, also spelled as Kita Daità Â, Kita-Daità Â-shima, and Kitadaità Â, is the northernmost island in the Daità  Islands group, located in the Philippine Sea southeast of Okinawa, Japan. It is administered as part of the village of Kitadaità Â, Shimajiri District, Okinawa. The island is entirely cultivated for agriculture. The island has no beaches but has a fishing harbor, three ferry docks and an airport (Kitadaito Airport) (airport code "KTD") for local flights.
Kitadaità Âjima is a relatively isolated coralline island, located approximately north of Minamidaità Âjima, the largest island of the archipelago, and from Naha, Okinawa. As with the other islands in the archipelago, Kitadaità Âjima is an uplifted coral atoll with a steep coastal cliff of limestone (the former fringing coral reef of the island), and a depressed center (the former lagoon of the island). The island is roughly oval in shape, with a circumference of about , length of and an area of . The highest point is above sea level. The interior of the island contains a few small freshwater ponds.
The 660 (as of June 1, 2013) inhabitants live in a village in the center of the island.
Kitadaità Âjima has a tropical rainforest climate (Köppen climate classification Af) with very warm summers and mild winters. The average annual temperature in Kitadaità Âjima is . Precipitation is significant throughout the year; the wettest month is May and the driest month is February. The island is subject to frequent typhoons. The average annual rainfall is with September as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around , and lowest in January, at around . Its record high is , reached on 7 September 2017, and its record low is , reached on 15 February 2015.
It is uncertain when Kitadaità Âjima was discovered. It is the most likely that their first sighting was by the Spanish navigator Bernardo de la Torre in 1543, in between 25 September and 2 October, during his abortive attempt to reach New Spain from the Philippines with the San Juan de Letran. It was then charted, together with Minamidaità Âjima, as Las Dos Hermanas (The Two Sisters). There is little doubt that Minamidaità Âjima and Kitadaità Âjima were again sighted by the Spanish on 28 July 1587, by Pedro de Unamuno who named them Islas sin Probecho (Useless Islands). However, on 2 July 1820, the Russian vessel Borodino surveyed the two Daità  islands and named the south as "South Borodino Island".
The island remained uninhabited until claimed by the Empire of Japan in 1885. In 1900, a team of pioneers from Hachijà Âjima, an island located south of Tokyo led by Tamaoki Han'emon (1838 – 1910), who had pioneered settlement on Minamidaità Âjima, became the first human inhabitants of the islands, and started the cultivation of sugar cane from 1903.
During this period until World War II, Kitadaità Âjima was owned in its entirety by Dai Nippon Sugar (now Dai Nippon Meiji Sugar), which also operated mines for the extraction of guano for use in fertilizer. Many of the inhabitants were seasonal workers from Okinawa and Taiwan. After World War II, the island was occupied by the United States. The use of increased mechanization increased phosphate yields marginally until the deposits were exhausted by the mid-1950s. The island was returned to Japan in 1972.