Island
Hopper
GUIDES

Big Island vs. Maui for Adventure Travelers: Where Will You Do More?

Hawaii Volcanoes National Park contains two active volcanoes — Kīlauea and Mauna Loa — and the lava fields along Chain of Craters Road represent some of the most recently formed land in the United States. That geological immediacy is the Big Island’s baseline. Maui, by contrast, runs on a different kind of drama: 74 waterfalls along the Road to Hāna, whale watching in the Maui Channel from December through March, and one of the most reliably accessible snorkel craters in the Pacific at Molokini. Both islands offer more than a week of activities. The question is which kind of

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Maui vs. Kauai for First-Time Visitors: Which Hawaiian Island Is Right for You?

Molokini Crater sits about three miles off Maui’s south coast — a half-submerged volcanic caldera that draws snorkel boats daily for its visibility and marine life. That kind of easy, organized access tells you something about Maui’s character: it’s a place designed, largely, for visitors. Kauai, by contrast, makes you work a little. The Kalalau Trail along the Nā Pali Coast is one of the most physically demanding day hikes in Hawaii, with 11 miles of rugged ridgeline before you reach the first legal overnight camp. These two islands attract very different travelers, and choosing the wrong one wastes

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Hawaii in Summer: How to Beat the Crowds and Still Have an Incredible Trip

Hanauma Bay opens its gates at 6:45 a.m., and on a summer weekday the parking lot is already a third full by then. A total of 857,102 visitors arrived in June — a 9.4 percent decline compared to June 2019, driven by soft international demand and reduced air capacity from Japan and Canada. The overall headline is less crowded, but the improvement isn’t spread evenly across islands. In June, Hawaii saw 90,000 fewer visitors compared to the same month in 2019 — the largest gap driven by international markets, with Japan still down 54 percent from pre-pandemic arrivals. What’s

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Best Time to Visit Each Hawaiian Island: A Definitive Month-by-Month Planning Guide

North Shore, Oahu in January looks like a different island entirely — the same beach roads that carry relaxed snorkelers in May are lined with spectators watching waves crash fifteen to twenty feet overhead. That contrast captures exactly why timing your Hawaii trip matters more than most destinations: the islands don’t just shift in temperature by season, they shift in character. hotel rates alone drop roughly 20% in April compared to spring break peaks, and that’s before you factor in crowd levels or ocean conditions. This guide runs through every major window of the calendar year — whale season,

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How to Island Hop Affordably in Hawaii Without Spending a Fortune on Airfare

A Honolulu to Kahului flight takes less time than the drive from Waikiki to Oahu’s North Shore — roughly 35 minutes in the air. That single fact reframes how most people think about Hawaii island-hopping: the distances aren’t the barrier. The cost of doing it without a plan is. Around 95% of inter-island travellers fly commercial, and fares range from a genuine $39 during sales to over $200 at peak. The spread between those numbers depends almost entirely on timing, flexibility, and whether you’re carrying bags. This guide covers exactly how to navigate that spread — which carrier to

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Hawaiian Airlines vs. Southwest vs. Mokulele for Interisland Flights: An Honest Comparison

The 2026 inter-island price floor now sits at $49 each way — up from the $29 promotional fares that drew crowds of budget island-hoppers between 2019 and the mid-2020s. That shift isn’t just a headline number. It reflects a genuine structural change in Hawaii’s inter-island aviation market following the Alaska-Hawaiian merger finalized in April 2026, Southwest’s capacity cuts, and the end of the fare war that briefly made hopping between Maui and Kauai cheaper than a tank of gas. This guide breaks down what each carrier actually charges in 2026, how to read the total cost rather than the

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Best Boutique Hotels in Maui Under $300 a Night for Style-Conscious Travelers

The Paia Inn sits on Hana Highway on Maui’s north shore with direct access to a white sand beach — and that alone tells you something useful about what Maui’s under-$300 category actually looks like. While the average Maui hotel runs around $500 a night, the island has a real mid-tier that gets overlooked in favour of the big Kaanapali resorts. This guide covers seven boutique and budget-adjacent properties across Kihei, Lahaina, Napili, and east Maui — with honest notes on what each one trades off to stay in that under-$300 window. The practical gap between $150 and $300

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Trail Running in Hawaii: Best Routes and Races on Each Island

The Waihe’e Ridge Trail on Maui’s west side is one of the clearest illustrations of what trail running in Hawaii actually looks like: a well-groomed path climbing through West Maui Forest Reserve, dramatic ridgeline views over Waihe’e Valley, and enough technical terrain to sort out runners who showed up in road shoes. Hawaii has over 750 running routes across the islands, ranging from flat coastal boardwalks to volcanic ascents with nearly 4,000 metres of gain. That range is the point — each island runs differently, and the right choice depends on your fitness level, how much sun exposure you

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Best Sea Glass Beaches in Hawaii: Where to Hunt for Colorful Coastal Treasures

Glass Beach near Port Allen sits on Kauai’s south shore, and the first thing that surprises most people is the texture underfoot — not sand, but a dense carpet of frosted, marble-sized glass pebbles in brown, green, aqua, and occasional flashes of blue. According to research on Glass Beach’s concentrated sea glass deposits, this is considered one of the most concentrated sea glass deposits in the United States — which goes some way toward explaining why it draws collectors from across the islands. The glass got here through decades of industrial dumping. From the 1940s onward, the area west

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Hawaii Night Sky Photography: Settings, Gear, and Locations for Capturing the Milky Way

At Mauna Kea’s summit, standing at 13,796 feet means you’re above 40% of the Earth’s atmosphere and above 90% of its water vapor — the same conditions that led scientists to build some of the planet’s most significant observatories here. Stars don’t flicker the way they do at sea level; the absence of atmospheric interference makes them resolve into steady, piercing points. That’s a physical difference, not a perceptual one, and it changes what your camera is capable of capturing. Hawaii offers a wider range of night photography options than most visitors realize. The Big Island has Mauna Kea

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