Understanding and predicting changes in shoreline location are critical for coastal planners. In situ monitoring is accurate but not widely available. Satellite observations of shorelines have global coverage, but their accuracy and predictive capacity have not been fully explored. Abundant beach surveys and extensive wave observations in Southern California provide a unique ground truth for the interpretation of satellite‐derived recently wetted waterlines. We combine 23 years of waterline position estimates from satellite imagery with nearshore wave hindcasts and tides to train and test a deep neural network (DNN). The trained DNN uses only tides and waves as predictors at transects with satellite coverage and wave estimates to predict beach width and, for the first time, seasonal average beach slopes. Beach width changes hindcast using DNN have at least fair skill (>0.3) for 50% of transects, where the skill was calculated relative to the mean of extensive new in situ survey data from in San Diego County. The DNN also predicted shoreline changes to within 10 m (the nominal uncertainty in satellite‐derived shorelines) for 64% of transects lacking ground truth. DNN and survey estimates of seasonal beach slope changes also agree qualitatively.