Hawaii
Fairmont Kea Lani review – The Points Guy
Fairmont Kea Lani provided TPG with a complimentary three-night stay so that we could get an inside look at the hotel and its amenities. The opinions expressed below are entirely those of the author and weren’t subject to review by the hotel or any external entity.
The Fairmont Kea Lani originally debuted on Wailea’s Polo Beach in 1991, but after undergoing a multi-million dollar renovation, it’s now blending luxurious amenities with cultural significance.
The reimagined resort is helping create one of the largest cultural centers on the island — particularly important after the loss of Maui’s historical and cultural center Lahaina. Residents of Lahaina in West Maui are still rebuilding after devastating fires tore through the historic town in 2023, but tourism to other parts of the island is vital now more than ever.
Those hoping to relax and unwind in luxury should consider booking a trip to the Fairmont Kea Lani — here’s why the property is a new TPG favorite.
The 18 best hotels in Maui, from luxury stays to family-friendly resorts
What is the Fairmont Kea Lani?
Set on more than 20 acres, the Fairmont Kea Lani boasts just over 400 suites and villas on the pristine Polo Beach in Wailea, about 30 minutes south of Maui’s Kahului Airport (OGG). The resort has a casual elegance about it, detectable from the moment you arrive in the lobby and when you enter your guest room for the first time. It feels familiar, comfortable and like home — only fancier. (And my home doesn’t offer expansive ocean views from almost every window.)
Designed as an all-suite resort, Fairmont Kea Lani caters to everyone from honeymooners to families and multigenerational travelers. The villas are specially designed for families, and they feature full kitchens, living rooms, indoor and outdoor dining areas and laundry rooms.
The grounds are lush and beautiful — exactly what you would expect for a tropical escape. One of the best parts about this property is that you are never a far walk from anything; the main building houses all of the restaurants, spa and fitness center, and there’s a short path to the villas and beach. With three pools (including one adults-only pool), a 140-foot waterslide from the upper to lower Lagoon pool, cabanas for rent and a full slate of activities, there are plenty of ways to fill your days at the Fairmont Kea Lani.
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How to book Fairmont Kea Lani
The resort is an Accor property, so Accor Live Limitless members can book and receive discounts of 10% or earn and redeem points for stays. Members get Classic status upon signup, which (in addition to discounted member rates) provides exclusive offers, free Wi-Fi, online check-in and fast checkout. Bookings are available directly through the Fairmont Kea Lani website, where room rates start at $899 per night, including taxes and fees. For Accor members (it’s free to join), there is member-specific pricing on the website. Simply sign into your account.
And if you want to redeem points for your stay, Accor doesn’t have an award chart but rather a flat rate per point of 2 cents each. You can use this to offset even a portion of your bill.
The resort is also bookable via American Express Travel. Cardholders can earn 5 points per dollar on prepaid hotels if booking with The Platinum Card® from American Express. It is a Fine Hotels + Resorts® member, so the complimentary breakfast benefit, 4 p.m. late checkout and other FHR amenities would apply to your stay. Remember, you can also get a once-yearly $200 statement credit when booking an Amex FHR or Hotel Collection property via Amex Travel. The Hotel Collection requires a minimum two-night stay
Chase cardholders can earn 5 points per dollar spent on travel booked through the Chase Travel℠ portal. Rates for stays booked through this portal start at $1,078 per night, including taxes and fees. Capital One and Citi are both transfer partners of Accor Live Limitless. You can transfer your Capital One miles and Citi ThankYou Rewards points to Accor at a 2:1 ratio, meaning 2,000 miles or points will become 1,000 Accor points — so not the best value per mile. Additionally, Bilt Points transfer to Accor’s program at a 3:2 ratio — a partnership that was announced last October.
A breathtaking beachfront location
As previously mentioned, the resort is about 30 minutes south of Maui’s Kahului Airport (OGG). You can connect to the rental car center from the terminal via a tram if renting a car. A rental car is a great option if you decide to venture off the resort grounds and experience Maui’s Upcountry or its many other beaches and local restaurants. The resort also has an Avis Rental Car outpost in the lobby for daily or weekly rentals.
We knew we would venture outside of the resort, so we rented a Jeep Wrangler from the airport’s Avis rental location. We booked through Costco Travel, and a seven-day rental was only $277 plus taxes and fees.
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The weather in Wailea is pretty much the same year-round — warm and breezy. Even if you see clouds on Haleakala, they rarely make their way toward the beach. The Wailea area is green and lush, filled with luxury resorts and championship golf courses. The Wailea Beach path connects the Fairmont Kea Lani, Four Seasons Maui, Grand Wailea, Marriott’s Wailea Beach Resort and the Andaz Maui, and it’s very popular for morning walks or jogging.
According to the resort’s website, valet parking is available for $40 per day per car. Self-parking is available at the resort and is included in the daily resort fee of $50.
The resort concierge can help organize excursions with local tour operators if you would like to experience activities off-property or see other parts of the island but prefer not to drive.
Arrival experience
Upon entering the lush oasis that is the Fairmont Kea Lani (which we reached via a quiet driveway), a bellhop greeted us and offered assistance with our luggage. Another guest experience staff member greeted us with leis and offered our daughter a whale’s tale carved necklace. The trip was already off to a great start, and we hadn’t even stepped into the gorgeous lobby yet.
We made a quick stop at the front desk and were welcomed by the villa experience team. They informed us that drinks would be replenished daily in our villa fridge and that breakfast was included as part of the villa stay; they also explained that the team would be just a phone call away if we needed anything.
During the golf cart ride down to the villa, a bellhop provided a brief property tour, pointing out locations as we went along. Once inside the villa, he provided an overview of the villa’s features and amenities.
Spectacular oceanfront villas
If you’ve ever wondered what living on the ocean in a villa would be like, this is your chance. We spent three glorious nights in a newly renovated, expansive two-bedroom, two-bath, 1,800-square-foot oceanfront villa with a private plunge pool and lanai. This would be my ideal living situation — falling asleep to the sound of the ocean every night and knowing the water is just steps from your patio door. It was heaven.
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Villa guests enjoy certain resort amenities included with their stay, such as daily breakfast at Kea Lani Restaurant and valet parking. The villa itself also included a barbecue grill on the lanai, two lounge chairs and an outdoor dining table. The staff stocked the kitchen refrigerator with beverages and snacks, and the kitchen was fully equipped for cooking. The villa team can also assist with arranging grocery deliveries.
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A large granite dining table was between the kitchen and living area. The living room furnishings included a sectional sofa and comfy chair, a flat-screen TV and a ceiling fan.
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The primary suite with a king bed was on the villa’s upper floor (the floor you enter from the outside stairs down to the villa). The room also included a writing desk and chair, a chaise lounge and a small patio with a lounger.
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Ample charging locations for devices were built into the nightstands and TV stand, making it easy to charge multiple devices for a family (not that you’ll need them when you’re enjoying the resort!).
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A lower-floor bedroom off the kitchen and living area offered two queen beds, a full closet and a bathroom. Each bedroom included ample closet space (a large walk-in closet was upstairs for the primary suite) and a full bathroom with a tub and walk-in travertine shower.
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Dual sinks with marble countertops offered plenty of space for travel kits.
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Alongside the Le Labo bath amenities were bottles of ocean-safe Project Reef mineral sunscreen and after-sun lotion on the bathroom counters — a thoughtful touch.
One of my favorite amenities was being able to do laundry in our villa halfway through our trip (this is also how you know you’re over 40). The stackable washer and dryer were in the utility room, along with an ironing board and iron.
Drinking and dining
Maui offers outdoor dining weather year-round, so you can feel the ocean breeze while enjoying a cocktail, dinner and a gorgeous sunset no matter the season. The Fairmont Kea Lani has multiple options for dinner, all with ocean views (in addition to room service). Overall, the food quality everywhere on the property was exceptional — even if you are not a seafood lover, you will not go hungry while staying here.
An added bonus is that kids under 5 eat free when dining with a registered guest through the resort’s Keiki (kids) dining program at Ko, Kea Lani Restaurant and AMA Bar and Grill (restaurant only, no poolside dining). Kids 6 to 12 may order from the Keiki menu at regular price or select items from the full menu and receive 50% off.
Dinner in Ko Restaurant
Ko features a fusion menu of Hawaiian, Asian and South Pacific flavors in an open-air concept space with mostly patio seating. It’s on the ground level of the main building overlooking the gardens, the adult pool and the ocean. The restaurant is open for happy hour, dinner and Sunday brunch.
To start, we shared the crispy shrimp with a Maui lavender honey sauce, candied macadamia nuts and smashed sesame cucumbers ($30). The flavors were a great complement to each other — it was savory and a bit sweet at the same time.
Our dinner choices were the surf and turf special of the night ($57) and the Korean braised short ribs ($58). The surf and turf was a bowl of Asian noodles tossed with bok choy, green beans, red peppers and sauteed shrimp. Perfectly cooked medium-rare slices of ribeye and a chimichurri sauce were sitting on top of the noodles. The Korean braised short ribs were served with carrots, baby bok choy and kimchi fried rice. Both dishes were full of flavor, and we had plenty to share.
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Breakfast buffet at Kea Lani Restaurant
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A villa stay includes daily breakfast at Kea Lani Restaurant. The buffet was plentiful and catered to many different tastes — there were displays of sliced meat, cheeses, artisan bread and pastries, along with Asian-style udon vegetarian noodles and miso salmon, chicken potstickers and miso soup.
Each morning, a generous selection was available, from waffles, pancakes and made-to-order omelets to bacon, Portuguese sausage, scrambled eggs and egg whites. Continental options included cereals, yogurts, granola, dried fruits and fresh sliced fruits.
Pilina ocean-view lobby bar
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Serving lunch and dinner, Pilina is an open-air lobby bar with gorgeous ocean views. The menu offers local drinks, fresh seafood, sushi, and a selection of meat and fish you can cook at your table on a hot rock. Just outside the entrance are swinging chairs which proved to be my daughter’s favorite spot to visit besides the pool slide and beach.
The drink menu includes a global wine selection, locally made and Japanese sake, a selection of spirits from Hawaiian distilleries, beer from Maui Brewing Company and cocktails. Try the Mauka cocktail ($24) — which means “toward the mountains” — which mixes Fy Hawaii gin, Ohia Lehua honey, ginger, lemon, smoked Big Island bee pollen, angostura bitters and lavender from the Ali’i Kula Lavender Farm we visited earlier in the day.
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For dinner, we enjoyed a selection of salmon sashimi ($27), rainbow rolls ($37) and edamame ($16) to start, followed by venison sliders with yuzu tomato jam aioli on Hawaiian sweet rolls ($26). The special sushi roll of the night was recommended by our server and turned out to be our favorite — a lobster, avocado, cucumber roll with soy sauce poke on top with ogo, cilantro microgreens and garlic chips ($37).
I love it when resorts have amazing lobby bars for a casual dinner, and Pilina definitely checked all the boxes thanks to its relaxing atmosphere, great drink menu and delicious food.
Cultural preservation and family-friendly activities
In 2024, the resort unveiled a new cultural center in the lobby, and it’s suitable for all ages. The Cultural Center at the Kea Lani is even more significant now because so many invaluable Hawaiian artifacts and historical documents were lost in the Lahaina wildfires.
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The center offers classes such as hula dancing and ukulele lessons. Plus, it includes a permanent display of Hawaiian artifacts — such as feather headdresses worn by royalty, jewelry made from seashells, ceremonial accompaniments and musical instruments — that were handmade by Maui artisans who replicated the traditional methods of creating them.
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Kamahiwa Kawaʻa, the head of the cultural center, explained that everything on display is meant to be explored and used — allowing guests to experience the culture and history firsthand.
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We also had fun experiencing the daily koi fish feeding at 9 a.m. (geared toward younger guests). Kids 10 and over might like the stargazing event twice a week on the lawn or the outrigger excursions offered a few times each morning.
Stargazing in Hawaii is particularly unique since you are on an island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean with very little light pollution. If you live in an urban area, you might have never seen the Milky Way or shooting stars. It’s worth it to try the high-powered telescope the astronomer brings to see planets and nebulae.
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A swim with sea turtles is a great way to start the morning, and the outrigger excursion (ages 10 and up, reservation required) was an informative cultural activity that lasted about an hour. It began with an explanation of how the Hawaiian people traditionally used canoes for recreation and fishing.
After a traditional Hawaiian prayer and blowing of the conch, the outrigger shoved off Polo Beach and out into the ocean. We paddled in unison for about 15 minutes before stopping to gaze down at the reef below and ease into the water with goggles for a swim. If you’re lucky, you’ll even get to see some turtles.
Cool off at the beach or pool
The main pool (suitable for all ages and families) is divided into the upper pool and lower pool, with a slide connecting the two. Pool cabanas are available in both areas, and rental fees start from $350 per day. The AMA Bar and Grill at the upper pool serves casual Hawaiian fare and also offers happy hour, a swim-up bar and patio dining.
The adults-only pool is closer to the main building, facing Ko Restaurant and the Kea Lani breakfast patio.
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Cabana rentals come with a bento box of edamame and fresh pineapple to snack on, as well as a soft-sided cooler stocked with ice, water, juices and sodas. Pool attendants regularly make the rounds checking on guests and, in the afternoon, bring around frozen chocolate mochi bites for everyone to enjoy.
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Pool amenities include refillable bottles of mineral sunscreen, a retail shop where you can purchase goggles, sunglasses, pool floats and toys; there’s also a scuba desk where you can arrange lessons.
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Down at Polo Beach, there’s an expansive verdant lawn for activities like watching the sunset, morning yoga or for kids to play. Guests who wish to borrow kayaks or stand-up paddleboards can do so free of charge from the beach.
Relax at the Willow Stream Spa
Willow Stream Spa is a signature of Fairmont properties with exceptional customer service and treatments. The spa at this property — which is slated to be renovated later this year — features 13 treatment rooms, a full salon and boutique, oceanfront and poolside spa cabanas, and multiple relaxation areas.
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For my treatment, I chose the Natural Hawaiian Journey (120 minutes, $465), which features locally grown ingredients that native Hawaiians use to maintain health and well-being. I also chose to add on a Knesko collagen face mask ($55).
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After my treatment, my skin felt hydrated and relaxed. My therapist, Kellie, provided expert recommendations for my skin type and ways to maintain my post-spa glow.
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Be sure to leave yourself time to experience the other parts of the spa, from the relaxation room to the healing clay and steam room to the experiential showers — an “afternoon thunderstorm” shower was quite the trip.
Accessibility
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The Fairmont Kea Lani is compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act, as it offers pool chair lifts, wide entrances and wide pathways. The main building has elevators for access to the shops, restaurants, fitness center and pools.
Wide pathways connect the main building to the pools, villas and beach. A select number of single-story, ocean-view villas are accessible from the main pathways without having to navigate steps.
As always, TPG recommends calling the hotel ahead of your stay to ensure they can meet your accessibility needs.
Checking out
After enjoying our last sunset at Polo Beach, the villa team called to arrange assistance with luggage and a golf cart ride up to the front of the resort for the next day. When it was time to leave, we were sad to say goodbye to our new oceanfront home away from home, but the aloha spirit of the Fairmont Kea Lani staff remains until our next visit.
Related reading:
Hawaii
Hawaii County Surf Forecast for May 04, 2026 | Big Island Now
Forecast for Big Island Windward and Southeast
| Shores | Tonight | Monday | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf | Surf | |||
| PM | AM | AM | PM | |
| North Facing | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 |
| East Facing | 4-6 | 4-6 | 4-6 | 3-5 |
| South Facing | 3-5 | 3-5 | 3-5 | 2-4 |
| Weather | Mostly cloudy. Occasional showers. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Temperature | In the upper 60s. | ||||||
| Winds | North winds 5 to 10 mph. | ||||||
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| Weather | Partly sunny. Scattered showers. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Temperature | Around 80. | |||||
| Winds | Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. | |||||
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| Sunrise | 5:49 AM HST. | |||||
| Sunset | 6:45 PM HST. | |||||
Forecast for Big Island Leeward
| Shores | Tonight | Monday | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf | Surf | |||
| PM | AM | AM | PM | |
| West Facing | 2-4 | 2-4 | 2-4 | 1-3 |
| South Facing | 3-5 | 3-5 | 3-5 | 2-4 |
| Weather | Mostly cloudy until 12 AM, then partly cloudy. Scattered showers. |
||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Temperature | In the lower 70s. | ||||||||||
| Winds | Southwest winds around 5 mph, becoming east in the evening, then becoming light and variable after midnight. |
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| Weather | Mostly sunny. Isolated showers. | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Temperature | In the mid 80s. | |||||||
| Winds | Southwest winds around 5 mph. | |||||||
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| Sunrise | 5:53 AM HST. | |||||||
| Sunset | 6:49 PM HST. | |||||||
The current small northwest swell will decline tonight. A moderate northwest swell will build on Monday and produce surf above seasonal average during the peak Monday night and early Tuesday. This swell will slowly decline late Tuesday and Wednesday. A larger northwest swell could produce surf near the High Surf Advisory level Thursday, then lower Friday into next weekend.
A south-southwest swell will produce surf around seasonal average tonight and will gradually decrease Monday and Tuesday, with mainly small background surf along south facing shores through the rest of the week.
Trade wind swell will slowly lower below seasonal average on Monday and will remain small through the remainder of the week.
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
Hawaiian Airlines Is Gone. Travelers Just Lost The Airline That Knew Hawaii Best.
Hawaiian Airlines ended as an independently functioning airline on April 22, but what it built didn’t end with it. The parts that, in hindsight, made Hawaiian feel ahead of everyone else are the same ones Alaska is now stepping into and scaling.
Just days before the flight code disappears, it is easier to see the shape of what Hawaiian actually was. It was not just the airline that could not make the numbers work; it was the airline that kept getting the future right earlier than almost everyone else around it.
Hawaiian Airlines saw premium differently.
Beat of Hawaii editors have both been flying the Pacific on Hawaiian for nearly a half-century. And we saw it at (mostly its best) firsthand, on the second-to-last HA1 from Los Angeles to Honolulu. The 787 was not trying to copy what other U.S. carriers were doing. It was trying to reset expectations entirely, and for a regional Hawaii airline, that meant more than it would have anywhere else. Hawaiian repeatedly won top-rated U.S. airline recognition year after year, for operational performance and service.
The Adient Ascent business class suites we experienced were one example. Hawaiian backed it early, before any other U.S. airlines had committed to something comparable. At the time, that looked like a risk for a carrier already on borrowed time and with little room for error. Now it looks like it was a blueprint.
Alaska’s new international business class uses the exact same business-class platform. The headlines now belong to Alaska, but the decision to believe in that suite, when it was still unproven, belongs exclusively to Hawaiian Airlines.
Hawaiian largely built a product that reflected the emotional aspects of Hawaii flights. TEAGUE designed the interior around Hawaii, with Polynesian navigation references overhead in the ceiling, Hawaiian touches throughout, and materials tied directly to the place in a way no U.S. airline even attempts. The seat, the layout, the feel of the cabin all reflected that, in some ways at least, perfectly.
We covered that in detail in Hawaiian Airlines Dreamliner First Class Review. When the Dreamliner arrived, nothing about that experience felt like a legacy airline barely holding on. It felt like something big, maybe just getting started.
Hawaiian moved first on what travelers actually use.
Before most U.S. airlines could stabilize their hodgepodge of largely poor-quality, expensive WiFi deployments, Hawaiian moved to Starlink across its fleet, putting very fast, free connectivity on all its trans-Pacific A330S and A321neos. It simply worked from gate to gate. No falderal, no log-in, no loyalty program or credit card.
Note: Unfortunately, Hawaiian was never able to achieve WiFi certification on its Dreamliners, and Alaska is just now in the process of obtaining that.
Starlink WiFi was not a small upgrade. It changed how Hawaii flights felt, especially for travelers who were used to paying for something slow or unreliable, if it existed at all. We cannot tell you how many times we’ve flown with other airlines that promised WiFi to and from Hawaii, only to find it didn’t work or didn’t work well. Hawaiian made the right call early, and it made it across two aircraft fleets already in service, not just on new plane deliveries.
Hawaiian identified the parts of the experience that travelers actually cared about, and it moved before anyone else did. Alaska now inherits that advantage. It does not have to explain why it counts or prove that it works, since all that came and went. Hawaiian already did its part, as have others since. Alaska has also decided to deploy Starlink WiFi across its entire network that BOH editors enjoyed on a brand new Alaska 737 MAX 8 about a week ago.
Hawaiian built a brand that traveled well: Pualani.
For decades, Hawaiian showed up in Australia, Japan, Korea, and New York City (pictured) with something that already had great meaning. And that too was not an accident, nor is it easy to replicate.
The Pualani brand was consistent. The identity was tied to our iconic home in a way that translated well internationally, especially in Japan, where airline brand perception still carries weight in purchasing decisions. Travelers were not just choosing a seat or a fare. They were choosing what the airline represented.
A national branding study ranked Hawaiian first among U.S. airlines for brand effectiveness, with a score of 123 out of 200 for logo recognition, brand attribution, and consistency. Alaska scored 74 and ranked ninth. We covered that gap about Hawaiian’s reach in How Hawaiian Airlines Pualani Branding Took Aloha Global. The difference was clearly not about marketing budgets. It was about what the brand stands for when it enters a market far from home.
We have previously explored what happened to that identity. The answer is not simple, and it is not finished. Alaska can keep parts, but it can never recreate the conditions that originally built it.
Hawaiian reached further than it was capable of.
Hawaiian ordered the 787 with plans that extended well beyond Asia, including potentially London and Singapore. It also kept flying routes that did not earn their keep and never figured out how to price its product the way the rest of the industry had learned to.
What it did not have was the corporate financial structure to keep it working when conditions tightened the way they did, and its ambitions outran the balance sheet years before Alaska ever stepped in.
The failure was not Hawaiian’s vision.
That part has already been told, and it does not need to be repeated here. We covered it in Why Hawaiian Airlines Failed: A Story of Planes, Promises, And Pride.
The timing, the cost structure, and the other breakdowns, both COVID-related and around the Saber-to-Amadeus migration in 2023, and other events, all seemed to come crashing down at once.
The leadership payouts that followed only sharpened the contrast. Peter Ingram at $13.2 million, Shannon Okinaka at $4.9 million, Jonathan Snook at $5.4 million, and Aaron Alter at $4.2 million. Those numbers landed hard with many when the airline itself couldn’t remain viable.
Hawaiian needed Alaska. This was not a strategic pairing of equals, as it was once called; it was a rescue.
Alaska gets the part Hawaiian could not finish.
Alaska inherits the aircraft decisions, product direction, connectivity upgrades, and early bets Hawaiian made when it still had room to maneuver. It gets to scale them across a far larger network, and with its stronger financial base.
It also inherits the harder question. What happens to the parts of Hawaiian that were not just operational decisions, but identity?
What Hawaii loses is harder to measure for residents and kamaaina.
Hawaiian was never the biggest airline serving the islands, nor the most profitable or efficient. What it was, for a long time, was the airline that understood uniquely what a Hawaii flight was supposed to feel like.
That was demonstrated in small ways and big ones. It showed up in how the cabin felt when you boarded, the unique Hawaii-based service provided, in how the brand translated overseas, in the decisions that put traveler experience ahead of short-term gain, and even good sense.
Those choices didn’t keep the airline alive. But they shaped what the airline became and what Alaska now has to work with. Hawaiian did not survive as an independent airline, and it did not disappear, exactly.
What does Hawaiian’s legacy mean to you now that the airline itself is no longer on its own, and does seeing Alaska build on what Hawaiian started change how you look at either one?
Lead Photo © Beat of Hawaii attending the inaugural HNL-JFK route celebration in New York City at Grand Central Station.
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Hawaii
Hawaii County Weather Forecast for May 03, 2026 | Big Island Now
Hilo
Tonight: Mostly cloudy. Scattered showers in the evening, then numerous showers after midnight. Lows 60 to 70 near the shore to 52 to 58 at 4000 feet. North winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy. Numerous showers in the morning, then scattered showers in the afternoon. Highs 77 to 82 near the shore to 62 to 67 at 4000 feet. Northeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy with numerous showers. Lows 60 to 69 near the shore to 51 to 56 at 4000 feet. Northeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Kona
Tonight: Partly cloudy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows around 72 near the shore to 49 to 54 near 5000 feet. Light winds. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday: Mostly sunny in the morning, then partly sunny with isolated showers in the afternoon. Highs 82 to 87 near the shore to around 67 near 5000 feet. West winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy with isolated showers in the evening, then partly cloudy after midnight. Lows around 72 near the shore to 49 to 54 near 5000 feet. Light winds. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Waimea
Tonight: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 61 to 71 near the shore to 55 to 62 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 15 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday: Breezy. Partly sunny with scattered showers. Highs around 78 near the shore to 67 to 77 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 20 mph increasing to 10 to 20 mph in the afternoon. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 61 to 70 near the shore to 54 to 61 near 3000 feet. East winds 10 to 15 mph decreasing to up to 15 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Kohala
Tonight: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 61 to 71 near the shore to 55 to 62 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 15 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday: Breezy. Partly sunny with scattered showers. Highs around 78 near the shore to 67 to 77 near 3000 feet. East winds up to 20 mph increasing to 10 to 20 mph in the afternoon. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Lows 61 to 70 near the shore to 54 to 61 near 3000 feet. East winds 10 to 15 mph decreasing to up to 15 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 50 percent.
South Big Island
Tonight: Partly cloudy. Lows around 74 near the shore to around 55 near 5000 feet. Northeast winds up to 15 mph.
Sunday: Breezy. Mostly sunny in the morning, then partly sunny with isolated showers in the afternoon. Highs around 85 near the shore to around 66 near 5000 feet. East winds up to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy. Isolated showers in the evening. Lows around 74 near the shore to around 54 near 5000 feet. Northeast winds up to 15 mph increasing to 10 to 15 mph after midnight. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Puna
Tonight: Mostly cloudy. Scattered showers in the evening, then numerous showers after midnight. Lows 60 to 70 near the shore to 52 to 58 at 4000 feet. North winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy. Numerous showers in the morning, then scattered showers in the afternoon. Highs 77 to 82 near the shore to 62 to 67 at 4000 feet. Northeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy with numerous showers. Lows 60 to 69 near the shore to 51 to 56 at 4000 feet. Northeast winds up to 10 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Waikoloa
Tonight: Partly cloudy. Lows around 72 near the shore to 50 to 55 above 4000 feet. Southeast winds up to 15 mph.
Sunday: Breezy. Sunny in the morning, then partly sunny with isolated showers in the afternoon. Highs 82 to 87 near the shore to around 68 above 4000 feet. Northeast winds up to 20 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy with isolated showers in the evening, then partly cloudy after midnight. Lows around 72 near the shore to 51 to 56 above 4000 feet. East winds up to 15 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Synopsis
High pressure north of the islands will produce moderate trade winds through Monday. Wind speeds will weaken from Tuesday through Thursday as a weak cold front passes north of the island chain. Trade winds slowly return by the end of next week as the stalled front diminishes and the broad ridge builds back over the region.
Short term update
The infrared satellite imagery this evening shows a shallow cold front roughly 600 miles northwest of Kauai approaching the Hawaii region. This frontal cloud band will weaken and stall out north of the state with no significant rainfall impacts. Trade wind speed trends however will decrease as the trough breaks down the ridge north of the island chain. Light large scale winds over Hawaii from Tuesday through Thursday will trigger and expansion of onshore sea breezes during the daylight hours and offshore land breezes overnight. These light local scale winds are driven by diurnal thermal differences between ocean temperatures and island heating/cooling cycles.
The short range forecast grids look reasonable. No updates to the evening forecast.
Prev discussion
Issued at 352 PM HST Sat May 2 2026 Radar and satellite show mostly cloudy skies and scattered showers across most windward and many mauka areas, along with the Kona region of the Big Island, this afternoon. Very few showers have made it to leeward areas, but a good amount of cloud cover has moved in from time to time. Winds were generally out of the northeast at 10 to 20 mph with a few higher gusts, but some leeward areas had west winds coming in off the ocean. These showers will decrease in the Kona region this evening, but otherwise should continue into the night.
With the upper low to our northeast finally moving away, upper level ridging will be able to strengthen. This will keep moderate to occasionally breezy trade winds with us through Monday as surface high pressure systems to our NE and NW move east across the Pacific. A weak trough (dying cold front) will move toward the area Monday, and pressure falls associated with its approach will veer winds to southeasterly Monday night. Light north to northeast winds behind the trough are expected to develop over western islands Wednesday, perhaps reaching as far east as Maui Wednesday night. With light winds Tuesday through Thursday, expect a few more clouds than normal over leeward areas, and perhaps a brief shower.
Winds will then return to southeasterly Thursday and remain that way into next weekend. PW values will be relatively low throughout the next week. The only day of values noticeably above 1″ will be Wednesday, when convergence from the surface trough will peak. Trades may return next weekend.
Aviation
Moderate to breezy easterly trades will persist through Sunday, with clouds and brief showers favoring windward sites. Expect periods of MVFR conditions in showers, otherwise widespread VFR is expected.
No AIRMETS are in effect.
Marine
No changes to the forecast this evening, and not expecting any significant changes with the morning package.
High pressure to the north-northeast will maintain trade winds through the remainder of the weekend. A front to the northwest will move to the east and help to weaken the ridge to the north. As a result, expect trades to steadily weaken, becoming light and variable by the middle of the week.
The current northwest swell (310-320 degrees) will gradually fade over the remainder of the weekend. Another small swell is expected to arrive late Sunday night/early Monday morning, and will help to maintain elevated surf along north and west facing shores. A storm low near Japan is expected to move to the east and will send a long period northwest swell to the islands. This swell (320 degrees) is expected to arrive Thursday, but currently expected to peak below advisory levels.
The current south swell will hold through the remainder of the weekend, and then gradually decline. As trades steadily weaken, wind waves and trade wind swell will follow with diminishing surf expected along east facing shores during the next several days.
HFO Watches/Warnings/Advisories
None.
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Data Courtesy of NOAA.gov
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