
Vadamarachchi East
Manalkadu Beach
Wide windswept dunes east of Point Pedro — the same stretch of coast that swallowed the Manalkadu Dutch Church.
November to March; late afternoon for the dune light
Best time to visit
Open landscape; accessible during daylight hours
Opening hours
Free
Entrance fee
Manalkadu Beach runs along the eastern shore of the Vadamarachchi peninsula, a few kilometres south of Point Pedro. It is a long, open dune coastline rather than a sheltered bay: the sand drifts inland in low ridges behind the high-tide line, and the wind off the Bay of Bengal works the surface of the dunes most of the year.
The beach is the same stretch of sand that has been slowly burying the ruined Saint Anthony's Church a short distance behind the dunes — already documented at /places-to-visit/manalkadu-dutch-church. Most visitors do the two together: the church first, then a half hour walking the open shore to settle the sense of scale.
There is no infrastructure on the beach. No food stalls, no umbrellas, no lifeguards. On most days you will see a handful of fishermen pulling in nets and very few other visitors — a rare quality on a Sri Lankan beach. The sand is fine and pale, the sea is open and not always calm, and the dune line behind the beach gives the place a particular emptiness that the more developed beaches around Casuarina and KKS do not have.
The water can run rougher here than on the lagoon-facing beaches of the western peninsula, especially in the southwest monsoon months from May to September. November through March is the calm window. In the late afternoon the light comes in low across the dunes from the west; that is the hour that does most of the photographic work.
A morning at Manalkadu pairs naturally with the Point Pedro lighthouse, the Dutch church ruin, and the drive back through the eastern coastal road to Jaffna town.
What to know
Visiting quietly
- Best season
- November to March, when the sea is calmest and the dunes stay dry
- Etiquette
- There are no facilities — take rubbish out with you. Avoid disturbing the dune vegetation, which holds the sand against the wind. Modest swimwear is appreciated; this is not a resort beach.
- Getting there
- 1.5 hours from Jaffna town via Point Pedro
A closer look
Location
On the map
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Practical things
Frequently asked
What's the best time at Manalkadu Beach?
Is Manalkadu Beach good for swimming?
How is Manalkadu Beach different from Casuarina?
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