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United States Honolulu Travel FAQ
41 answers across 8 categories
We've collected the most common questions about traveling to Honolulu — visa requirements, costs, transport, food, accommodation, weather, attractions, and practical tips. Click any question to expand the answer. Use the category quick links below to jump to your topic.
General Travel Info (7) Cost & Currency (5) Getting Around (5) Food & Drinks (5) Accommodation & Hotels (5) Culture & Etiquette (5) Events & Festivals (4) Logistics & Tips (5)
General Travel Info
7 questions How many days do I need in Honolulu?
3-4 days for the O'ahu core — Waikiki Beach, Diamond Head sunrise, Pearl Harbor, Iolani Palace, the North Shore loop and the Polynesian Cultural Center. A common Korean-tourist Hawaii combo is 5-7 days total: Honolulu 3-4 days plus an island-hop to Maui or the Big Island.
When is the best time to visit Honolulu?
April-May and September-November are the sweet spot — 26-30°C, fewer tourists, comfortable. December-March brings the famous winter waves to the North Shore (pro surfing season). June-August is peak crowds and prices. Korean Lunar New Year and the Christmas-New Year stretch are also peak. Avoid Korean Golden Week in early May if you can — prices spike.
Is Honolulu safe?
Waikiki and the main tourist areas are very safe. The real risks are in the water — strong currents at unfamiliar beaches, shore breaks at Sandy Beach, an extreme UV index of 11. Always check the beach safety signs. Petty theft from rental cars happens — don't leave valuables visible.
Do I need to speak English?
Yes — English is the official language. Hawaiian Pidgin is the local creole — 'Howzit' (how's it going), 'shoots' (yes/cool), 'da kine' (whatchamacallit). Locals appreciate 'Aloha' and 'Mahalo'. Korean-speaking staff are available at the major Korean-tourist hotels.
What should I prepare?
ESTA visa-waiver for Korean/Japanese/EU/UK/AU/NZ passport holders (apply online for $21 at least 72h before travel). Travel insurance is essential. Reef-safe sunscreen is required by Hawaii law (oxybenzone and octinoxate are banned). Light beach clothing, Type A/B plug (110V — US standard), some USD cash for food trucks.
What's the currency situation?
US dollars. Cards work everywhere. Tipping is expected — 18-22% at restaurants, $1-2 per drink at bars, $5-10 per night for housekeeping. Resort fees ($35-50/night) are added at checkout, on top of the room rate. Use bank ATMs (free with Wise/Revolut) — skip the resort ATMs (5-10% surcharge).
Honolulu vs Maui vs Big Island?
Honolulu (O'ahu) is the main city — Waikiki, Pearl Harbor, the cheapest island, $130-880/day. Maui is more upscale — Road to Hana and Haleakala — around $380/day. The Big Island is volcanoes and varied landscapes, around $320/day. For a first Hawaii trip, Honolulu is the easiest base — easy to reach and easy to get around.
Cost & Currency
5 questions How much does Honolulu cost per day?
Budget: $130/day (hostel, plate lunch, TheBus, free Diamond Head). Mid-range: $320/day (Waikiki 4-star, Uber, sit-down meals, Pearl Harbor). Luxury: $880+/day (Halekulani, private guide, Polynesian Cultural Center VIP). Hawaii is genuinely expensive — resort fees and tipping add up quickly.
How much are hotels?
Hostels: $50-100/night in Waikiki (Hostelling International). 3-star Waikiki: $150-250. 4-star Waikiki: $250-450 (Sheraton Waikiki, Marriott). 5-star: $450-1000+ (Halekulani, Ritz-Carlton). Add a $35-50/night resort fee on top.
How much are day tours?
Pearl Harbor is free but timed-entry — pre-book 60 days ahead at recreation.gov. Polynesian Cultural Center $90-150 (lū'au plus the show). North Shore Circle Island tour $80-150. Hanauma Bay snorkel $25 plus $1 parking. Klook often discounts these.
Are tips mandatory?
Effectively yes — 18-22% at restaurants (auto-added for parties of 6+), $1-2 per drink at bars, $5-10/night housekeeping, $5-10 valet, 18-20% at spas, 15-20% Uber/Lyft. US-strict tipping culture.
What hidden costs?
Resort fees $35-50/night added at checkout (mandatory). Hawaii state tax 4.71%. Reef-safe sunscreen $15-25/bottle (required by law). Hanauma Bay $25 reservation. Pearl Harbor 60-day-ahead booking. Rental car $50-80/day plus $30/night parking.
Getting Around
5 questions How do I get to Honolulu?
Daniel K. Inouye Airport (HNL) — Korean Air, Asiana and Hawaiian Airlines fly direct 8-9h from Seoul. Airport to Waikiki: Uber $35-45, taxi flat $35-45, TheBus #20 $3 (60 min), Speedi Shuttle $20-25. Klook airport transfers run $25-40 for Korean travelers.
What's the best way to get around?
TheBus covers the island at $3 single / $7.50 day pass (cheapest). Uber/Lyft for short trips at $15-25 (the most reliable option). Rent a car ($50-80/day) if you want the North Shore plus multiple sites. Waikiki itself is walkable. The Honolulu Skyline rail is $3 single but only covers partial routes.
Are Uber + Lyft available?
Yes — both are widely used and reliable, with price upfront. Short trips run $15-25, hotel to airport $35-45. The default choice for most Korean tourists. Cheaper than taxis. Add a card in the app before you fly.
How do I get to North Shore?
1h drive from Waikiki. A rental car is the easiest option ($50-80/day). A Circle Island day tour bus ($80-150) lets you skip the driving and hits multiple stops. Uber one-way runs $80-120 (expensive). TheBus works but takes 2.5h each way.
How do I get to Pearl Harbor?
TheBus #20 from Waikiki costs $3 (60 min). Uber $25-35. Rental car plus $7 parking. The free timed-entry ticket needs to be booked at recreation.gov 60 days ahead — same-day walk-ins aren't possible. Battleship Missouri, the Aviation Museum and the Bowfin are $35 each as paid extras.
Food & Drinks
5 questions What food is Honolulu famous for?
Plate lunch (main protein, 2 scoops rice, mac salad, $10-15 at Rainbow Drive-In). Poke ($10-20 at Ono Seafood). Loco moco (rice, hamburger, egg, gravy, $8-15). Spam musubi ($3-5). Shave ice ($5-10 at Matsumoto). Malasada ($1-2 at Leonard's Bakery). The Mai Tai cocktail was invented at Trader Vic's in 1944 and perfected at the Royal Hawaiian ($10-18). Giovanni's Shrimp Truck on the North Shore is famous for its $14 garlic shrimp plate.
Where to eat the best plate lunch?
Rainbow Drive-In ($10-15) is the institution — it's been serving plate lunches since 1961. 15 minutes' walk from Waikiki. Cash or card. Try the kalua pork with mac salad.
Where to eat traditional Hawaiian?
Helena's Hawaiian Food (since 1946, James Beard Award) — kalua pork, lomi lomi salmon, poi, pipikaula. About $20-30 per person. Reservations are hard to get, so call ahead.
Where to eat North Shore Giovanni's Shrimp?
Giovanni's Shrimp Truck in Kahuku — $14 for the garlic shrimp plate. Cash only. 1h drive from Waikiki. Easiest to combine with a North Shore loop day.
What's the food cost?
Plate lunch $10-15. Poke $10-20. Loco moco $8-15. Spam musubi $3-5. Malasada $1-2. Helena's around $20-30 per person. Mai Tais $10-18. Mid-range Hawaiian dinner $25-50. Sit-down luxury $80-150+. US prices, plus mandatory 18-22% tips.
Accommodation & Hotels
5 questions Where should I stay in Honolulu?
Waikiki is the obvious first-visit choice — beach, Diamond Head, walkable, popular with Korean tourists, $150-1000/night. Ala Moana is the calmer local-favorite alternative with the Ala Moana Center mall, $150-400. Ko Olina is the luxury resort strip popular with Korean honeymooners, $400-1000. Kaanapali has the Marriott family-friendly properties, $200-600.
What are the best luxury hotels?
Halekulani ($600-1000/night) — beachfront Waikiki landmark, 'House Befitting Heaven'. Ritz-Carlton Residences Waikiki Beach ($700-1500). The Royal Hawaiian — the 1927 'Pink Palace', $400-800. Moana Surfrider — Waikiki's oldest hotel from 1901, $400-800. Hilton Hawaiian Village — Waikiki's largest resort, $400-800.
Is Airbnb legal?
Heavily regulated — Hawaii banned most short-term rentals in 2022. Legal vacation rentals exist in Ko Olina and Kaanapali. Booking.com, Airbnb and Vrbo have limited Waikiki options. Korean tour packages dominate.
Hostel options?
Hostelling International Waikiki ($60-120/night) is the most popular. Polynesian Hostel Beach Club ($80-150). The backpacker scene is limited — Hawaii is expensive, so most Korean travelers stay at hotels.
When to book?
Christmas-New Year peak (Dec-Jan): 4-6 months ahead. Korean Lunar New Year and Golden Week in May: 2-3 months. Pearl Harbor: 60 days ahead at recreation.gov. Polynesian Cultural Center: 1 week via Klook. Hanauma Bay: 48h ahead.
Culture & Etiquette
5 questions Hawaiian dining etiquette?
Casual and family-friendly. Tipping at 18-22% is expected. Pidgin English is common. High-end restaurants need a reservation. Plate lunch is eaten at picnic tables, often cash-only. Tipping in Hawaiian restaurants tends to be stricter than mainland US.
Reef-safe sunscreen mandatory?
Yes — Hawaii has banned sunscreens with oxybenzone and octinoxate since 2021. Reef-safe sunscreen is required at every Hawaii beach. $15-25/bottle. Buy it at Walmart, ABC Stores or Foodland.
Hawaiian language + Aloha?
Aloha is more than 'hello' — it carries respect and a sense of Hawaiian culture. 'Mahalo' (thank you) goes a long way. Try not to mispronounce place names — locals notice when you make the effort. 'Ohana' (family) is another cultural term you'll hear often.
Cultural quirks?
Slow down — 'island time' is real. The pace in Hawaii is gentler than mainland US. Pidgin English ('Howzit', 'shoots') is everywhere. Tipping is part of the culture. Reef-safe sunscreen is required by law. Beach etiquette: don't litter, don't approach monk seals.
Tipping in Honolulu?
Effectively required: 18-22% at restaurants (auto-added for parties of 6+), $1-2 per drink at bars, $5-10/night housekeeping, $5-10 valet, 18-20% spa, 15-20% Uber/Lyft. Resort fees ($35-50) sit on top of the room rate, and you still tip on services.
Events & Festivals
4 questions Pearl Harbor anniversary (December 7)?
December 7 each year is Pearl Harbor Day. There's a memorial ceremony at the USS Arizona Memorial (sometimes closed to the public). Hotels are pricey. Pre-book Pearl Harbor 60+ days ahead.
Aloha Festivals (September)?
Held every September — Hawaii's biggest cultural festival. Hula performances, parades, Hawaiian music and a lū'au. Spectator events are free. Most of it happens downtown Honolulu.
Vans Triple Crown of Surfing (November-December)?
Held on the North Shore from November to December — pro surfing competitions at Banzai Pipeline, Sunset Beach and Waimea Bay. Free to watch. The Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational is the headline event when conditions allow.
Christmas-New Year peak?
December-January is the peak Korean and Japanese tourist season. Honolulu does Christmas with a Hawaiian twist (palm tree Christmas trees). Hotel prices roughly triple. Pearl Harbor Day on December 7 is the most significant date in this stretch.
Logistics & Tips
5 questions What's the weather like?
Tropical year-round (24-30°C). April-October is the dry season, warm and sunny. November-March is the rainy season and brings the winter North Shore swells (pro surfing). Water temperature stays at 24-27°C all year. UV index 11 is extreme — reef-safe sunscreen is required by law.
What should I pack?
Reef-safe sunscreen (required by Hawaii law). Light beach clothing and swimwear. A modest cover-up for cultural sites. Walking shoes for Diamond Head and other hikes. Light layers if you're traveling November-March, when evenings can be cooler. Type A/B plug (110V US standard). Hat and sunglasses for the UV 11 sun.
Is Honolulu accessible?
The modern Waikiki hotels are accessible. Waikiki Beach itself is largely accessible. Pearl Harbor is accessible. Diamond Head has steep stairs and is limited. Hanauma Bay is accessible. Most North Shore beaches are accessible.
Are there left-luggage facilities?
HNL Airport storage runs $5-15 per 24h. Most hotels store luggage free for their guests. Waikiki has several luggage storage shops at $10-20/day. Klook airport transfers can include luggage handling.
Pharmacy + medical?
Longs Drugs and Walgreens are in Waikiki. Queen's Medical Center is the main private hospital. Travel insurance is essential for non-US travelers — mainland US prices apply. Emergency 911. Beach injuries are common — UV burns and jellyfish stings most of all.
More on Honolulu
Cost guide, attractions, neighborhoods — plan the rest of your trip.
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Jimmy Kong
TripPick founder · Travel content creator
Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
8+ years analyzing travel data
30+ countries visited
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