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Fliteboard unveils 2026 eFoil adventures across 11 destinations

Fliteboard’s 2026 Riders Adventures spread across 11 destinations, with beginner retreats, mixed-level trips and pro sessions built around travel, coaching and progression.

David Kumar··2 min read
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Fliteboard unveils 2026 eFoil adventures across 11 destinations
Source: shopify.com

Fliteboard mapped out its 2026 Riders Adventures as more than a sightseeing trip on foil. The program returned across 11 destinations, giving riders a chance to match their level to the water, whether the goal was first-time stability work, mixed-level exploration or faster, more technical open-water riding.

The destination list stretched from Mallorca, Ibiza, Greece and Sardinia to Croatia, Portugal, Copenhagen and Berlin, with Norway’s Lofoten region, St. Maarten and St. Barths, and Colombia rounding out the slate. That spread matters because the product was built around fit, not just scenery: riders could choose calmer, more controlled settings for progression or head to tougher locations where conditions and route choice demanded sharper control.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Each adventure week was structured around daily on-water sessions, technical progression and shared off-water experiences. Fliteboard said the format included guided sunrise and sunset sessions, small-group coaching and level-specific training focus, with exploration routes tailored to each destination. Safety equipment was included, and riders could either bring their own Fliteboard or use one supplied by the team, a practical detail that lowered the barrier for travel without a full board setup.

The skill-level split was the clearest sign of where the category is headed. Beginner retreats were framed as controlled environments with structured lessons and stability work. Mixed-level retreats blended progression with exploration, while advanced and pro retreats leaned into open-water riding, higher-speed control, race-style progression and technical drills. In other words, Fliteboard was not selling a one-size-fits-all camp. It was selling a route map, with each stop designed to answer a different rider question: how do I learn faster, ride farther or sharpen my performance in a new setting?

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Source: fliteboard.com

That positioning also says something about the wider eFoil market. The category is moving beyond board sales and into destination-led experiences, where the board is only part of the value proposition. For riders, the appeal is obvious: instruction, travel and terrain are now bundled into one trip, and the destination itself becomes part of the training plan.

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