Hawaii
Kamaaina Discounts: Unfair To Hawaii Visitors Or Genuine Perks for Residents?
Kamaaina discounts, exclusive deals for Hawaii residents, have long been touted as a perk to ease the high cost of living in the islands. And we’ve written about them previously because Hawaii visitors and residents have asked about them so many times. Today, we received a question from our prolific 600-comment reader Rod W., who asked:
“The taxes (we pay) might be at the same rate (for visitors and residents). But, aren’t there discounts on the room rates for local folks?“
There’s growing skepticism about several aspects of the Kamaaina discount. First, is its value real? Are these discounts genuinely the most beneficial, or have they become just another marketing gimmick? Furthermore, are these discounts fair to Hawaii visitors who cannot access them?
The fairness debate about Kamaaina discount and visitor perspectives.
Visitors have often expressed frustration and feelings of exclusion regarding Kamaaina discounts. Kathy from Lake Tahoe remarked, “Here in Lake Tahoe, locals get zero discounts. Why are we bent over when we travel to Hawaii?” This sentiment is echoed by many who feel that the discounts create an unequal playing field. At the other end of the spectrum, Eva added, “Considering high prices inflated by tourists, I am glad that Kamaaina rates exist.” These highlight the tension between tourist spending and resident affordability.
Mike J humorously commented, “Usually, I just wish I had a Hawaii driver’s license. Given the amount of money I have spent on my visits, I should be given an honorary one.” Mike illustrates well the desire of frequent visitors to benefit from the same perks as residents. Meanwhile, Steve O. pointed out, “Why do visitors think they have the right or are ‘owed’ the right to visit Hawaii… Imagine wanting to go to a local beach, local park, or restaurant and not being able to get in because of the mass of tourists.”
Adam M. chimed in about this, expressing his frustration and stating, “As much as I’ve loved my 10 trips to Hawaii, I find the constant anti-tourist policies, rules, and sentiment off-putting. Rising prices and falling service quality make the travel future look bleak.”
Another commenter, Mike, echoed a common sentiment: “It’s discrimination. This viewpoint suggests that offering special rates exclusively to residents might be seen as unfair to visitors who also contribute significantly to the local economy.”
These comments and others reflect a broader concern that while Kamaaina discounts are intended to support travel by residents, they inadvertently alienate and frustrate visitors who feel they are not receiving fair treatment despite their significant contributions to the local economy.
How much ongoing value is there in Kamaaina discounts?
Before visitors get too worked up in us versus them regarding these discounts, realize that things have evolved greatly. In the past, Kamaaina discounts offered substantial savings, sometimes up to 30% or more. But today, it is clear that these discounts have dwindled.
On a recent hotel stay, we were offered a 40% Kamaaina discount, yet the actual savings were far less, about 10%, due to other discounts that were available for non-residents. Sometimes, however, we find that in addition to a much smaller discount, better terms may be available for Kamaaina reservations. These can include no resort fee, reduced parking charge, or a better cancellation policy.
Joerg H noted, “The Kamaaina rates I’ve encountered recently are nowhere near what they used to be.” This experience is shared by many residents who remember more significant savings in the past. Joel L. had a similar experience at a high-end hotel, where he found the Kamaaina rate was still prohibitively expensive.
Even when hotels advertise up to 40% off, the fine print often reveals much smaller actual savings. Jim M. reported that non-resident deals on platforms like Hotels.com sometimes offer even better rates than Kamaaina discounts.
This is confusing, leading to questions about just who feels cheated and who is receiving better deals, visitors or residents. In fact, the difference might be minimal.
The marketing angle of Kamaaina discounts.
Hotels and other businesses have increasingly used Kamaaina discounts as a marketing strategy focused on attracting Hawaii residents more than a genuine benefit. Chris F. pointed out, “Hotels use Kamaaina rates to fill their rooms when tourism numbers are down.” Thus, these discounts might be more of a marketing strategy for managing occupancy rates than offering real value to residents.
Rich called these discounts “Just another tax on visitors that everyone knows that visitors cannot avoid. You come, you pay.” This perspective suggests that the allure of discounts is just another way to attract business without providing substantial savings.
Where, then, can the best Hawaii accommodation discounts be found?
This is a great question that many of you have also asked. The answer isn’t one that you’ll like to hear, albeit familiar. When booking accommodations or any other travel expense, you can’t expect to find the lowest rate in one place. If you are convinced that the best deal is always at booking.com, Costco Travel, or via a Kamaaina discount, you will definitely not be getting the best rate. The reality is that it is a shell game.
Navigating discounts in Hawaii (or elsewhere in travel) can often be challenging, with the best deals constantly shifting and often hidden. Whether you’re looking for Hawaii hotels, vacation rentals, or car rentals, it’s crucial to check all available sources.
Also try to avoid pre-paying at least until the very last minute so that you have the flexibility to keep looking. Kamaaina discounts might seem appealing to residents and insulting to visitors, but non-resident deals on various platforms or third-party websites can sometimes offer even better savings. To ensure you get the best deal, always compare rates and all available discounts, as prices fluctuate almost faster than you can blink an eye.
Balancing benefits and reality of Kamaaina.
While the tangible savings from Kamaaina discounts have decreased, they can still offer some benefits for Hawaii residents. One resident, Jason T., highlighted how these discounts help offset the high costs of travel within the islands for medical appointments or other necessities. While Kimberly, a healthcare worker, pointed out the essential role of such discounts in a state where tourism strains local resources.
Pam S. added, “I think it’s fair to offer Kamaaina discounts to residents. Their cost of living is so high that they need all the help they can get just to survive.”
Conclusion on Kamaaina? While it’s a mixed bag, it’s also a good reminder.
First, Kamaaina discounts are undoubtedly less generous than they once were, often reduced to mere marketing tactics. However, they still provide some relief to residents, even if the savings are not as substantial. The debate on fairness remains heated, with valid points on both sides.
In the bigger picture, discounts such as Kamaaina are a good reminder that you need to keep checking to get the best Hawaii travel deals or any travel deals.
Editor Jeff recently rented a car in Europe. For a five-week rental, he paid $1,300. He found that deal via Kayak using the rental car company Sixt. That’s one he’s never really used before, but it worked out fine. The exact same car via Costco Travel was $600 more, while the pricing via Autoslash was even worse. Not that there is anything at all wrong with those sources. It’s just that the best deals are literally never found in the same place twice.
Your thoughts on the current state of Kamaaina discounts and finding the best deal overall? Getting past the marketing ploys is a challenge. Please share your experiences below!
Hawaii
Damage reports continue to grow after Kona low storms
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The city has received nearly 1,600 damage reports so far after the back-to-back Kona low storms.
Dawn Takeuchi Apuna, director of the Department of Planning and Permitting, provided the information Thursday while testifying in front of the Honolulu City Council Zoning & Planning Committee.
“It was very interesting just to understand, go house to house, to really see the damage, understand what people are going through,” said Apuna about validating the data with government employees.
The DPP provided the following data:
- 23 homes destroyed
- 260 homes need major repairs
- 32 temporarily inaccessible
- 436 homes sustained minor damage
- 442 homes sustained cosmetic damage, but are safe to live in
- 393 homes sustained no visible damage
Apuna explained that major damage means floodwaters reached more than 12 inches and covered a major outlet. Minor damage means floodwaters reached below 12 inches on a structure.
“With this information, FEMA was able to take that data and take it to the feds to determine the disaster declaration,” said Apuna.
Representatives from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Small Business Administration went out into the community to validate the information.
“It was important that we went out right after the storms to assess flood lines within houses and to really understand the level of damage,” said Apuna.
She said close to 56 percent of those affected did not have flood insurance. “That’s where FEMA comes in. If you don’t have insurance, FEMA hopefully can cover that cost.”
Apuna testified that the DPP is providing residents with the tools, resources, and guidance needed to restore structures.
DPP also received 17 new permit applications from flood victims.
“Six are repair permits, two are alteration or addition, which we need to look at because they might not be necessarily Kona low-affected,” said Apuna.
Staff can waive permitting fees on a case-by-case basis.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Tin Can Mailman: Preserving Hawaii’s past, one paper treasure at a time
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Oswalt-Sanchez owns Tin Can Mailman, tucked into Honolulu’s Chinatown along Nuʻuanu Avenue—a shop where history doesn’t sit behind glass.
“Generations progress, and they age out; people don’t realize how special some of this older stuff is,” says Christopher Owalt-Sanchez. “It’s all little, tiny pieces that if we don’t talk about and we don’t share, it’s going to be forgotten.”
It’s stacked, shelved, and cataloged in the form of everyday artifacts: vintage canned food labels, old travel brochures, restaurant menus, and movie lobby cards that once helped sell an evening at the theater.
Inside, you’ll find lobby cards advertising films shot in Hawaiʻi or centered on island life—bright, nostalgic snapshots from a time when going to the movies was an event.
“This is back when movie theaters only had one screen, and the lobby was like a very posh, sort of, like a nicer hotel lobby,” Owalt-Sanchez explains. “So, they would utilize every little bit of space. So, these would have been in the lobby, and they would have been advertised—a movie that could have only played one night or a movie that was coming.”
The shop also holds travel brochures from United Airlines and Aloha Airlines, along with menus from restaurants that helped define eras of Waikīkī dining—but are now long gone. Names like Ciro’s, Lau Yee Chai, and Tops live on in print, offering a glimpse into what people ordered, what it cost, and what “a night out” looked like decades ago.
“You know, you go to a lot of places now, new places that are opening up—the menus are digital. You scan a QR code,” he says. “Here, we’ve actually got the menu. You can see what people were eating. You can see how much it costs and think, that’s really interesting—that you can get, you know, a double bourbon for 25 cents.”
And it’s not just paper ephemeral. Tin Can Mailman is also home to collectibles and curiosities that blur the line between souvenir and story—objects that spark memories for some and discoveries for others.
A Shop With a Story of Its Own
Even Tin Can Mailman’s name comes with history—and the business has traveled nearly as much as the items it sells.
“Well, the Tin Can Mailman originally opened in the 1970s in a town called Arcata, California. It was originally a bookstore,” Owalt-Sanchez says. After a divorce, the original owners split: “The lady kept her Tin Can Mailman in Arcata, and the man took his Tin Can Mailman to Kauaʻi, opening in the mid-1980s.”
Over the years, the store moved through roughly five locations on Kauaʻi. The owner sold it in 2003, died in 2005, and the shop eventually made its way to Oʻahu—relocating to Chinatown in November 2009. The Arcata store, Owalt-Sanchez adds, still exists today, but the two are no longer connected.
So why “Tin Can Mailman”?
“He named it after an island in Tonga, where they would take the mail and weld it shut in big tin biscuit cans or cookie cans,” he explains. “And the men would swim out to the passing ships and deliver the mail and get the new mail and then bring it back to the island. And those were the tin can mailmen.”
The practice dates back more than a century, he says—first as a necessity, later as a novelty, even evolving into what was known as “tin can canoe mail.”
Keeping the Details From Disappearing
Owalt-Sanchez says Tin Can Mailman has sourced items from all over the world.
“Tin Can Mailman has bought things as far away as Argentina and as close as across the street,” he says.
But for him, the point isn’t simply collecting—it’s connecting. He sees each label, menu, card, and brochure as a fragment of lived experience, especially as older generations fade and their everyday stories go with them.
“I like to tell you about what the industry was like in the 40s, what was selling in the 40s, what people were sending home,” he says. “Because that generation is, you know, slowly disappearing. And if we don’t talk about it, it’s just gone. That’s all, little pieces of love and little pieces of light that are just float away into the wind.”
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Soaring air fares hit interisland flights
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – If you’ve booked a flight lately, you know that air fares between the Hawaiian islands have been skyrocketing. That’s affecting everyone from visitors to families — and even high school and college teams in a state where air travel is a fact of life.
One Oahu family has two boys — Elijah Ickes plays baseball for the University of Hawaii at Manoa, while is brother, Tui, plays for the U.H.-Hilo Vulcans.
Tui will have his senior night in Hilo this weekend, and two family members are flying there.
“So we’re trying to figure out which way we’re going to go, because I think we’re going to go Southwest there and Hawaiian back because of the time difference. But it’s like 150 each way,” said family member Jesus Hoomalu.
That’s about a $600 expense. And those are the cheap seats.
Have regular interisland air fares been that high?
“Never before,” said Jerry Agrusa, a professor at the U.H. School of Travel Industry Management. “What we’re having is a shortage of both flights and then the fuel surcharge is just being carried over to all the passengers. And then they both have raised the prices on the luggage as well.”
Since the Iran War began, air fares on domestic flights have surged 18%, and international flights have risen by over $100 a ticket because of jet fuel prices that have doubled to over $220 a barrel. That’s much higher than gasoline prices because jet fuel requires more production and most of it comes through the Middle East.
The sky-high fares could ground some interisland travelers this summer.
“I think the biggest challenge is going to be that 25 percent in the summers that are taking staycations that are going outer island, the kamaaina, are not going to do as much,” said Agrusa.
It’s also tough for teams heading to the first-ever high school state surfing championships this weekend on Maui. Waialua High School surf coach Spencer Suitt has been looking at flights from Honolulu to Kahului.
“There’s a ticket, 7:25 flight tomorrow, and then a return flight on Saturday — 638 dollars,” he said as he look at the prices on his computer screen.
Suitt said his athletes booked their flights early, but families who want to go could take a big financial hit.
“By the time the plane tickets come through, the rent-a-car, the hotel, the food — I don’t know if you’re leaving your car at the airport, too. That’s another thirty dollars a day,” said Suitt.
“Hopefully this war will end and the price of oil will drop, and then the airlines won’t be charging as much money,” said Agrusa.
However, experts said the price will take longer to drop than it did to jump.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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