
2016 🇺🇸 John John Florence 16.67 🇺🇸 Conner Coffin 9.93
2015 🇧🇷 Filipe Toledo 17.83 🇧🇷 Italo Ferreira 17.13
2014 🇦🇺 Mick Fanning 15.50 🇿🇦 Jordy Smith 7.67
2013 🇦🇺 Kai Otton 12.23 🇺🇸 Nat Young 11.03
2012 🇦🇺 Julian Wilson 16.26 🇧🇷 Gabriel Medina 15.37
2011 🇧🇷 Adriano de Souza 15.67 🇺🇸 Kelly Slater 14.73
2010 🇺🇸 Kelly Slater 13.33 🇿🇦 Jordy Smith 11.43
Year Winner Score Runner-up Score
2025 🇺🇸 Caroline Marks 7.90 🇺🇸 Gabriela Bryan 6.97
2024 🇫🇷 Johanne Defay 10.83 🇦🇺 Tyler Wright 5.50
2023 🇺🇸 Caitlin Simmers 13.50 🇺🇸 Courtney Conlogue 12.83
2022 🇧🇷 Tatiana Weston-Webb 15.33 🇺🇸 Lakey Peterson 14.27
2019 🇺🇸 Caroline Marks 13.73 🇺🇸 Lakey Peterson 6.27
2010 🇺🇸 Carissa Moore 17.44 🇦🇺 Stephanie Gilmore 8.60

* Women's competition was held in Cascais 2011–2018. Only Peniche editions listed.

Challenger Series — EDP Ericeira Pro, Ericeira

Ribeira d'Ilhas, Ericeira

A long, reeling right-hand point break set beneath dramatic cliffs, 28 km north of Lisbon, inside Europe's only World Surfing Reserve. Ribeira d'Ilhas is fast, consistent, and holds waves from two to twelve feet — qualities that make it ideal for competition. It has hosted WSL events since 2019 and became a permanent Challenger Series fixture in 2021. As a penultimate stop on the CS calendar, it's where CT qualification is won and lost every October.

2021
First CS edition
5
CS editions held
October
Typical window
CS #4–5
Position on circuit

The Challenger Series is the WSL's second tier — a six-event circuit that runs in parallel to the CT season. At the end of the CS, the top 10 men and top 7 women in the final rankings earn a spot on the Championship Tour the following year. For surfers outside the CT, Ericeira is one of the last chances to qualify. For CT surfers who missed the mid-season cut, it's a way back in. The stakes at Ribeira d'Ilhas every October are as high as they get in professional surfing.

CS results — all-time champions, Ericeira
Year Winner
2025 🇫🇷 Kauli Vaast
2024 🇧🇷 Samuel Pupo
2023 🇧🇷 Deivid Silva
2022 🇮🇹 Leonardo Fioravanti
2021 🇺🇸Ezekiel Lau
Year Winner
2025 🇵🇫 Tya Zebrowski
2024 🇦🇺 Sally Fitzgibbons
2023 🇺🇸 Alyssa Spencer
2022 🇦🇺 Macy Callaghan
2021 🇧🇷 Luana Silva
Portuguese surfers on the world stage

No Portuguese surfer has won either of the two Portugal events — at Peniche or Ericeira. Tiago Pires, who grew up in Lisbon surfing Costa da Caparica, was the first Portuguese surfer to qualify for the Championship Tour, competing on the CT from 2006 to 2014. Frederico Morais followed, qualifying for the CT in 2017 and remaining on Tour until 2021. On the women's side, Yolanda Hopkins and Teresa Bonvalot have both competed at the Ericeira CS event as locals in front of a home crowd, with Hopkins consistently among the top competitors in the Challenger Series rankings.

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FAQ
What WSL events are held in Portugal?

Portugal hosts two WSL events annually: the MEO Rip Curl Pro Portugal, a Championship Tour (CT) event at Supertubos beach in Peniche (typically March), and the EDP Ericeira Pro, a Challenger Series (CS) event at Ribeira d'Ilhas in Ericeira (typically late September to early October).

What is the difference between the CT and the Challenger Series?

The Championship Tour (CT) is the top tier of professional surfing — roughly 10 events per year where the world's best surfers compete for the world title. The Challenger Series (CS) is the second tier — a six-event circuit that determines who qualifies for the CT the following year. A strong result in the CS, like at the Ericeira Pro, can earn a surfer a spot on the elite tour.

Where is the WSL Championship Tour event in Portugal held?

At Supertubos beach in Peniche, a powerful hollow beach break approximately 90 km north of Lisbon. The event has been held there every year since 2010, except 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Where is the WSL Challenger Series event in Portugal held?

At Ribeira d'Ilhas beach in Ericeira, a right-hand point break inside Europe's only World Surfing Reserve, 28 km north of Lisbon. The event has been a CS fixture since 2021 and typically takes place in late September or early October.

Has a Portuguese surfer ever won a WSL event in Portugal?

No Portuguese surfer has won either the CT event in Peniche or the CS event in Ericeira. Tiago Pires and Frederico Morais are the only Portuguese men to have competed on the CT. Yolanda Hopkins and Teresa Bonvalot are the most prominent Portuguese women on the Challenger Series.

Who has won the most times at the WSL Portugal CT event?

Italo Ferreira and Griffin Colapinto share the men's record with 2 wins each. Caroline Marks leads the women's with 2 wins (2019 and 2025).

Explore more from The Surf Index — Board Exchange's guide to surf culture, schools, spots, and competition in Portugal and Europe.

Results sourced from the World Surf League official website. All CT scores are combined two-wave totals out of 20.

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