This is your destination guide for Japan.
This is your destination guide for Okinawa
📍 Part of JapanKerama-blue water, Ryukyu kingdom culture, pork-and-awamori cooking — tropical Japan closer to Taipei than to Tokyo.
The reality: You land at Naha and the first thing that's off is the heat — it's December and it's 20°C. The second is the vocabulary: Ryukyu this, Uchinā that, a castle on the hill that belonged to kings Tokyo never crowned. Okinawa has been Japanese on paper since 1879. On the ground it's its own thing, sitting closer to Taipei than to Tokyo, and it knows it.
That's the trick of Okinawa: three places stacked on one chain of islands. Underneath is the Ryukyu Kingdom — the language, the sanshin, the eisa drums, a maritime trading state that ran its own foreign policy for 450 years. On top is the American layer — taco rice, A&W root beer, the long fences of Kadena air base. And running through both is the water, the reason most people come and the one thing the brochures don't oversell: the Kerama islands turned a specific shade of blue into a noun.
Most travellers stay on the resort strip at Onna and see one beach. The island is bigger than that — a subtropical forest in the north where a flightless rail bird still crosses the road, a sobering war-memorial coast in the south, and a string of outer islands a short flight away where water buffalo pull carts down lanes of red-tiled houses. Rent a car. Drive north for an hour. You'll stop recognising the Japan you flew in expecting.
The water is the headline, and unusually for a headline, it delivers. Two kinds of beach here: the resort sand on the main island, and the Kerama islands offshore, where the colour earned its own name.
Cape Maeda & the Blue Cave (Onna) — the snorkel everyone does, and for once the crowd is right. A flooded sea cave that glows electric blue where sunlight bounces off the white seabed. Walk in from the cape steps or take a boat; guided tours run ¥3,000–4,500. Go before 10am — by midday it's a queue in wetsuits.
Furuzamami Beach (Zamami, Kerama) — the postcard. Two stars in the Michelin Green Guide, sea turtles grazing offshore, and the clearest water you'll swim in all trip. Day-trip or stay over.
Aharen Beach (Tokashiki, Kerama) — the other Kerama base, calmer, and the easiest of the islands to reach as a day trip from Naha.
Nishihama (Aka, Kerama) — quieter island again; Kerama deer wander down to the village, which is exactly as odd as it sounds.
Emerald Beach (Ocean Expo Park, Motobu) — man-made, free, shallow, and right next to Churaumi. The one for families with small kids and no ferry patience.
Hoshizuna "star sand" beach (Taketomi, Yaeyama) — the sand grains are star-shaped, the skeletons of tiny shelled creatures. Pick a handful up and look.
Okinawa isn't a town-hopping island the way Mallorca is. Think of it as three stops on the main island, then two island groups offshore.
Naha — the capital and your way in. Kokusai-dori is the souvenir gauntlet (walk it once, eat one street over). Makishi Public Market is where you actually eat — buy fish downstairs, they cook it upstairs. Up the hill is Shuri Castle, seat of the Ryukyu kings, which burned down in October 2019. The Seiden main hall is due to reopen autumn 2026, so right now the visit is the rebuild: carpenters, scaffolding, a viewing gallery, lacquer reapplied by hand. You're watching a national monument come back, not ticking off a finished one. The Yui Rail monorail covers Naha (and only Naha).
The south (Itoman) — the Battle of Okinawa ended on this coast in 1945, and roughly a quarter of the island's civilians died in it. Peace Memorial Park and the Himeyuri monument are here. Go, but go knowing what it is — this is a morning of reckoning, not sightseeing.
Onna (the resort coast) — the hotel strip down the west side: the Blue Cave, Cape Manza, the big international resorts. Where most package visitors base themselves and never leave.
Motobu (north) — home of the Churaumi Aquarium, whose Kuroshio tank holds whale sharks and manta rays (adult ¥2,180; the upper viewing walkway has been closed since spring 2026, but the main window is open). Next door: Ocean Expo Park, Emerald Beach, and the drive out to Kouri Island over its long sea bridge.
The Kerama islands (Zamami, Tokashiki, Aka) — 50–70 minutes by high-speed ferry from Tomari port in Naha. This is the Kerama Blue. Humpback whales calve here January–March; diving and snorkelling carry the rest of the year.
The Yaeyama islands (a flight south, not a ferry) — Okinawa's far frontier, closer to Taiwan than to its own capital. Ishigaki is the hub. Taketomi is a preserved Ryukyu village of red-tiled roofs where water buffalo pull carts at walking pace. Iriomote is 90% jungle, with mangrove rivers to kayak and a wildcat almost nobody sees. Miyako has the "Miyako Blue" and the Irabu bridge, the longest toll-free bridge in Japan. Yonaguni, the westernmost point, draws divers for winter hammerhead schools and a contested underwater rock formation people will argue about over dinner.
For people who'd rather be in the water than beside it.
The draw here is the sea, but the north of the main island hides a forest most visitors never reach. You don't need to be an expert for any of it — most of it runs on half-day tours.
Okinawan food is its own cuisine — Japanese roots, Chinese technique, an American occupation layered on top, almost all of it built around pork. Little of it is what a Tokyo visitor expects.
Okinawa soba — the staple. Thick wheat noodles (no buckwheat), pork-bone broth, topped with stewed rib or belly. The everyday lunch.
Goya champuru — the signature stir-fry: bitter melon, tofu, egg, and Spam (yes — that's the American layer). Bitter on purpose; lean into it.
Rafute — pork belly braised slow in awamori, soy and brown sugar until it gives way.
Taco rice — taco filling over white rice, invented near the bases in the 1980s. Pure Okinawa, exists nowhere else in Japan.
Umibudo ("sea grapes") and beni-imo (purple sweet potato) turn up everywhere, raw with a dip and in everything from tarts to ice cream.
Where to eat: the Makishi Public Market in Naha is the easy start — buy from a stall, hand it to a kitchen upstairs. Beyond that, look for a neighbourhood izakaya with a sanshin player and order rafute, umibudo, and whatever's grilled.
Drinks: awamori, the island's distilled rice spirit (older barrels are labelled kusu and worth the jump); Orion, the local beer that outsells the mainland brands here; A&W root beer, whose only Japanese drive-ins are on Okinawa; and Blue Seal ice cream in flavours like beni-imo and sugarcane.
April–June — the sweet spot before the storms. Warm (24–28°C), the sea warming up, fewer crowds, ferries and restaurants running normally. This is where you want to be.
July–September — hot and typhoon season. Expect at least one system to scramble your plans: cancelled ferries, grounded flights, a "sea day" where nothing sails. August is also the price-and-crowd peak. Go in if your dates are fixed, but build slack into the schedule.
October–November — the other good window. Still swimmable, typhoon risk easing, prices off the summer high.
December–March — mild (16–20°C), not really beach weather, but this is humpback whale season in the Keramas and the cheapest, quietest time on the islands. Bring a layer; this is not the "winter" mainland Japan means.
Rent a car. Non-negotiable on the main island. It's 100 km top to bottom, the best coves and the whole north sit beyond bus range, and Japanese rentals are cheap and easy — you'll need an International Driving Permit. Drive on the left, same as the mainland.
The Yui Rail monorail runs airport ↔ Naha ↔ Shuri. Great inside the city, useless past it.
Ferries to the Keramas leave from Tomari port in Naha — high-speed ~50–70 min, slow ferry ~2h, plus a ¥100 environmental tax at the terminal. Book about two days ahead in season; the high-speed boats sell out.
The Yaeyama and Miyako islands are flights, not ferries — roughly an hour from Naha. There's no regular passenger boat down there from the main island, so don't plan to sail it.
Around the bases: traffic stiffens near Kadena and Futenma. Build in time on Highway 58.
Pick a base by the trip you want — the island's long enough that your base decides your days.
Naha — for the city. Food, the monorail, easy runs to the war-memorial south and the Kerama ferries. The practical first-or-last-night base.
Onna (resort coast) — for beaches and the Blue Cave, with the big international hotels. Resort holidays and families live here.
Motobu / the north — for Churaumi, the Yanbaru forest, and quiet. Cooler, greener, fewer people.
Kerama (Zamami or Tokashiki) — overnight to have the blue without the day-trip crowds, and to be there for sunrise.
Ishigaki (Yaeyama) — almost a separate holiday: base here to reach Taketomi, Iriomote and Miyako. Worth three or four nights of its own, not a day trip.
Okinawa is mid-priced for Japan — cheaper than Tokyo or Kyoto for food and everyday eating — but the Onna resort strip in August charges Hawaii money, and every outer island adds a flight or a ferry on top of the base trip.
Prices in 2026 yen. A 2% prefectural lodging tax (capped ¥2,000/night) is coming 1 Feb 2027 — not charged yet. Off-season knocks a large chunk off the Onna resort rates.
Go if you want tropical Japan that isn't the Japan you pictured — Kerama-blue water, pork-and-awamori cooking, a kingdom's worth of culture Tokyo only annexed in 1879, and outer islands where buffalo still pull carts. Skip if you came for cherry blossom and bullet trains, won't rent a car, or only have August.
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