Explore Wakulla County, Florida with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 5 cities and towns in Wakulla County below.
| County | Wakulla |
| State | Florida (FL) |
| County Seat | Crawfordville |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 30.119093 |
| Longitude | -84.332842 |
| Cities & Towns | 5 |
| Area Codes | 850 |
Wakulla County sprawls across the Florida panhandle, a land shaped by water and the persistent, humid breath of the Gulf. Its terrain is a subtle undulation, a low-lying expanse giving way to the dark, slow-moving waters that define its character. The Wakulla River, a serpentine artery, winds its way through the county, its blackwater depths reflecting the dense cypress and oak canopies that crowd its banks. To the south, the landscape softens into marsh and swamp, a prelude to the vastness of the Everglades, while the north retains a hint of the Spanish-colonial past in its older settlements and oak-lined avenues. Bordering Franklin County to the west and Liberty and Gadsden Counties to the north, Wakulla County is a place where the land itself seems to hold its secrets close, a verdant, water-logged world often bathed in a peculiar, softened light that seems to emanate from the very air.
This county, Wakulla, was organized in 1843, carved from the larger Leon County by settlers drawn to its fertile lands and abundant natural resources. The early days were marked by a frontier spirit, a determined push to tame the wilderness, though the wilderness here proved a formidable, waterlogged adversary. The county seat, Crawfordville, emerged as a central point for these early endeavors, its location chosen for its accessibility and the promise of commerce along the river routes. The very act of settlement felt like a negotiation with the land, a slow, persistent effort to establish a foothold amidst the palmetto scrub and the whispering reeds. The imprints of these early lives, the families who stayed and the ones who moved on, are still discernible in the weathered wood of old structures and the quiet dignity of forgotten cemeteries.
The economy of Wakulla County continues to be tied to the land and its bounty, though the nature of that bounty has shifted over the generations. Fishing remains a vital pursuit, drawing sustenance and livelihood from the Gulf's offerings and the rivers' freshwater inhabitants. Tourism, too, plays a role, attracting those seeking the quietude of the state parks and the unique ecosystems found here, particularly the famed Wakulla Springs, a place where the earth exhales crystal-clear water. The character of the county is one of understated resilience, a quiet self-sufficiency that has weathered hurricanes and economic shifts. In its small towns, like Sopchoppy with its distinctive riverfront character, or the more developed areas along the coast, there is a sense of lives lived in close proximity to nature’s grand, unyielding forces, a constant reminder of the wild beauty that surrounds and defines this corner of Florida.
This page provides an interactive map of Wakulla County, Florida alongside links to detailed street maps for 5 cities and towns. The county seat is Crawfordville. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |