Sign for Haleiwa on the North Shore in the Waialua District.
Wondering when is the best time to visit Honolulu? Here's the scoop on when to find the most festivals, the smallest crowds, and the perfect beach weather, plus what's happening month to month.
Editor's note: During COVID-19, please check the latest travel restrictions before planning any trip and always follow government health advice. Events may be subject to change.
High season: December to April, June to August
Best surfing and whale watching
This is prime time for surf breaks and the migration of humpback whales. But don't miss unique cultural festivities, either, like the Sailor Jerry Festival. Held in Chinatown, this festival features music, stand-up comedy, movies and tattooing. Sailor Jerry (aka Norman Collins) was the legendary tattoo artist who fulfilled the third part of Honolulu-stationed WWII sailors' and soldiers' proud motto – 'stewed, screwed and tattooed.
You'll be hitting Honolulu at its highest temperatures, room rates, and influx of tourists, but the weather is still fantastic. Book any ticketed events and make restaurant and hotel reservations far in advance – and get up a little early if you're worried about snapping your vacation shots without randos photobombing the view.
Shoulder season: November to December, September
Best time for cultural offerings and the outdoors
After the summer rush and heat are over, and before the uber-crowded winter tourism season begins later in November, Honolulu is at its most accessible in October. Crowds at popular attractions thin, trails are less crowded and the weather is mellow.
You could spend days enjoying the solitude of the forests and peaks around the city. Some of Oʻahu’s most popular hiking trails lead into the lush, windy Koʻolau Range just above downtown.
Low season: May and October to November
Best time for beating the crowds
With mellow temps, dry weather, and pods of humpback whales passing by Oahu, May is a fantastic time to visit Honolulu – especially because crowds are relatively small. You'll be able to get better hotel and airfare deals, and a little elbow room on prime trails and beaches.
In the fall, you'll also see prices dip with the temperatures, and fewer crowds ahead of the winter rush. This is also a fantastic time to experience Honolulu like a local, dipping into a wealth of festivals and cultural offerings that crop up outside the high season.
Month-by-month breakdown
Here's a monthly guide to what you can expect through the year in Honolulu. All events are subject to change.
January
Part of a Hawaii-wide circuit, Oʻahu Fringe Festival presents uncensored performing arts, often off the cuff. Most venues are downtown.
Key Events: Oʻahu Fringe Festival
February
Chinatown’s annual swirling new year festivities include a parade with lion dances and crackling firecrackers. Red-colored decorations are everywhere.
Key Events: Lunar New Year, Great Aloha Fun Run
March
Three days of Hawaiian and Asian-Pacific cultural exchange with music, dance and drama performances, an arts-and-crafts fair, a parade and fireworks.
Key Events: Honolulu Festival
April
A celebration of Hawaiian music starting in April with workshops, live concerts and hula performances leads up to Hawaii's prestigious Na Hoku Hanohano Awards, which are the local version of the Grammy's.
Key Events: Na Hoku Hanohano Awards
May
Held on Memorial Day in May, the souls of the dead are honored with a Japanese floating-lantern ceremony after sunset at Magic Island in Ala Moana Regional Park. More than 5000 lanterns are floated and over 50,000 people turn up to watch.
Key Events: Shinnyo Lantern Floating Hawaii
June
In June, the concerts and hula performances of Mele Mei lead up to Hawaii’s prestigious Na Hoku Hanohano Awards, which are the state's version of the Grammys – a significant honor in a culture where music is important. Meanwhile, one of Hawaii’s biggest hula contests also takes place, with hundreds of dancers competing at downtown’s Neal S Blaisdell Center in late June. Participants come from all over the world.
Key Events: Pan-Pacific Festival, King Kamehameha Hula Competition, King Kamehameha Celebration, Sailor Jerry Festival
July
Colorful Chinese dragon boats race to the beat of island drummers on one long summer Saturday. Also in July, the state’s oldest and largest noncompetitive hula event sees Hawaii’s leading hula halau (schools) perform over a summer weekend.
Key Events: Hawaii Dragon Boat Festival, Prince Lot Hula Festival, Queen Liliʻuokalani Keiki Hula Competition
August
A huge annual marketplace for Hawaii-made products, including everything from art to food to furniture to crafts to tacky souvenirs.
Key Events: Made in Hawaii Festival
September
September's Aloha Festivals are a month-long statewide celebration of Hawaiian music, dance and history. Honolulu hums with performances and parties.
Key Events: Aloha Festivals
October
Some of Honolulu’s biggest festivals spill over into Waikiki, most notably the annual Honolulu Pride parade. Star chefs, sustainable farmers and food lovers come together for over three weeks of wine tastings, cooking demonstrations, excursions, and dining events highlighting the state’s top farmers, fishers, ranchers, bakers, food producers and chefs at the Hawaiʻi Food & Wine Festival.
Key Events: Hawaiʻi Food & Wine Festival, Talk Story Festival
November
The King Kalakaua Festival includes a concert of traditional monarchy-era music by the Royal Hawaiian Band at ʻIolani Palace every November 16, a parade down Waikiki's Kalakaua Ave, and a lei-draping ceremony at the King Kalakaua statue located at the intersection of Kalakaua Ave and Kuhio Ave in Waikiki.
Key Events: King Kalakaua Festival, Hawaiʻi International Film Festival, Honolulu Fashion Week
December
December boasts fantastic weather and palm trees strewn with holiday lights, making for a one-of-a-kind mix of Christmas cheer and sunny sweatathons like the Honolulu Marathon as crowds pour in for the winter high season. Roam the lobbies of the bigger, fancier hotels to see them go big on holiday displays – and stick around for the New Years fireworks over Waikiki Beach.
Key Events: the Honolulu Marathon, Honolulu City Lights
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