Characteristics of macroalgal beds composed of sargassaceous plants (Fucales, Phaeophyta) and Ecklonia kurome (Laminariales, Phaeophyta) were surveyed at Yashiro and Heigun islands in the western Seto Inland Sea (Iyo-nada Sea and Hiroshima Bay areas). The surveyed macroalgal beds were located on 8 natural rocky or boulder shores and 3 subtidal stone-built artificial reefs. A transect was set at each bed between the upper and lower limits of the macroalgal vegetation to investigate vertical distribution patterns of the constituent species. Eighty-five macroalgal species were recognized in total, and among those, 14 sargassaceous species, such as Sargassum fusiforme, S. macrocarpum, S. horneri, S. fulvellum and Myagropsis myagroides, were found. In general, sargassaceous plants were dominant from the intertidal to 4 m depth, and E. kurome distributed in deeper zones than sargassaceous plants, down to 14 m at the deepest. However, in some beds on the southern coasts of the islands, this vertical pattern was reversed. Ecklonia grows on rocky substrata which was stable and free from the effects of sand action, though sargassaceous plants grow on boulders distributed in zones deeper than the Ecklonia zones. On artificial reefs, similar vegetation with those on natural substrata was established. On reefs of the northern coast of Yashiro Is. (Hiroshima Bay area), however, sedimentation on substrata prevented the growth of Ecklonia. In the correlation analysis between physical characteristics and vegetation of the beds, there is a tendency that mean coverage of sargassaceous plants of the beds is higher as the mean depth of the beds becomes shallower, and that mean coverage of Ecklonia is higher as the slope of the beds becomes steeper.