Maubant, LouiseDodd, LachlanTregoning, Paul2025-12-232025-12-230094-8276ORCID:/0000-0003-2077-169X/work/195687018https://hdl.handle.net/1885/733796995The Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission provides an unparalleled observation system for monitoring global surface water resources. We compared different SWOT level-2 high-rate products and in situ data for rivers, lakes and reservoirs in Australia, utilizing quality flags and uncertainty indicators present in these data products. Water heights derived from the Raster product have a weighted root-mean-square error of (Formula presented.) 5 cm but the product fails to sample small water bodies. The use of LakeSP and RiverSP spatial definitions of water bodies yields accuracies typically between 20 and 30 cm but often do not include data for Australian water bodies and/or small river sections. Our approach using pixel cloud data achieves an accuracy of (Formula presented.) 5 cm in measuring water heights over rivers as narrow as (Formula presented.) 40 m wide and reservoirs as small as (Formula presented.) (Formula presented.) m, well below the mission requirements of 100 m river width and (Formula presented.) m lake area.We thank three anonymous reviewers, the Associate Editor and Editor Sujay Kumar for their helpful feedback which improved this manuscript significantly. Open access publishing facilitated by Australian National University, as part of the Wiley - Australian National University agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.11en© 2025. The Author(s).Assessing the Accuracy of SWOT Measurements of Water Bodies in Australia2025-03-2810.1029/2024GL114084105000959390