1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
SocietyGermany

Munich surfers abandon attempt to restart Eisbach wave

December 27, 2025

City authorities are putting up unnecessary resistance to restoring the world-famous surf spot, the local sports association said.

Surfers on the Eisbach wave in Munich
Surfers from all over the world flocked to the Eisbach wave [FILE: June 2025]Image: Stephan Rumpf/SZ Photo/picture alliance

A months-long effort to restore Munich's famous "Eisbach" wave is being disbanded, the Surf Club Munich has announced. The group cited excessive red tape and a lack of enthusiasm for the project from the city government.

"The administration does not want to regulate surfing on the Eisbach, but to prevent it," the association said in a statement. They pointed to "administrative obstruction" in their mission to bring the wave back after it disappeared in October during a routine cleaning process.

How did land-locked Munich become a surfing hotspot?

The Eisbach is a small tributary of the Isar river that flows through Munich's famous English Garden city park.

A series of concrete reinforcements underneath the stream in the 1970s led to the creation of a strong current near a bridge in one area of the park.

Local surfing legend Walter Strasser has been credited in local media with coming up with the idea to place a plank at a specific angle where the current was strongest, creating a wave large enough for surfing.

Over the years, Strasser and his wave gained more and more renown in the surfing community, and the area became a hotspot for the sport.

Earlier in December, Strasser told local newspaper the Münchener Abendzeitung that he had tried to work with Mayor Dieter Reiter to restore the wave, but had been met with ambivalence.

"I have so much experience with the Eisbach. I know exactly what the problem is. I could have fixed it within weeks, with very little funding," he told the paper. "But the city told me they didn't need me."

Surfing in Munich

00:37

This browser does not support the video element.

Deadly accident

The Eisbach was also closed for two months after a 33-year-old surfer died in April. After her surfing line became trapped around her leg, she was pulled under the water and stuck underwater for nearly 30 minutes under rescue services were able to reach her.

The strong current had prevented bystanders from coming to her aid.

Although paramedics were able to reanimate her on the riverbank, she died later that same day in a Munich hospital.

The incident was the first such deadly event at the Eisbach, and prompted what authorities called a thorough safety review before the wave reopened at the end of June. A specific cause for the accident was never found, however.

Illicit reopening

The news that the Surf Club Munich has given up its official attempts to reopen the wave come just a few days after some surfers illegally set it back up with a wooden plank and used it clandestinely over the holidays.

But this construction was not permanent, and authorities have made it clear that surfing is currently prohibited.

Although Surf Club Munich has dropped its study of how to restart the wave on a constant basis, they maintained that the debate would continue despite "becoming political."

Edited by: Louis Oelofse

Elizabeth Schumacher Elizabeth Schumacher reports on gender equity, immigration, poverty and education in Germany.
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW