Best Time to Visit Hawaii: Island-by-Island Guide (2026)
Hawaii is a year-round destination — the water is warm and the sun shines in every month — but the best time to go depends on what you want: the lowest prices, the fewest crowds, humpback whales, big winter surf, or simply flawless beach weather. Timing also swings your budget dramatically, from bargain shoulder-season deals to holiday weeks that cost two or three times as much. This 2026 island-by-island guide breaks down the weather, whale and surf seasons, crowds and prices for Oahu, Maui, Kauai and the Big Island, so you can pick the perfect dates.
Quick answer
The Short Answer: Best Months to Visit Hawaii
For the best balance of weather, crowds and cost, target the shoulder seasons: April and May in spring, and September and October in fall. These months deliver warm, dry weather across the islands with 25–40% savings versus the December–February peak. If your priority is whale watching, plan for January or February; if it’s big-wave surfing on Oahu’s North Shore, come in winter.
Hawaii Month-by-Month (2026)
| Month | Weather | Crowds & prices | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| January–February | Warm days, wetter; cooler nights | High (whale + winter escape) | Whale watching, North Shore surf |
| March | Warm, drying out | High (spring break) | Whales, shoulder of surf season |
| April | Warm, sunny, less rain | Moderate — great value | Best overall — weather + value |
| May | Warm, dry, gorgeous | Moderate | Best overall |
| June–July | Hot, dry, calm seas | High (families, summer) | Snorkelling, calm beaches |
| August | Hot, dry; hurricane watch | High | South-shore surf, beaches |
| September | Warm, dry, calm | Low — cheapest | Best value + weather |
| October | Warm, dry | Low — cheapest | Best value |
| November | Warm; surf building | Low (avoid Thanksgiving) | Value before the holidays |
| December | Warm days, wetter | Very high after ~Dec 20 | Whales, holidays (pricey) |
Best Time to Visit Each Hawaiian Island
Each island has its own microclimates and personality, but the shoulder-season sweet spots are broadly similar. Here’s the quick view, then a note on each.
| Island | Best months | Known for |
|---|---|---|
| Oahu | May, September, October | Waikiki, Pearl Harbor, North Shore surf |
| Maui | Apr–May, Sep–Oct (Jan–Mar for whales) | Whales, Road to Hana, Haleakala |
| Kauai | Apr–May, Aug–early Oct | Na Pali Coast, lush scenery, rain |
| Big Island | May, August–September | Volcanoes, Kona sun, diverse climates |
Oahu
The most-visited island balances warm weather with lower demand in May, September and October. Waikiki and the south shore swim beautifully all winter, while the North Shore roars to life with world-class surf from November to February.
Maui
Great in April–May and September–October, but Maui is also the whale-watching capital of Hawaii — the sheltered waters between Maui, Lanai and Molokai fill with humpbacks from January to March. Choose winter if whales top your list; shoulder season for value.
Kauai
The lush “Garden Isle” is greenest because it’s wettest, especially in winter and on its north shore. Aim for April–May or August–early October for the driest, sunniest conditions to enjoy the Na Pali Coast and canyons.
Big Island
Home to nearly every climate zone, timing matters less than location: the Kona (west) coast is reliably sunny while windward Hilo is wet. May and August–September are strong all-rounders, with volcanoes and stargazing year-round.
Hawaii's Two Seasons & Weather
Hawaii really has just two seasons. Summer (roughly May–October) is slightly hotter, drier and calmer — ideal beach and snorkelling weather. Winter (November–April) is a touch cooler and wetter, with bigger surf on north-facing shores. Crucially, weather is very local: leeward (south and west) coasts like Waikiki, Wailea/Kihei and Kona stay sunny and swimmable even in winter, while windward (north and east) sides are wetter and greener.
Where to swim in winter
Whale Season in Hawaii
Humpback whales migrate to Hawaii’s warm waters to breed, arriving as early as September and staying into May, with peak sightings in January and February. The best viewing is off Maui, Lanai and Molokai, the north coast of Kauai, and the Kohala/Kona coast of the Big Island — and Maui is the undisputed whale-watching capital.
Surf Season: When the Big Waves Come
Hawaii’s legendary big-wave surf hits the north-facing shores — most famously Oahu’s North Shore — from roughly November to March, when winter swells arrive. That’s prime time for watching pros charge Pipeline and Waimea, but dangerous for casual swimmers. In summer the pattern flips: south shores get gentle surf and north shores turn calm and glassy.
Cheapest Time to Visit Hawaii
Prices swing hugely by season. The best value is September through mid-November (excluding Thanksgiving week): hotels run 30–40% below the winter peak, flights cost 20–35% less, and rental cars drop 15–25%. Late spring (April–May) is also good value. The most expensive stretch by far is December 20 to January 1, followed by Thanksgiving week and mid-summer.
| Period | Price level | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| September–October | Lowest | Best value — great weather too |
| Early November (pre-Thanksgiving) | Low | Excellent value |
| April–May | Moderate | Great value + weather |
| June–August | High | Summer family peak |
| Thanksgiving week | Very high | Avoid for value |
| Dec 20–Jan 1 | Highest | Most expensive week of the year |
Best Time by What You Want
| Your priority | Best time |
|---|---|
| Best weather + value | April–May or September–October |
| Lowest prices | September–October (& early November) |
| Whale watching | January–February (season Dec–Apr) |
| Big-wave surf (North Shore) | November–February |
| Calm snorkelling | June–September |
| Fewest crowds | September–early December (non-holiday) |
| Honeymoon (weather + romance) | April–May or September–October |
Dates to Avoid (for Value)
Hawaii’s priciest, busiest weeks
Practical Tips
- Book 3–6 months ahead for the best flight and hotel prices, especially for winter and summer trips.
- Match your coast to the season — south/west shores for winter swimming, any coast in summer.
- Island-hop thoughtfully — inter-island flights are short but add cost; two islands in 10 days is a comfortable pace.
- Watch hurricane season (June–November) — direct hits are rare but can affect late-summer plans.
- Respect the ocean — check daily surf and current warnings, especially on north shores in winter.
Planning more bucket-list trips? Compare seasons with our guide to the best time to visit Japan, and for summer ideas see where to vacation in August.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line
There’s no bad time to visit Hawaii, but there is a best time for your trip. For the winning mix of glorious weather, thinner crowds and lower prices, aim for the shoulder seasons of April–May or September–October — with September and October the cheapest of all. Come December–April if you want to see humpback whales, choose winter for North Shore surf, and sidestep the pricey holiday and Thanksgiving weeks.
Whichever island calls you — Oahu’s energy, Maui’s whales, Kauai’s green cliffs or the Big Island’s volcanoes — match your coast to the season, book a few months ahead, and you’ll get the Hawaii of the postcards.
