{"ok":true,"data":{"id":7657,"slug":"wakasa-wada-beach-wakasa","name":"Wakasa Wada Beach","country":"Japan","state":"Fukui Prefecture","city":"Wakasa","coords":{"lat":35.5342,"lng":135.7473},"beachType":"Sandy","tags":["famous","family","sunset","scenic","vibes"],"article":{"hero":"You arrive to find the beach already organized for the day: yellow buoys strung in neat parallels fifty meters out, a first-aid station with actual paramedics, rental umbrellas lined like a pastel regiment against the tree line. The sand is pale gold, raked smooth each morning, and it slopes so gradually into Wakasa Bay that toddlers can wade twenty meters out and still stand chest-high to their parents. The water holds a teal tint in the shallows, deepening to proper blue beyond the swim lanes.\n\nThis is supervised swimming at its most competent. Lifeguards rotate positions every hour; the changing rooms smell of fresh bleach; someone collects trash before it accumulates. Families spread out across the beach with the comfortable sprawl of people who know they're safe. You swim out to the buoy line and float on your back, watching the clouds move east toward the Mikata Five Lakes. The bay's horseshoe shape kills any swell from the Sea of Japan; the water rocks you gently as a hammock.\n\nLate afternoon brings the color shift—light going amber, the bay's surface turning from teal to bronze. The loudspeaker announces the beach closing in thirty minutes. Families begin their orderly exodus, shaking out towels, rinsing feet at the stations provided. You stay for the last light, watching the sun sink behind the western headland and turn the calm water to hammered copper. Even at dusk, the beach remains impeccable—no forgotten towels, no scattered bottles. Just clean sand and quiet water and the sense of a place well cared for.","teaser":"The beach operates with precision—lifeguards in matching windbreakers, color-coded flags demarcating swimmer zones, a loudspeaker announcing water temperature hourly. Yet the sand stays soft, the bay stays sheltered, and children still squeal with the same abandon they did before the international certification.","uniqueAngle":"One of Japan's few Blue Flag beaches, Wakasa Wada maintains international environmental and safety standards while preserving the relaxed atmosphere of a local favorite.","accessType":"Ample parking, full facilities","thingsToDo":[{"icon":"swim","title":"Lane swimming","subtitle":"Marked zones, lifeguards, calm conditions"},{"icon":"sun","title":"Family beach day","subtitle":"Shallow gradient, supervised play areas"},{"icon":"camera","title":"Sunset photography","subtitle":"Western headland frames descending sun"},{"icon":"kayak","title":"Bay paddling","subtitle":"Protected water, rental equipment available"}],"audience":{"surfer":"The bay's protective embrace means flat water even when typhoons are churning offshore—great for your grandmother's swimming safety, useless for catching waves. The nearest surfable beach is twenty kilometers northeast where the coast opens to the Sea of Japan's full fetch. Treat Wada as your family-friendly anchor point if you're traveling with non-surfers who want supervision and facilities while you chase swell elsewhere. The parking fee hurts less when you're splitting it, and the showers are legitimately excellent after a session in cold water.","couples":"The beach caters heavily to families, which means summer weekends bring enough children's laughter to soundtrack a daycare. Visit on weekday afternoons in June or September for the same calm water with a fraction of the noise. The Blue Flag certification means genuinely clean facilities—a detail you'll appreciate. Rent a double kayak and paddle toward the bay's eastern edge where the water deepens and occasional sea turtles surface to breathe. Several beachfront cafes serve decent coffee and the local specialty: grilled squid so fresh it's almost sweet. Stay for sunset; the organized crowds thin quickly after the closing announcement.","backpacker":"Blue Flag beaches come with Blue Flag prices—parking fees, umbrella rentals, a general assumption you're paying for the infrastructure. If you're on a tight budget, this isn't your beach; the free, undeveloped stretches of Fukui coast offer better value. That said, the facilities are legitimately useful: hot showers, secure lockers, a convenience store on-site, and lifeguards who won't hassle you for swimming alone. The municipal campground two kilometers south costs ¥800 and includes shuttle service during summer. Consider it if you need a day of organized comfort between rougher adventures.","local":"You've watched the beach evolve from sleepy local secret to Blue Flag showcase, and you have mixed feelings about the transformation—the new restrooms beat the old concrete block with its perpetually broken locks, but you miss the days when you could park for free and swim without loudspeaker announcements. Your solution: arrive at dawn before the lifeguards clock in, swim your laps in the silent bay while mist still hangs over the water, and leave before the first rental umbrellas get planted. The beach remains yours for one hour each morning, which is enough.","family":null,"party":null,"diver":null,"explorer":null},"faqs":[{"a":"Wakasa Wada Beach holds prestigious Blue Flag certification, an international eco-label recognizing excellence in water quality, safety, environmental management, and services. This certification guarantees rigorous water quality standards are maintained and safety measures are in place. The beach features lifeguards during summer season and excellent facilities. The calm swimming conditions make it particularly safe for families and less experienced swimmers. Regular water quality testing ensures cleanliness. The Blue Flag status is reviewed annually, so the beach consistently maintains high environmental and safety standards.","q":"Is Wakasa Wada Beach safe and clean for swimming?"},{"a":"Wakasa Wada Beach is ideal during the official swimming season (mid-July to late August) when all facilities operate and lifeguards are present. However, its scenic beauty and Blue Flag status make it attractive year-round. Spring and autumn offer pleasant temperatures for beach walks without crowds. For the best swimming conditions and full services, visit during peak summer. The calm waters are generally consistent throughout the season. Sunset viewing is spectacular year-round. Weekdays in early July or late August provide warm weather with fewer visitors than peak mid-summer weekends.","q":"When is the best time to visit Wakasa Wada Beach?"},{"a":"Wakasa Wada Beach is located in Wakasa Town, Fukui Prefecture, along Wakasa Bay. By car, it's approximately 90 minutes from Fukui City or 2-2.5 hours from Kyoto/Osaka via expressway. The beach is well-signposted as one of the region's premier destinations. If using public transportation, take a train to the nearest station on the Obama Line, then taxi or local bus to the beach area. Parking facilities are available but can fill during summer weekends, so early arrival is recommended. The beach's fame ensures good directional signage.","q":"How do I get to Wakasa Wada Beach?"},{"a":"As a Blue Flag beach, Wakasa Wada offers excellent facilities including clean restrooms, showers, changing rooms, and parking. During summer season, beach houses provide refreshments and light meals, and equipment rentals may be available. The surrounding area has restaurants serving Wakasa Bay seafood specialties and local cuisine. Accommodation options range from beachside hotels to traditional ryokan in Wakasa Town. Convenience stores are accessible for supplies. The beach's infrastructure is well-maintained year-round, with expanded services during peak summer months reflecting its status as a premier destination.","q":"What facilities and food options are available at Wakasa Wada Beach?"},{"a":"Wakasa Wada Beach's Blue Flag certification places it among an elite group of beaches worldwide meeting strict international standards for water quality, environmental management, safety, and education. This makes it one of relatively few Blue Flag beaches in Japan, representing a significant achievement. The certification requires ongoing commitment to environmental protection, sustainable practices, and visitor safety. For travelers, it guarantees exceptionally clean water, well-maintained facilities, and environmental responsibility. The calm swimming conditions combined with this certification make it particularly appealing to families and environmentally conscious visitors seeking assured quality.","q":"What makes Wakasa Wada Beach's Blue Flag certification special?"}]},"seo":{"title":"Wakasa Wada Beach: Blue Flag Shores in Fukui Prefecture","description":"Powder-soft sand meets glassy waters at this Blue Flag sanctuary along the Sea of Japan. Families wade into shallows as tangerine sunsets ignite the horizon.","ogImage":"/api/place-photo?ref=Ab43m-uiIhbPn7mGz6ekIXqw1Oq_VuIf3CX_kcJh3kYMMOEhsKuWhuJsYWlrd7mTRwC1pCpt-0lPZBO0Yb5D9vzWTy3o-AsTmVs9W3Hp3cFuJHpT0XkDxGgOrj6zrNm_WuRHjfUXdp_JYXoZBrVnjDYwGHNv-4mPIUGz-r75AI61Q3zOZTHjg0yk_fndNnGhjq3HZ8yqFV_wgxHCx9IPWDseFmUz9KfblNj7yr7sS3YGiD1EwKPkXi4tlVLKLXiCfI9sD6udmOqxDSxr0Ldxk-iVQWv3wDcyM3RkE1SfnNxZfRea52n7oBCxWs7TooeZKEhCC6s3DUtRz4SWAclb9J6inGMoLyDMLHnBIsRM8vWFtZA3M0z-_dGjJn5TNxQa63yy5yTxfnQLX2GN8Vh7ao4YE1tSXh5TfQPk4nBKY4blrKf45rWD&w=1600"},"images":[]}}