The general understanding of coastal inundation in the low-lying nations of the Pacific areas relates flooding to extreme water levels (i.e., astronomical tides, sea level variability) or tropical cyclones (Hoeke et al., 2013). Nevertheless, distant-source swells are less studied (Hoeke et al., 2013) and are one of the main causes of coastal flooding in the Pacific (Ford et al., 2018). After traveling thousands of kilometers (Snodgrass et al., 1966), swell dissipation results in wave set-up due to breaking waves and infragravity waves (Pomeroy et al., 2012), increasing the local impact when they reach the reef-lined coast. Furthermore, differently to tropical storms which may have more localized impacts, far-field swells can cause flooding damage among a large number of Pacific islands and atolls at the same time, as it happened in the inundation event of December 2008 (Hoeke et al., 2013).