is a village located entirely on Minamidaità Âjima in Shimajiri District, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. Minamidaità Âjima is located approximately east of Okinawa Island. Minamidaità  covers .
As of June 2013, the city had a population of 1,418 and a population density of 46.4 people per km<sup>2</sup>.
The island is in the subtropical zone and was formed out of coral reef. With the exception of neighboring Kitadaità Â, there is no inhabited land within 400 km of Minamidaità Â.
The village includes six wards.
Minamidaità  has a tropical rainforest climate (Köppen climate classification Af) with very warm summers and mild winters. Precipitation is significant throughout the year; the wettest month is June and the driest month is February. The island is subject to frequent typhoons.
Minamidaità Âjima remained uninhabited until formally claimed by the Empire of Japan in 1885. In 1900, a team of pioneers from Hachijà Âjima, became the first human inhabitants of the island, and started the cultivation of sugar cane from 1903. Until World War II, Kitadaità Âjima was owned in its entirety by Dai Nippon Sugar (now Dai Nippon Meiji Sugar). After World War II, the island was occupied by the United States. The village of Minamidaità  was established in 1946. Land reform was carried out in favor of the residents of Minamidaità  in 1964. A freight train system was established and later dismantled in favor of contemporary transportation. The island was returned to Japan in 1972.
Sugarcane is the chief product of the village, and is cultivated in the central lowlands of the island. There is also seasonal tourism and commercial fishing.
Rum is produced here. Grace Rum distillery, founded in 2004 is producing there two kinds of rum, Cor Cor red label and Cor Cor Green label, made from molasses and sugar juice respectively.
Minami-Daito Airport, located at the east of the island, connects Minamidaità  with the nearby island of Kitadaità  and Naha, Okinawa. Okinawa Prefecture operates the airport, and classifies it as a third class airport. There is no port on the island and ships must be loaded/offloaded by crane.
The village of Minamidaità  maintains a single school: Minamidaità  Elementary and Junior High School (). As of 2010 the school had 95 elementary students and 49 junior high students. The village has no high school; students leave the island to complete their secondary education.
In 2013, a motion picture called was released. Themes include the relationship between inhabitants of Minamidaità  and Kitadaità  and families being torn apart because of the lack of a senior high school on the island.