Cikakak – Coastal kecamatan on the Sukabumi south coast, West Java
Cikakak is a kecamatan in Sukabumi Regency in the province of West Java, on the south coast of Java facing the Indian Ocean. The Indonesian Wikipedia entry notes that much of the kecamatan's terrain is classified as having high landslide risk, including parts of the coastal strip, with the exception of parts of Cimaja kelurahan. Cikakak is organised into nine desa and is positioned just west of the regency's main coastal town Pelabuhan Ratu, with its kecamatan seat near the coast.
Tourism and attractions
Cikakak's coastline is part of the Pelabuhan Ratu Bay surf and beach corridor, and Cimaja in particular has long been associated with one of West Java's better-known surf reefs. Sukabumi Regency, of which Cikakak is part, is widely recognised for Pelabuhan Ratu Bay, the Geopark Ciletuh-Palabuhanratu UNESCO Global Geopark with its waterfalls and amphitheatre cliffs, the Mount Halimun-Salak and Mount Gede-Pangrango national parks, and a coast that forms part of the wider Hindu Ocean cultural sphere with strong Nyi Roro Kidul folklore. Visitors typically combine Cikakak with the Pelabuhan Ratu and Cisolok hot springs circuit.
Property market
Cikakak's property market combines a quiet rural-coastal core with a small but distinctive surf-tourism segment around Cimaja. Typical inventory includes single-storey landed houses on family plots, smallholder rice and palm plots inland, and a thin layer of villas, surf homestays and bungalows along the coast. Land tenure is mixed: formal BPN certification in built-up areas with adat tenure further out, and the high landslide-risk zoning noted in the Indonesian Wikipedia entry should weigh heavily in any due diligence. Across Sukabumi Regency, the more active formal market sits along the Sukabumi–Pelabuhan Ratu and Sukabumi–Cianjur corridors.
Rental and investment outlook
Formal rental supply in Cikakak is modest and concentrated in the Cimaja surf belt, where short-term homestays and longer-term villa rentals serve a small flow of domestic and international visitors. Demand outside the surf segment is anchored in civil servants, teachers and healthcare staff. Investors weighing exposure to the area should treat the surf-tourism segment as cyclical and frame expectations accordingly, while paying close attention to landslide and erosion exposure on the coast and the individual zoning of any prospective plot.
Practical tips
Access to Cikakak is by road from Pelabuhan Ratu along the south-coast route; the wider region is served by Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Tangerang and by the Bogor–Sukabumi toll road that has cut overland travel times. Basic services include the kecamatan puskesmas, schools, mosques, modest retail and the small commercial strip in Cimaja that serves visitors. Indonesian regulations restrict freehold (Hak Milik) land title to Indonesian citizens, so foreign nationals usually structure transactions through long-term leasehold (Hak Sewa) or right-to-use (Hak Pakai) arrangements, with PT PMA ownership where commercial scale justifies it. The climate is tropical with high rainfall typical of the south coast of Java.

