11 Beaches with the Clearest Water in the World

Clearwater Beach Florida. Panorama of city Clearwater Beach FL. Spring break or Summer vacations in Florida. Beautiful View on Hotels and Resorts on Island. America USA. Gulf of Mexico. Aerial view.
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Written by Isaac Peterson

Updated: October 31, 2023

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What is the clearest natural water in the world? And what about those piercing-cyan-blue beaches at vacation spots worldwide: “It’s like a screensaver!” says Jon Favreau’s character Joey in Couple’s Retreat. We’re going to look at the world’s clearest water beach.

Countless blue-clear beaches around the world provide incredible opportunities to snorkel or scuba and take in the baffling grandeur of what’s just below the surface—or take in the sun, sipping expensive fruit-decorated drinks and reading your Kindle (or paperback) in a chair. Either way, the view will be amazing.

New Zealand’s Blue Lake, Kiwi’s Clearest Water Beach, but No Swimming

Blue Lake

New Zealand’s shockingly clear Blue Lake has what might be the clearest natural freshwater on earth. It’s often compared to distilled water for its clarity.

©iStock.com/Andrey Danilov

The aerial photographs of Rotomairewhenua (Blue Lake) on New Zealand’s South Island are stunning. These pictures show Blue Lake does have a small patch of sand road leading up to it. The rest of the water’s perimeter is cobbles or a hard break into the forest. Because of accommodations for local Indigenous peoples, no swimming is allowed.

So, Blue Lake has a beach, but not really. It does allow for great hiking, camping, and fishing.

Numerous sources list it as having the deepest water clarity on earth, and its brilliant transparency is often compared to distilled water.

Middle of the South Pacific Has No Beach, but This Spot Could Top Blue Lake for Water Clarity

Underwater Sea - Deep Water Abyss With Blue Sun light

In the South Pacific, scientists found a spot where they beamed down visible light over 100 meters (328 feet), which could be an unofficial record.

©RomoloTavani/iStock via Getty Images

The Kiwi nation’s clearest water beach may have been dethroned.

According to a little-known 2007 article in New Scientist, researchers sounded UV light over 100 meters (328 feet) into the depths of the South Pacific. And that 100 meters could be an unofficial record: New Zealand’s Interior Department used aerial observations of Rotomairewhenua, also called Blue Lake, to list this clearest water beach at 70 to 80 meters (229 to 262 feet). But the crucial distinction of clearest “freshwater” is noted by the Kiwis.

That (likely) clearest water in the world that scientists have measured is off the coast of the Pacific’s Tahiti, heading towards the enigmatic Easter Island. Tahiti has lovely beaches, but this potentially record-setting clear water spot is far off the coast. The exact location is not specified. There’s no beach or much of anything nearby.

But it may set a new record for water clarity.

(Oddly enough, there are many rival claims regarding the clearest natural water in the world.)

Lake Tahoe in California: Dozens of Beaches and Improving Water

Infographic of Lake Tahoe
From 2021 to 2022, scientists registered an increased water clarity of 10 feet in this enormous California-and-Nevada-straddling body of water. The enormous lake has dozens of beaches.

This enormous freshwater lake sits on the California-Nevada border in the Southwest US and is a popular resort destination for Hollywoodites. With 72 miles of shoreline, it has at least a dozen popular beaches and means “big water” in the Washoe First Nation language.

As of 2022, the clearest water beach reading for Tahoe was 71.7 feet. That measure was a jump of 10.7 feet from the year before.

Lake Mashu in Japan Is Ideal for Volcano Lovers

Lake Mashu in Japan

The quiet, mystical beauty of a beach near Lake Mashu in Japan. When it’s not so icy, it has extremely clear water.

©iStock.com/shikema

This one is another no-swim option, and it’s pretty understandable why. Mashu offers a chance to contemplate nature’s wild paradoxes. It sits inside a volcano, a testament to the earth’s raging glory. Then, in the winter, wispy tendril-tipped trees are coated with the finest layer of frost, and this naturally-preserved lake becomes a winter ponderland instead of a wonderland.

BBC Travel suggests it’s running for the clearest water in the world, saying visibility is generally 20 to 30 meters (65 to 98 feet).

If getting away from it all and seeing the stark, natural world amid volcanic lakes and powdery snow drifts is your jam, this is the place. It might be a great place to experience hamorebi in the summer, but in the winter, it’s probably komorebi.

Exuma Beaches That Are Literally Caribbean Blue

There’s so much more to this Caribbean spot than the now-famous aquatic porcines: look at the electric-aqua-colored backlight on this crystal clear beach water.

©Lisa Belle Larsen/Shutterstock.com

Though known through internet lore as the islands with the swimming pigs, it’s much more than that. This scattershot group of islands sits in the West Indies. It has the glowing-baby-blue waters that most people imagine when thinking of the quintessential romance of a tropical island.

There is a TripAdvisor page on finding hidden beaches in Exuma. In it, one traveler notes that she and her husband were the only people on many of the beaches they explored.

Reportedly, there are 365 islands in this Caribbean constellation, one for every day of the year!

Manini’owali Beach, Kalaoa, Hawaii

Manini'owali

Manini’owali is a great swimming beach in Hawaii with phenomenally clear water aquamarine beaches.

©Danne_I/Shutterstock.com

Manini’owali Beach is part of Kua Bay. Part of the Kona district on Hawaii’s Big Island, this beach recently got an infrastructure upgrade with a large paved road. The turquoise reefs, white cap waves, and deep blues are now a hub for snorkelers.

And that Kona district is, in fact, the famous coffee-producing spot of the Aloha State.

Cala Mariolu in Sardinia of Italy

Cala Goloritze view from above. Cala Mariolu famous beach. Italy Sardinia Nuoro province National Park of the Bay of Orosei and Gennargentu Cala Mariolu listed as World Heritage. Sardinia, Italy.

The clear waters on a Sardinia beach (“Sardigna” in Italian) show only enough room for a few dozen beach umbrella sitters. But look at that view.

©DaLiu/Shutterstock.com

Floating in the Gulf of Orosei is Sardinia, the largest island of the Mediterranean. In a small cove, right about the center on the island’s east side, is Italy’s Cala Mariolu.

A native resident notes that the beach part, like many on this list, can be tricky to get to. (But that it’s worth it.) Some cliffs are over a quarter-mile high, and there is no wheeled transport to the sand and white-pebble beach. A steep and challenging hike or going by way of boat are the only options, she says.

It’s a more relaxed vibe here as the beach part is smaller, and the sloping cliffs offer some shade. But it still has the sharp, deep blue ocean waters dancing in and out of turquoise boulder-strewn shallows.

Navagio Bay in Greece, Despite a Shipwreck, Is Still One of the Clearest Water Beaches

Amazing Navagio Beach in Zakynthos Island, Greece

The screensaver-like blue-clear beach of Navagio Bay in Greece appears to be getting a giant tectonic hug from leafy cliffs cradling one of its hotspots.

©KellySHUTSTOC/Shutterstock.com

K-Drama, or Korean films and shows, have a large audience. For a brief period in 2016, a K-Drama mini-series called Descendants of the Sun put the island of Zakynthos on the map. Part of the storyline involves a military medic rescuing a woman from a marine disaster.

Indeed, a famous shipwreck in 1980 put Navagio Bay on the map first. The story was so well known that the bay where it ran aground changed its name to Navagio or “shipwreck.” Panogiotis, the ill-fated ship, still sits rusting in the Mediterranean as an off-beat tourist attraction.

The white-sand beach sits huddled by leafy rocky outcroppings and features a stunning, brilliant azure inlet.

Baia do Sancho in Brazil Has Ladders

Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Copacabana beach is the most famous beach of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Skyline of Rio de Janeiro

This is the famous Copacabana beach in Brazil, but there’s a UNESCO-Heritage-Site-designated beach called Baia do Sancho on a distant island.

©Catarina Belova/Shutterstock.com

At over 200 miles off the coast of Brazil, Baia do Sancho qualifies as “off the beaten path.” There is no path: most sources (including US News & World Report) note the only access to this cove is by ladder. Workers coordinate via walkie-talkie to help tourists up and down the shimmy.

The beach appears to be an opulent French pastry layering from latte-colored sand to the darker tidal ridge to the aquamarine shallows, to turquoise to mysterious dark blue. Boulders and ancient tectonic parting gifts are visible through the waters.

Baia do Sancho is a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Crater Lake in Oregon Sets Records

It’s registered almost 100 feet for its water clarity. But only the bravest souls want to dip into the water that tops out around 60 degrees Fahrenheit—in the summer.

America’s Crater Lake in Klamath County, OR, is the deepest in the US. At its deepest, it goes down over one-third of a mile to almost 2,000 feet. Being in the Northwest, the area around Crater Lake appears popular with skiers and less so for fun-in-the-sun beach time. It is just one of many crystal clear, record-setting lakes.

The National Park Service states that the average summer-time surface temperature is between 55 and 60 degrees Fahrenheit. For most people, this can lead to shock! Biologists sampling the water clarity had readings of 88 feet for this frigid behemoth out West.

Maldives in the Indian Ocean Has Marine Christmas Lights

Most Beautiful Islands - Maldives Island

The saturating blue of a Maldivian clear water shore; some beaches along Maldives’ 1200 islands stretch for a full mile!

©Lifestyle Travel Photo/Shutterstock.com

This island nation in the Indian Ocean has countless beaches, but not all sparkle. Mudhdhoo Beach, a UNESCO site, shimmers from millions of bioluminescent organisms at night. The island is technically an atoll, and, interestingly, the word “atoll” comes from the Maldivian language, which had this specified term for a ring-shaped island that encloses a lagoon.

There are over 1200 islands in the Maldives. 1200. Almost 1,000 are not inhabited. Many of these are dots on the map that contain coral and expansive sand banks. Beaches in the Maldives have sandbars stretching for up to a mile. As for water clarity, one curious professional wanderer posted an online video of the ocean’s crystal-clear water side-by-side with bottled water.

But this created another friendly competition. A commenter chimed in that the Bahamas has more transparent water.

Clearing Things Up

One might think that Clearwater, Florida, would have the clearest water in the world or that maybe the record has something to do with the classic rock band Creedence Clearwater Revival, but it does not.

Nonetheless, brilliant beaches from the frigid Pacific Northwest to the middle of Pacific nowhere to 1200 scattered islands in Southeast Asia, there are some gorgeous, pristine beaches on this blue marble.

Clear water gives us a sense of calm from the eternal mystery of what’s just below the surface.

Sometimes, indeed, it’s the things we can’t see that are the best.


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About the Author

Isaac began writing as a paid staff reporter for his college newspaper. After getting his B.A. in Divinity, he was a daycare teacher who emphasized God's natural world, and all the creatures, into his learning activities. He worked as Staff Writer for a Midwest-based global online retailer before going full-time freelance. As a solo writer, he's covered gray wolf sightings in the Southwest U.S., smart home upgrades to backyard chicken coops, training American bulldogs and countless other topics, animal and otherwise; especially technical writing. Since his childhood in northern New England, he's been hooked on the beauty of this earth and the outdoors. Isaac loves biking, running, snowboarding, skateboarding and hiking in all of it. In his new home of the Great Lakes, he's spotted numerous herons, rabbits, squirrels, deer, a few toads and at least one turtle on his trail runs. He especially enjoys talking critters with his little sister who loves all animals big and small from giant orcas to her own pet beagle (Mister B).

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