What Does 10m Visibility Actually Look Like? Comparing 5m, 15m & 20m
2026-03-11
What Does "10m Visibility" Actually Feel Like Underwater?
Dive logs casually say "visibility: 10m" — but what does that look like in reality? Unlike fog on land, underwater visibility is shaped by light scattering and absorption, creating very different experiences at different distances.
Based on our 46,000-observation database, Japan's national average visibility is around 12–13m. Izu Pacific coast: 10–12m in summer, 16–18m in winter. Okinawa stays 19–25m year-round. Here's what those numbers actually mean underwater.
Visibility Level Guide
< 3m visibility— Turbid / Plankton bloom peak
Hazy white murk, buddy barely visible 1–2m away. Spring bloom (IOP in April) can reach this level.
📷 Photography: Photos wash out white. Only close-up macro possible.
⚠️ Safety: Stay close to buddy. Extra navigation caution.
5m visibility— Low visibility / post-storm / river mouth
Walls and ropes invisible beyond 5m. Fish visible but no mid-water panorama. Post-typhoon typical; Hirasawa in spring.
📷 Photography: Dark background, strobe essential.
⚠️ Safety: Rope diving recommended. Avoid night diving.
10m visibility— Average / Japan Pacific coast summer
Visibility ~10m. Schools of fish and larger animals start appearing in view. Izu summer / IOP spring. Japan's national average.
📷 Photography: Wide angle difficult, macro and fish schools workable.
⚠️ Safety: Within normal safety margins. Comfortable recreational diving.
15m visibility— Good / Ito winter / IOP winter
Bright, expansive view. Full structure of reefs visible. Fish school movements trackable. Izu winter / Akinohama average.
📷 Photography: Wide-angle shots become beautiful. Blue water columns achievable.
⚠️ Safety: Excellent visibility. High dive comfort level.
20m visibility— Very good / Ishigaki & Kerama average
Entire reef structures and walls visible. The sensation of floating in space. Ishigaki and Kerama average this year-round.
📷 Photography: Stunning wide-angle shots with divers. True ocean transparency feels photogenic.
⚠️ Safety: Excellent, but wider spread can mean easier separation from buddy.
30m+ visibility— Exceptional / Yonaguni summer / Yakushima July
Surface visible from depth, sand patterns and life visible 30m away. Yonaguni September (51.7% chance), Yakushima July (32.1m avg).
📷 Photography: Direct sunrays penetrate creating cathedral-light effects. Feels like flying through the sky.
⚠️ Safety: Depth perception distorted — stay diligent with depth gauge.
Japan Dive Sites by Typical Visibility Level
- Osezaki Bay (Izu): 7.6m avg — spring dips to 3–5m
- Hirasawa (Shizuoka): 8.8m avg — high marine biodiversity compensates
- IOP (Izu Oceanic Park): 13.8m avg — 18.6m in Jan, 11–12m in summer
- Ito (Chiba): 15.9m avg — peaks 18m+ in winter
- Akinohama (Izu Oshima): 14.3m avg — stable year-round
- Ishigaki: 20.5m avg — consistently high
- Kerama: ~19m avg — Okinawa's most stable site
- Yonaguni: 24.5m avg — 27.3m in September, 30m+ at 51.7% in Sep
Can You Still Enjoy Low Visibility?
Absolutely. Spring turbidity (plankton bloom) at IOP or Hirasawa brings 5–10m visibility, but also the densest concentrations of nudibranchs, frogfish, and gobies of the year. "Visibility = enjoyment" is a myth — macro diving often peaks when clarity is at its lowest.
Summary
- <5m: Fog-like, buddy contact critical
- 10m: Japan standard; fish schools and large animals visible
- 15m: Good; Izu winter level; wide-angle photos work
- 20m: Very good; Ishigaki/Kerama annual average
- 30m+: Otherworldly; Yonaguni/Yakushima summer
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