Photo: Nizil Shah · Wikimedia Commons
Ukai is not a place people plan a holiday around, and I mean that as a compliment. It is where Surat families go when they want water and open sky without the effort of a real trip, a couple of hours inland in the Tapi district. The draw is the reservoir behind the Ukai dam on the Tapi river, a vast sheet of water that stretches further than you can take in from any single point on the shore. On a still evening it turns to sheet metal under the sunset, and that is really the whole reason to come.
I first went almost by accident, killing time on a work trip to the area, and I have been back twice since just to sit by the water. There is not a long list of things to do, no ticketed attractions competing for your afternoon. You come to slow down, watch the light change over the lake, maybe take a boat out, and eat something simple before the drive home. For anyone in and around Surat feeling boxed in by the city, that is enough.
The Ukai dam is a big earth-and-masonry structure across the Tapi, built mainly for irrigation and power, and the reservoir it holds back is one of the larger man-made lakes in the state. You do not need to know the engineering to enjoy it; what matters on the ground is the scale of the water and the quiet. Stand on the bank at the right spot and the far shore is just a low green line, with hills rising softly behind it and birds working the shallows.
Sunset is the event. As the light drops the whole surface goes gold and then a deep bruised orange, and the few boats out on the water become silhouettes. There is a plainness to it that I find restful after the noise of Surat. Bring something to sit on, arrive an hour before the sun goes, and let the evening unfold. It is not a manicured viewpoint with railings and a snack counter, which is exactly why I keep it on my list.

Sunset over the Ukai reservoir, one of the largest artificial lakes in Gujarat.
When boating is running, a short trip out onto the reservoir is worth it just to feel the size of the place from the middle of it. Availability depends on the season and the water level, so it is not guaranteed; ask locally rather than counting on it. Beyond the water, the appeal of Ukai is that it sits in a pocket of Tapi district with more to it than the lake, if you are willing to explore a little off the main road.
You come to Ukai to do very little, and the lake is generous enough to make that feel like plenty.
Nearby Songadh has an old hill fort, a steep climb up to ruined ramparts with a long view over the surrounding country, and there is forest around the district that shelters wildlife and quiet temples. None of it is polished for tourists, so treat it as gentle exploration rather than a checklist. A weekend that pairs a fort morning with a lakeside sunset is about the right shape for Ukai, unhurried and low on logistics.
I would not send a first-time visitor to Gujarat here over Kutch or the Statue of Unity. Ukai is a local’s getaway, best for people within a couple of hours who want a change of scene rather than a headline sight. Facilities are basic, so set your expectations accordingly: a few simple eateries, limited accommodation, and not much in the way of signage or guides. Come with a full tank, low expectations of infrastructure, and a genuine wish to do nothing much beside a very big lake, and Ukai delivers precisely that.
Ukai is proof that a getaway does not need a marquee attraction to be worth the drive. It is a very large lake, a good sunset, an old fort within reach, and the simple pleasure of being out of the city for a day or two. If you live near Surat and the usual weekend spots feel tired, point the car inland toward the Tapi and let the reservoir do its quiet work. Keep your expectations modest and your evening free, and Ukai will send you home calmer than it found you.
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