We cannot overstate the importance of water that is the most abundant compound on the surface of Earth and also the principal constituent of all living organisms. Water plays a central role in science and technology extensively. The structure-property relationship of water is pertinent to understanding life on Earth, deepening geoscience, synthesizing new materials, exploring the universe with quests for life, developing chemical industries, and so on. Much of what is known about its structure-property relationship comes from none other than vibrational spectroscopy. It allows for studying water in any phases and forms at almost arbitrary temperature and pressure with ultimate spatial and temporal resolution. It is an indispensable tool to advance our understanding of water.This special issue of JRS showcases recent advances in vibrational spectroscopy of water from experimental and theoretical viewpoints. One notes that the papers in this issue employ various tools such as Raman, IR, NIR, SFG (sum frequency generation), and theoretical spectroscopies to investigate water in application-oriented as well as fundamental aspects. It is also noted that this issue deals with water in diverse environments: e.g., crystalline phases, amorphous states, solid surfaces, soft interfaces, ionic liquids, hydration shells, bulk ambient-temperature and supercooled liquids, and high-1