Hawaii
Hawaii’s Green Fee Survives First Legal Test | What It Means For All Visitors
Many Hawaii travelers assumed the state’s proposed Green Fee might stall out, shrink, or even disappear entirely. Federal lawyers had called it illegal extortion, as we reported last month, and lawsuits quickly followed. The language around it was unusually sharp, even by Hawaii standards, and that led many visitors to believe this was yet another idea that would not survive first contact with the courts. But that assumption no longer holds.
A federal judge declined to block the Green Fee from taking effect on January 1, 2026, next Thursday. The broader legal fight will continue, but the immediate reality is simple. New visitor fees are now scheduled to be implemented, and travelers planning trips for 2026 are again recalculating. What stands out is not so much the fee itself, but how visitors are reacting to what Hawaii’s fees represent.
Green Fee arrives after years of layered charges that visitors struggle with.
Hawaii accommodation taxes rose to 18% and will be nearly 19% as of next week. Resort fees are still largely unavoidable. We are staying at a Kona hotel now, where the mandatory $25 fee includes a yoga class and two hours of free coffee. Parking fees have also expanded. Rental cars added more surcharges. State park access for visitors has moved behind paywalls at more locations. And for some travelers, especially repeat ones, this latest fee does not feel at all isolated. Instead, it feels cumulative.
That sentiment runs through reader comments. Visitors are not saying they should pay nothing. What they are saying is that they no longer understand what they are paying for, where the money goes, or why each new fee seems to arrive without any visible results. They want the visitor infrastructure to improve in correlation with paying more.
Several readers also pointed out that they are already paying property taxes through timeshares or second homes, only to be charged again through occupancy taxes. Others mentioned booking trips a year in advance only to discover new fees bolted on close to arrival. As Tom wrote, “At some point you are not asking for a fair share anymore, you are just seeing how far you can push.” And for others, the frustration is not about price alone, but rather the unpredictability of it all.
Why the court decision surprised so many visitors.
The judge did not rule that the Green Fee is legal forever. The court declined to stop it from taking effect now, citing long-standing limits on federal court interference in state tax matters. Appeals are expected, and the underlying constitutional questions remain unresolved.
That nuance still matters, but most visitors will not follow the appeals process closely. What they see instead is that Hawaii is moving forward with another visitor fee while the legal debate continues in the background. For many readers, that reinforced an existing concern. Fees seem to arrive first. Safeguards, explanations, and proof of results will come later, if they come at all.
Several commenters said they assumed the federal challenge would at least pause the fee. When that did not happen, it changed how they viewed what might come next.
The trust issue is louder than the tax itself.
Across dozens of comments, a common thread emerged that has little to do with any legal doctrine. Visitors are asking where the money goes and whether anything visibly improves as a result.
Readers repeatedly cited the same examples. Dirty restrooms. Aging parks. Trails falling apart. Infrastructure that looks worse, not better, year after year, without regard to new fees and taxes. Naomi summed it up this way: “If Hawaii wants people to accept something called a Green Fee, the first thing I would expect to see is green fee related results.”
Others compared Hawaii to destinations where public facilities feel better maintained despite lower visible fees. That comparison may not always be fair, but it is real. Perception does drive travel decisions more than spreadsheets ever can. And without visible follow-through, visitor skepticism only hardens.
Visitors are connecting the dots across fees.
What surprised us most when we wrote about this recently was how quickly readers linked this ruling to other visitor charges already scheduled. The Green Fee is not the only change arriving on January 1. The state’s hotel transient accommodations tax also increases by 0.75%, affecting every hotel stay, not just cruise passengers.
That detail matters to readers because it reinforces a broader point. This is not about one narrow category of visitors. It touches nearly everyone who stays overnight in Hawaii.
Several commenters raised the same concern in slightly different ways. But it was the same phrase that kept surfacing in different comments that caught our attention: “Where does this end?” That question is not really about this fee at all. It is about Hawaii’s unspoken visitor trajectory.
What this latest ruling changes and what it does not.
The court decision did not calm emotions in the comments that Beat of Hawaii receives. If anything, it shifts them. Readers who already assumed the fee would be blocked are now grappling with this surprising reality. Hawaii has won the right, at least for now, to move forward with this latest plan.
Some welcomed that outcome. Others saw it as confirmation that visitor voices carry little weight once revenue decisions are made. What almost everyone agreed on is that the burden of proof is on Hawaii.
If Hawaii wants visitors to accept this latest fee as fair and necessary, tangible results will matter more than any legal arguments. Without that, frustration is unlikely to fade on its own.
What Hawaii visitors are watching for next.
January 1 is not just a start date. It is a test. Travelers will be watching how the fee is implemented, how it is explained, and whether Hawaii shows restraint or momentum afterward. They will notice whether infrastructure conditions improve or whether the experience feels unchanged except for the bill they receive.
As reader Kenji put it, “I understand the idea of a Green Fee. What bothers me is the lack of trust.” That sentiment captures where many visitors are landing right now, even before their flight takes off.
Would you accept a new Hawaii visitor fee if you could clearly see what it improved, or has the stacking of charges already changed how you think about returning?
Photo Credit: Beat of Hawaii at Kona on December 26, 2025.
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Hawaii
Hawaii County Surf Forecast for June 20, 2026 | Big Island Now
Forecast for Big Island Windward and Southeast
| Shores | Tonight | Saturday | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf | Surf | |||
| PM | AM | AM | PM | |
| North Facing | 0-2 | 0-2 | 0-2 | 0-2 |
| East Facing | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 |
| South Facing | 4-6 | 3-5 | 4-6 | 5-7 |
| Weather | Sunny until 6 PM, then partly cloudy. Scattered showers. |
|||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Temperature | In the lower 70s. | |||||
| Winds | Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph, becoming northwest after midnight. |
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| Weather | Mostly sunny. Scattered showers. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Temperature | In the mid 80s. | |||||
| Winds | Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. | |||||
|
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| Sunrise | 5:42 AM HST. | |||||
| Sunset | 7:02 PM HST. | |||||
Forecast for Big Island Leeward
| Shores | Tonight | Saturday | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf | Surf | |||
| PM | AM | AM | PM | |
| West Facing | 2-4 | 2-4 | 2-4 | 2-4 |
| South Facing | 4-6 | 3-5 | 3-5 | 4-6 |
| Weather | Mostly sunny until 6 PM, then mostly clear. Isolated showers. |
||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Temperature | In the upper 60s. | ||||||||
| Winds | Northwest winds around 5 mph, becoming southeast in the evening, then becoming light and variable after midnight. |
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| Weather | Sunny. Isolated showers. | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Temperature | In the upper 80s. | ||||||||
| Winds | West winds around 5 mph. | ||||||||
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| Sunrise | 5:46 AM HST. | ||||||||
| Sunset | 7:06 PM HST. | ||||||||
A small, medium period south swell will continue to steadily fade into Saturday, allowing surf along south and west-facing shores to drop a notch. A series of small, medium to long period south and southeast swells will fill in Saturday into the first half of next week, which will boost surf heights back near seasonal averages.
Tiny surf will prevail along north-facing shores through most of the coming week as only some limited short-period energy reaches the islands from the north. Trade winds remain lighter than normal through the weekend, keeping surf along east-facing shores below average. East shore surf will begin to trend up early next week as trade winds increase upstream and across the region.
NORTH EAST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Semi choppy with ESE winds 5-10mph in the morning increasing to 10-15mph in the afternoon.
NORTH WEST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Clean in the morning with ESE winds less than 5mph. Bumpy/semi bumpy conditions for the afternoon with the winds shifting W 5-10mph.
WEST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Light sideshore texture in the morning with NNW winds 5-10mph. Bumpy/semi bumpy conditions for the afternoon with the winds shifting to the WNW.
SOUTH EAST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Sideshore texture/chop with NE winds 10-15mph.
Data Courtesy of NOAA.gov and SwellInfo.com
Hawaii
Principal honors Obama as ‘Child of Hawaii’ at library opening – AsAmNews
The honor of introducing former President Barack Obama at the grand opening of his new presidential library in Chicago Thursday went to Dr. Kaiwipunikauikawēkiu Punihei Lipe of Hawaii.
Hawaii News Now reports that Lipe participated in the inaugural cohort of the Asia-Pacific Leaders Program in 2019 and is currently the principal at Kamehameha Schools Kapālama.
“Where I come from, to introduce someone means we have pilina, a connection. If this man walked into my home, my children would call him uncle because we are both keiki o ka ʻāina, children of Hawaii,” she said in her remarks.
She told those in attendance that the former president and herself are both “children of Hawaii.” Obama lived on the island and attended Punahou School and lived in Hawaii for eight years until his graduation from high school.
Lipe said being children of Hawaii carries with it a “sacred responsibility to care for those who we may never meet.”
She made reference to the resilient Hawaiian shrub, the Like a’ali’i.
“The a’ali’i thrives by being deeply rooted, resilient through storm and drought, and fiercely responsive. That is what ‘yes, we can’ means to my indigenous heart. It demands that we remain unshakably rooted in truth, resilient through trial, and so responsive that just as this plant yields its leaves for medicine, its blooms for beauty, and its timber for protection, we become the healing, the vibrance, and the shelter needed by our communities and by grandmother earth.”
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Hawaii
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