Hawaii Honeymoon Packages: Island-by-Island Guide to the Best Deals (2026)

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Tropical beach in Hawaii at sunset

Hawaii is the most searched honeymoon destination in the United States, and the word "package" appears in nearly every search query about it. That makes sense -- flights to Hawaii are expensive, resorts are expensive, and the idea of bundling everything into one price feels like the smart move.

Sometimes it is. Sometimes it is not.

The problem with Hawaii honeymoon packages is that Hawaii does not operate like the Caribbean or Mexico. There are very few true all-inclusive resorts on the islands. When you see "Hawaii honeymoon package," you are usually looking at one of three things: a flight-plus-hotel bundle from an online travel agency, a resort credit deal where the property throws in a spa treatment and breakfast, or a travel agent's curated itinerary with markup. Each of these can be a great deal or a terrible one depending on which island you pick, when you travel, and whether you actually do the comparison math.

This guide breaks down Hawaii honeymoon packages by island, by budget, and by booking method. Every price range listed is based on 2026 rates for two people, sourced from direct resort pricing, Costco Travel bundles, and major OTAs. Nothing is made up, nothing is sponsored, and nothing is "starting from" a price you will never actually pay.


Table of Contents

  1. Quick Reference: Package Tiers by Island
  2. Island-by-Island Package Guide
  3. All-Inclusive vs DIY in Hawaii
  4. Best Booking Platforms for Hawaii Packages
  5. When to Book: Timing and Pricing
  6. Sample 7-Night Package Breakdowns
  7. 10 Money-Saving Tips for Hawaii Honeymoons
  8. Keep Exploring
  9. FAQ

Quick Reference: Package Tiers by Island

Before diving into the details, here is what you can realistically expect to pay for a 7-night Hawaii honeymoon package for two in 2026, including flights from the US mainland (West Coast departure) and hotel.

| Island | Budget Tier | Mid-Range Tier | Luxury Tier | |--------|------------|----------------|-------------| | Oahu | $3,000-$4,500 | $5,000-$7,500 | $8,000-$15,000+ | | Maui | $4,000-$5,500 | $6,000-$9,000 | $10,000-$20,000+ | | Kauai | $4,000-$5,500 | $6,500-$9,000 | $10,000-$18,000+ | | Big Island | $3,500-$5,000 | $5,500-$8,000 | $9,000-$16,000+ |

What these tiers include:

  • Budget: Flights + 3-star hotel or vacation rental, no meals, rental car not included
  • Mid-Range: Flights + 4-star resort with breakfast or resort credits ($100-$200 daily), rental car possible
  • Luxury: Flights + 5-star resort with spa credits, upgraded room category, possible rental car and excursion credits

East Coast departures add $400-$800 per person to all tiers. Midwest departures add $200-$400 per person.

If you are still deciding whether Hawaii is the right fit for your budget, our honeymoon cost guide covers average spending across 30+ destinations, and the budget calculator lets you model your specific scenario.


Island-by-Island Package Guide

Each Hawaiian island has a different personality, a different price point, and different package options. Choosing the right island is actually more important than choosing the right package -- because the island determines what you will spend on food, activities, and transport once you arrive.


Maui: The Classic Honeymoon Island

Maui is the default Hawaii honeymoon island for a reason. The southwest coast (Wailea, Kihei) has the most reliable weather in the state, the beaches are stunning, and the resort infrastructure is built for couples. It is also the most expensive Hawaiian island for accommodation, which is why packages here matter the most -- the savings on bundled rates can be substantial.

Why Maui for honeymoons: Best beaches in Hawaii (Makena, Ka'anapali, Kapalua), excellent restaurant scene outside the resorts, the Road to Hana is a genuinely unforgettable day trip, and Haleakala sunrise is one of those rare tourist experiences that actually delivers on the hype.

The downside: Maui is expensive across the board. A sit-down dinner for two at a decent restaurant will run $120-$200 before drinks. Rental cars average $80-$120/day. The resort fee culture is aggressive -- expect $40-$60/night added on top of your room rate at most properties.

Top Maui Resorts for Honeymoon Packages

Four Seasons Maui at Wailea The benchmark luxury honeymoon resort in Hawaii. Oceanfront rooms, three pools (the adults-only serenity pool is worth the premium alone), and a spa that consistently ranks among the best in the US. The honeymoon package typically includes a room upgrade (subject to availability), daily breakfast for two, one couples spa treatment, and a bottle of champagne.

  • Package price (7 nights): $8,500-$14,000 for hotel only, depending on season and room category
  • With flights (West Coast): $10,000-$16,000 per couple
  • What is included: Breakfast daily, one spa credit, resort fee waived in some packages
  • What is not: Lunch, dinner, most activities, rental car, airport transfers

Andaz Maui at Wailea Resort The more modern, design-forward alternative to the Four Seasons, and often $100-$200/night cheaper. The rooftop bar is excellent, the rooms are large by Maui standards, and the location on Mokapu Beach is slightly less crowded than Ka'anapali. Hyatt loyalty members can sometimes book with points, making this one of the best value luxury options in Hawaii.

  • Package price (7 nights): $5,500-$9,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $7,000-$11,000 per couple
  • What is included: Varies by package -- some include breakfast, others offer resort credits ($100-$150/day)
  • Best for: Couples who want Wailea quality without Four Seasons prices, especially Hyatt members

Montage Kapalua Bay On the northwest coast, Montage sits above Kapalua Bay -- one of the best snorkelling beaches on Maui. The property is quieter and more residential-feeling than the Wailea resorts. Suites are large (600+ sq ft minimum), which matters when you are spending seven nights somewhere. The honeymoon package typically includes daily breakfast, a sunset sail or snorkel cruise, and spa credits.

  • Package price (7 nights): $7,000-$12,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $8,500-$14,000 per couple
  • What is included: Breakfast, one excursion, spa credit (amount varies by season)
  • Best for: Couples who prefer quiet luxury over scene-y resort energy

Wailea Beach Resort (Marriott) The most accessible luxury option in Wailea. Not as polished as the Four Seasons or Andaz, but the beach location is outstanding and Marriott Bonvoy members can redeem points or get better package rates. Costco Travel frequently runs competitive bundles for this property.

  • Package price (7 nights): $4,000-$6,500 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $5,500-$8,500 per couple
  • What is included: Costco packages often bundle daily breakfast + resort credit ($75-$100/day)
  • Best for: Marriott loyalists and couples looking for Wailea on a tighter budget

Oahu: Waikiki Value and North Shore Adventure

Oahu is the most affordable Hawaiian island for honeymoon packages because of sheer hotel inventory. Waikiki alone has over 30,000 hotel rooms, which means competition keeps prices lower than the neighbour islands. It is also the easiest island to visit without a rental car -- Waikiki is walkable, and Uber/Lyft coverage is the best in the state.

Why Oahu for honeymoons: Lowest package prices in Hawaii, excellent food scene (Honolulu has James Beard-recognised restaurants), no rental car needed in Waikiki, Pearl Harbor and Diamond Head for non-beach days, and Kailua/Lanikai on the windward side is arguably the most beautiful beach in Hawaii.

The downside: Waikiki can feel crowded and touristy. If your honeymoon vision is "secluded tropical paradise," Waikiki is not that. The best beaches on Oahu (Lanikai, Waimanalo) require a 30-45 minute drive from Waikiki. Resort fees in Waikiki are universal and frustrating ($35-$55/night).

Top Oahu Resorts for Honeymoon Packages

Halekulani The most romantic hotel in Waikiki, and it is not particularly close. Halekulani has been operating since 1907 and carries a quiet elegance that the mega-resorts next door cannot replicate. The signature pool with its orchid mosaic is iconic, the restaurant La Mer holds AAA Five Diamond status, and the rooms on the Diamond Head side have views that justify the premium.

  • Package price (7 nights): $5,500-$9,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $7,000-$11,000 per couple
  • What is included: Honeymoon packages vary -- typically breakfast daily, one dinner at La Mer or Orchids, spa credit
  • Best for: Couples who want luxury without the mega-resort chaos

The Royal Hawaiian The "Pink Palace of the Pacific" sits on the best stretch of Waikiki Beach. It is a Marriott Luxury Collection property, which means Bonvoy members get perks. The Mai Tai Bar at sunset is a genuine Hawaii experience. Rooms in the historic wing have more character; rooms in the Mailani Tower have better views and more modern finishes.

  • Package price (7 nights): $4,000-$7,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $5,500-$9,000 per couple
  • What is included: Costco and Pleasant Holidays packages often include breakfast + $75-$100 daily resort credit
  • Best for: Couples who want a Waikiki icon with good package deals

Four Seasons Oahu at Ko Olina Located 30 minutes west of Waikiki in the Ko Olina resort community, this is Oahu's quietest luxury option. The lagoons are calm and uncrowded, the pool area is serene, and it feels more like a neighbour island resort than an Oahu property. The trade-off: you need a rental car or expensive ride-shares to get anywhere outside Ko Olina.

  • Package price (7 nights): $7,000-$12,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $8,500-$14,000 per couple
  • What is included: Similar to Four Seasons Maui -- breakfast, spa credit, occasional room upgrade
  • Best for: Couples who want Four Seasons luxury but want to be on Oahu (maybe for Pearl Harbor or the food scene)

Outrigger Waikiki Beach Resort The best mid-range option directly on Waikiki Beach. Outrigger properties are Hawaiian-owned and well-run, and this location -- right on the sand, steps from the best restaurants -- is unbeatable at this price point. Rooms are not large, but you are not spending your honeymoon in the room.

  • Package price (7 nights): $2,800-$4,500 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $4,000-$6,500 per couple
  • What is included: OTA packages often include breakfast; Costco bundles add resort credit
  • Best for: Couples who want a beachfront Waikiki honeymoon without luxury resort prices

Kauai: The Adventure-Romance Island

Kauai is the least developed major Hawaiian island and the most naturally beautiful. The Na Pali Coast is one of the most dramatic stretches of coastline in the world. Waimea Canyon is called "the Grand Canyon of the Pacific," and while that is a stretch, it is genuinely spectacular. Kauai attracts couples who want their honeymoon to involve hiking, kayaking, and helicopter tours alongside the beach days.

Why Kauai for honeymoons: Na Pali Coast (by boat, helicopter, or the Kalalau Trail), Waimea Canyon, quieter beaches, fewer tourists than Maui, incredible hiking, and a pace of life that feels the most "old Hawaii" of any island.

The downside: Limited nightlife and dining compared to Maui or Oahu. Resort options are concentrated in two areas (Poipu on the south shore, Princeville on the north shore), and the drive between them is about 90 minutes. Weather on the north shore is unpredictable -- Kauai is the wettest Hawaiian island. Rental car is absolutely mandatory.

Top Kauai Resorts for Honeymoon Packages

1 Hotel Hanalei Bay Reopened in 2022 after a major renovation (formerly the St. Regis / Princeville Resort), 1 Hotel Hanalei Bay is the flagship luxury property on Kauai's north shore. The setting is extraordinary -- perched on a bluff above Hanalei Bay with views of the Na Pali Coast. The brand's eco-luxury positioning works well in Kauai's environment-first culture. The pool area was completely redesigned and the spa is among the best in Hawaii.

  • Package price (7 nights): $7,000-$12,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $8,500-$14,000 per couple
  • What is included: Varies -- expect breakfast, spa credit, and occasionally a Na Pali boat tour credit
  • Best for: Couples who want the most dramatic resort setting in Hawaii

Grand Hyatt Kauai Resort and Spa The grande dame of Kauai's south shore (Poipu). The pool complex is massive and beautifully landscaped, the grounds are lush, and the Anara Spa is consistently rated among the top resort spas in the US. Poipu's south shore location means more reliable sunshine than the north shore. Hyatt points redemptions can stretch your budget significantly.

  • Package price (7 nights): $5,000-$8,500 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $6,500-$10,500 per couple
  • What is included: Costco and Pleasant Holidays bundles typically include breakfast + $75-$125 daily resort credit
  • Best for: Couples who want a full-service resort experience on Kauai without north shore weather risk

Koloa Landing Resort at Poipu A condo-style resort (1-3 bedroom units with full kitchens) that packages well for honeymoons because of the kitchen -- you can cook some meals and save significantly on food costs. The pool area rivals any resort on Kauai, and the Poipu location puts you near good restaurants and Poipu Beach.

  • Package price (7 nights): $3,500-$6,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $5,000-$8,000 per couple
  • What is included: Kitchen in every unit (huge money saver), pool access, fitness centre
  • Best for: Couples who want space and the option to self-cater some meals

Big Island (Hawaii Island): Volcanoes and Beaches

The Big Island is the most geographically diverse of the Hawaiian islands and offers something no other island can: an active volcano (Kilauea), black sand beaches, and the ability to drive from tropical rainforest to snow-capped summit (Mauna Kea) in under two hours. It is also generally less expensive than Maui or Kauai for comparable quality, which makes it the best value for couples who want luxury plus adventure.

Why Big Island for honeymoons: Hawaii Volcanoes National Park (bucket list), black and green sand beaches, Mauna Kea stargazing (among the best in the world), Kona coffee farm tours, manta ray night dives, and the Kohala Coast resorts are world-class but less crowded than Maui's.

The downside: The Big Island is big. Really big. It takes 3-4 hours to drive from the Kohala Coast resorts to Volcanoes National Park. Rental car is non-negotiable. The beaches on the Kohala Coast (Hapuna, Mauna Kea Beach) are beautiful but fewer in number than Maui. The Hilo side gets significant rainfall.

Top Big Island Resorts for Honeymoon Packages

Mauna Lani, Auberge Resorts Collection The premier luxury resort on the Big Island after its 2020 renovation under the Auberge brand. Set among ancient fishponds and petroglyphs on the Kohala Coast, Mauna Lani has a sense of place that most Hawaii resorts lack. The rooms are beautiful, the restaurants are excellent (especially CanoeHouse), and the private beach is one of the most sheltered on the coast.

  • Package price (7 nights): $6,500-$11,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $8,000-$13,000 per couple
  • What is included: Honeymoon packages typically include breakfast, spa credits ($200-$300 total), and a cultural experience
  • Best for: Couples who want the Big Island's best resort experience

Fairmont Orchid Adjacent to Mauna Lani on the Kohala Coast, the Fairmont Orchid is slightly more accessible in price while delivering a similar beachfront experience. The pool area is expansive, the luau is one of the better resort luaus in Hawaii, and the Spa Without Walls -- an outdoor spa concept set in a tropical garden -- is unique and memorable.

  • Package price (7 nights): $4,500-$7,500 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $6,000-$9,500 per couple
  • What is included: Costco packages frequently include breakfast + resort credit ($75-$100/day)
  • Best for: Couples who want Kohala Coast quality with better value than Mauna Lani

Mauna Kea Beach Hotel The original luxury resort in Hawaii -- opened in 1965 by Laurance Rockefeller on what is arguably the most beautiful beach in the state. The hotel has been thoroughly modernised, but retains a mid-century elegance and a curated art collection worth millions. Hapuna Beach, a short shuttle ride away, is regularly rated the best beach in Hawaii.

  • Package price (7 nights): $5,500-$9,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $7,000-$11,000 per couple
  • What is included: Breakfast, golf or spa credits, access to Hapuna Beach Prince shuttle
  • Best for: Couples who appreciate history and want the best beach access on the Big Island

Hilton Waikoloa Village The Big Island's mega-resort, with a monorail, boat canal, dolphin lagoon, and three pools. It is not intimate or romantic in the traditional sense, but if you want a resort where you never need to leave the property, Waikoloa delivers. It is also the most affordable Kohala Coast option and packages extremely well through Costco and Hilton's direct channels.

  • Package price (7 nights): $3,000-$5,000 hotel only
  • With flights (West Coast): $4,500-$7,000 per couple
  • What is included: OTA packages vary -- Hilton Honors members get better direct rates, Costco bundles add resort credit
  • Best for: Couples who want resort amenities and activity without the luxury price tag

All-Inclusive vs DIY in Hawaii

This section is critical because it addresses the biggest misconception in Hawaii honeymoon planning: the idea that you can book an "all-inclusive" Hawaiian honeymoon the way you would in Cancun or Montego Bay.

You cannot.

Hawaii has essentially zero true all-inclusive resorts in the Caribbean sense. There is no Hawaiian equivalent of Sandals or Excellence where you pay one rate and everything -- food, drinks, activities, tips -- is included. The closest you get is a resort that bundles breakfast and a daily credit, which is a long way from all-inclusive.

What "Hawaii Honeymoon Package" Actually Means

When you see a Hawaii honeymoon package advertised, it is almost always one of these:

Flight + Hotel Bundle An OTA (Expedia, Costco Travel, Pleasant Holidays) negotiates bulk rates with airlines and hotels, then sells them together at a price that is typically 10-20% less than booking separately. This is the most common type of Hawaii package, and it can represent genuine savings -- but only if you verify the math. Sometimes the "package price" is the same as or even higher than booking the components individually.

Resort Credit Package The resort itself offers a package: book 5+ nights and get daily breakfast, a spa credit, or a room upgrade. These are common at the Four Seasons, Andaz, Montage, and other luxury properties. The value depends entirely on whether you would have purchased those extras anyway. A $200/night resort credit is worthless if you were planning to eat off-property and skip the spa.

Travel Agent Curated Package A travel agent (or online equivalent like Journi or Zicasso) builds a custom itinerary: flights, hotels, rental car, activities, sometimes inter-island flights. These can be excellent for multi-island honeymoons because the logistics get complex. The agent earns a commission from the suppliers, so the price to you should not be higher than booking directly -- but verify.

The All-Inclusive Math in Hawaii

Let us do the actual comparison for a 7-night Maui honeymoon:

DIY Approach:

  • Flights (LAX-OGG, round trip for two): $800-$1,200
  • Rental car (7 days at $90/day): $630
  • Hotel (Wailea Beach Resort, $350/night): $2,450
  • Food ($150/day for two, mix of restaurants and takeout): $1,050
  • Activities (snorkel tour $150, Haleakala sunrise tour $300, Road to Hana gas + stops $100): $550
  • Resort fee ($55/night x 7): $385
  • DIY Total: $5,865-$6,265

Package Approach (Costco Travel bundle):

  • Costco 7-night Maui package (flights + Wailea Beach Resort + breakfast + $100/day resort credit): approximately $5,200-$6,800 depending on dates
  • Rental car (add-on through Costco): $500-$600
  • Food (breakfast included, so $100/day for lunch and dinner): $700
  • Activities (use resort credit for one, pay for others): $350-$500
  • Package Total: $6,750-$8,900

Wait -- the package is more expensive? Sometimes, yes. The Costco bundle includes a higher room category and the resort credit, but if you were going to book a standard room and eat cheap, the DIY route can win. The package wins when you would have spent on those upgrades and extras anyway.

The honest answer: Hawaii packages save money for couples who want a curated, comfortable experience and would otherwise spend on restaurant breakfasts, spa treatments, and room upgrades. They do not save money for budget travellers who are happy with a rental condo, grocery store meals, and free beaches.

For a deeper comparison of how Hawaii stacks up against truly all-inclusive destinations, read our Hawaii vs Caribbean honeymoon breakdown, or browse our full list of all-inclusive honeymoon resorts.


Best Booking Platforms for Hawaii Packages

Not all booking platforms are created equal for Hawaii, and some are significantly better than others for specific scenarios.

Costco Travel

Best for: Mid-range and luxury resort packages, especially Marriott and Hyatt properties.

Costco Travel is the single best platform for Hawaii honeymoon packages if you are a Costco member. Their buying power with Hawaiian resorts is enormous, and their packages consistently include extras (breakfast, resort credits, room upgrades) that you would not get booking direct. The prices are genuinely competitive -- they price-match and often beat OTAs -- and the 2% Executive Member rebate on travel purchases effectively gives you another discount.

The main limitation: Costco Travel does not cover every property. You will not find boutique hotels or vacation rentals. And their website is functional but not beautiful -- expect a 2015-era booking experience.

Typical savings: 10-25% versus booking flight + hotel separately, plus included extras worth $50-$150/day.

Pleasant Holidays

Best for: Multi-island packages and inter-island logistics.

Pleasant Holidays has been specialising in Hawaii packages since 1959, which is longer than Hawaii has been a state. Their strength is expertise: they know the islands, they have relationships with smaller properties that Costco does not carry, and their multi-island packages handle the inter-island flights and hotel transfers seamlessly.

If your honeymoon plan involves Maui + Big Island or Oahu + Kauai, Pleasant Holidays is likely your best option. They also offer romance-specific packages that include extras like private dinners, helicopter tours, and sunset sails.

Typical savings: 5-15% versus DIY on multi-island trips; the real value is in logistics and curation rather than raw price.

Direct Resort Booking

Best for: Luxury resorts during promotional periods.

The Four Seasons, Montage, 1 Hotel, and Mauna Lani all run direct booking promotions that can beat third-party prices, especially during shoulder seasons. These often include guaranteed upgrades, late checkout, and F&B credits that you will not get through an OTA. The downside: you handle flights separately, so you lose the bundling savings.

When this wins: During resort-specific sales (typically announced via email to past guests or loyalty members), for properties not well-covered by Costco, and when you have status with the hotel loyalty programme.

Expedia / Hotels.com / Booking.com

Best for: Budget tier and last-minute bookings.

The major OTAs are fine for Hawaii but rarely the best deal. Their strength is breadth -- they cover everything from hostels to five-star resorts -- and their last-minute deals can be sharp when hotels need to fill rooms. Hotels.com's "stay 10 nights, get 1 free" rewards programme can also add up over time.

Typical savings: Comparable to or slightly worse than Costco for resort packages; occasionally better for budget accommodation and last-minute deals.

Airbnb / VRBO

Best for: Couples who want a private condo or cottage instead of a resort.

Not a "package" in the traditional sense, but vacation rentals deserve mention because they can dramatically change the cost equation. A 1-bedroom condo in Kihei (Maui) runs $150-$250/night versus $350-$600/night for a Wailea resort, and having a kitchen cuts food costs by 40-60%. The trade-off: no pool, no spa, no daily housekeeping, and you are managing your own logistics.

Important note: Hawaii has significantly tightened vacation rental regulations since 2022. Maui in particular has restricted short-term rentals in many areas. Always verify that the listing is legally permitted before booking.


When to Book: Timing and Pricing

Hawaii has clear seasonal pricing patterns, and understanding them can save you $1,000-$3,000 on the same package.

Peak Season (December-April, June-August)

Prices: Highest of the year. Expect to pay 30-50% more than shoulder season for the same room.

December through March is peak because mainlanders are escaping winter. June through August is peak because families travel during school holidays. Christmas/New Year's week and spring break are the absolute pinnacle -- some resorts charge 2x their normal rate.

Should you book peak? If your wedding is in May or November and your honeymoon immediately follows, you have no choice. If you have flexibility, avoid peak. The weather in Hawaii is good year-round (it is the tropics), so you are paying a premium purely for demand, not for better conditions.

Booking window: 4-6 months in advance for peak season. Popular resorts (Four Seasons, Halekulani) sell out their best room categories 6+ months ahead for Christmas and February.

Shoulder Season (May, September-November)

Prices: 20-35% below peak. This is the sweet spot.

May is excellent -- the weather is warm, the winter crowds have left, and summer families have not arrived yet. September through mid-December (before the holiday rush) is similarly good, with the caveat that September-October can bring slightly more rain on the windward (east/north) sides of the islands.

The absolute best time for value: Late September through October. You get the lowest prices of the year at most resorts, smaller crowds, warm water (ocean temperatures peak in September), and whale season has not started yet (if you care about that, wait until December).

Booking window: 2-4 months in advance is usually fine. You will have more room selection and can often negotiate or find promo codes.

Booking Lead Time Tips

  • Flights: Book 2-3 months before departure for the best fares. Hawaii flights from the West Coast average $250-$400 round trip when booked at the right time. Southwest Airlines flies to all four major islands and frequently runs sales in the $198-$298 range.
  • Hotels: For packages, 3-4 months is ideal. Too early and you miss promotional pricing; too late and availability narrows.
  • Rental cars: Book as early as possible. Maui and Kauai rental car availability has been tight since the post-pandemic surge, and last-minute rates can be eye-watering ($150-$200/day). Book at 3-4 months and rebook if prices drop -- most rental car reservations are fully refundable.

Sample 7-Night Package Breakdowns

Three realistic budgets, three different experiences. All prices are for two people, including flights from Los Angeles (the most common departure city for Hawaii), 7 nights of accommodation, and the essentials.

Budget: The $3,000-$4,000 Honeymoon (Oahu)

This is the "Hawaii on a real budget" honeymoon. It works, it is enjoyable, but it requires trade-offs.

| Item | Cost | |------|------| | Flights: LAX to HNL, round trip for two (Southwest or Hawaiian Airlines, booked 2-3 months out) | $500-$700 | | Hotel: Outrigger Reef Waikiki (7 nights, standard room, off-peak) | $1,400-$1,800 | | Food: Mix of plate lunches ($12-$15/person), grocery store breakfasts, and 2-3 nicer dinners ($100-$150 each) | $700-$900 | | Activities: Diamond Head hike (free + $5 parking), Kailua Beach day trip via bus ($5.50), North Shore drive ($30 gas), one snorkel trip ($80/person) | $200-$300 | | Transport: TheBus passes + 2 Uber rides | $100-$150 | | Total | $2,900-$3,850 |

What you sacrifice: No rental car (limits your flexibility), no resort experience (Outrigger Reef is nice but it is not a resort), limited splurge dinners, and no spa or luxury extras.

What you gain: A week in Hawaii with your partner, Waikiki Beach every day, excellent local food, and the best free activities on any Hawaiian island.

Mid-Range: The $6,000-$7,500 Honeymoon (Maui)

This is the sweet spot for most couples. You get a real resort experience on the best honeymoon island without financial stress.

| Item | Cost | |------|------| | Costco Travel package: LAX to OGG flights + Wailea Beach Resort (Marriott) 7 nights + daily breakfast + $100/day resort credit | $5,200-$6,200 | | Rental car (booked through Costco, compact): 7 days | $500-$600 | | Food: Breakfast included; lunch from food trucks/casual ($25-$35/day for two); 4 nice dinners at $120-$180 each | $650-$850 | | Activities: Road to Hana self-drive (gas + stops $100), Haleakala sunrise (reservation free, gas $30), snorkel at Molokini ($120/person) | $370-$450 | | Spa: Use resort credit for one couples treatment; one additional treatment | $0-$200 | | Total | $6,720-$8,300 |

What you get: A proper Wailea resort with pool and beach, daily breakfast so mornings are relaxed, enough resort credit to cover a spa treatment or two upgraded dinners, a rental car for exploring, and Maui's three signature experiences (Road to Hana, Haleakala, Molokini).

Pro tip: Book the Costco package during September-October for the lower end of these ranges. The same package in February could be $1,500-$2,000 more.

Luxury: The $10,000-$15,000 Honeymoon (Maui + Big Island)

A two-island honeymoon that covers Hawaii's best resort and its most unique natural wonder.

| Item | Cost | |------|------| | Flights: LAX to OGG, round trip for two + inter-island OGG to KOA one-way for two | $900-$1,400 | | Maui (4 nights): Four Seasons Wailea, ocean-view room, honeymoon package (breakfast, spa credit, champagne) | $4,000-$6,000 | | Big Island (3 nights): Mauna Lani, Auberge Collection, ocean-view room, honeymoon package (breakfast, cultural experience) | $2,800-$4,500 | | Rental cars: Maui (4 days) + Big Island (3 days) | $700-$900 | | Food: Most breakfasts included; budget $175/day for remaining meals (mix of resort dining and off-property restaurants) | $900-$1,200 | | Activities: Road to Hana, Haleakala sunrise, Hawaii Volcanoes NP, Mauna Kea stargazing tour ($250/couple), manta ray night snorkel ($200/couple) | $650-$800 | | Spa: Covered partly by package credits; one additional couples treatment at Mauna Lani | $200-$350 | | Total | $10,150-$15,150 |

What you get: Two of Hawaii's finest resorts, two islands, every signature experience, and a honeymoon you will talk about for decades. The Maui portion delivers beaches and romance; the Big Island portion delivers adventure and wonder. The Volcanoes-to-stars day (drive through the national park during the day, stargaze on Mauna Kea at night) is one of the most extraordinary days you can have anywhere in the world.

For broader package comparisons across destinations, see our honeymoon packages guide or compare with Maldives honeymoon packages for a very different price-value equation.


10 Money-Saving Tips for Hawaii Honeymoons

These are specific to Hawaii -- not generic "travel tips" you have read in a hundred other articles.

1. Fly Southwest and Check Bags Free

Southwest Airlines flies to Honolulu (Oahu), Kahului (Maui), Kona (Big Island), and Lihue (Kauai) from multiple West Coast cities. Their fares are competitive with Hawaiian Airlines, but the real advantage is two free checked bags per person. That saves $120-$280 round trip for two people on any other airline. They also allow free cancellation and rebooking, which means you can lock in a fare and rebook if it drops.

2. Use Costco Travel, But Verify the Math

Costco Travel is excellent for Hawaii, but not universally the cheapest. Before booking, add up the flight price on Google Flights + the hotel price on the resort's direct website. If the Costco package is cheaper AND includes extras (breakfast, credits), book it. If the components are cheaper separately, book separately. The math takes 10 minutes and can save you hundreds.

3. Book a Condo for Part of Your Trip

If you are doing 7+ nights, consider splitting: 4 nights at a resort for the honeymoon experience, 3 nights at a vacation rental condo for the adventure/exploration phase. You get the pool and the spa when you want to relax, and a kitchen and lower nightly rate when you are out hiking and driving all day anyway.

4. Eat Where Locals Eat

Hawaii's best food is not in the resorts. Plate lunches ($12-$18 for a massive portion of kalua pork, lau lau, or chicken katsu with rice and mac salad) are a Hawaiian institution. Food trucks in Kahului, Haleiwa, and Kailua-Kona serve outstanding meals for $10-$20. Even in Waikiki, walking two blocks off the beach drops restaurant prices by 30-40%.

5. Do Not Pay for a Luau Unless It Is One of the Good Ones

Most resort luaus are overpriced and underwhelming -- $150-$250 per person for mediocre food and a generic Polynesian show. The exceptions: Old Lahaina Luau on Maui (book 2-3 months ahead, it sells out), Feast at Mokapu on Maui, and the Fairmont Orchid's Gathering of the Kings on the Big Island. If the luau is not on a "best of" list, skip it and spend the $400+ on a sunset dinner instead.

6. Free Activities Are Some of the Best Activities

Hawaii's greatest attractions cost nothing or nearly nothing: Haleakala sunrise (free with reservation), hiking in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park ($30/vehicle), Diamond Head ($5/person), snorkelling at Kapalua Bay or Hanauma Bay ($25/person entry at Hanauma), watching sunset from any beach. Do not fall into the trap of thinking you need to pay for experiences. The island itself is the experience.

7. Skip the Resort Breakfast (Sometimes)

If your package does not include breakfast, do not default to the resort restaurant -- those $45-per-person buffets add up fast ($630 over 7 mornings for two). Instead, grab acai bowls from a local shop ($12-$15), hit a bakery, or stock your mini-fridge with fruit and pastries from Foodland or Safeway. Save the resort dining budget for dinner.

8. Rent Your Snorkel Gear, Do Not Book a Tour (for Easy Spots)

Snorkel tours make sense for boat-access spots like Molokini Crater or the Na Pali Coast. They do not make sense for beach-entry snorkelling. Rent a mask and snorkel for $10-$15/day from a local shop (Boss Frog's on Maui, Snorkel Bob's everywhere), drive to Kapalua Bay, Kahalu'u Beach (Big Island), or Poipu Beach (Kauai), and snorkel for free. The fish do not care whether you arrived by boat.

9. Use Inter-Island Flights Strategically

If you want to visit two islands, inter-island flights on Hawaiian Airlines or Southwest run $60-$120 one-way when booked in advance. The mistake couples make is booking a round trip to one island and then adding expensive inter-island round trips. Instead, fly open-jaw: fly into Maui, inter-island to Big Island, fly home from Big Island. One less flight, one less airport hassle.

10. Book the Rental Car Early and Rebook Later

Rental car prices in Hawaii fluctuate wildly. Book a refundable reservation 3-4 months out to lock in availability, then check prices weekly as your trip approaches. If the rate drops, cancel and rebook. Discount Hawaii Car Rental (a local aggregator) and Costco Travel often have the best rates. Avoid booking at the airport counter -- you will pay 40-60% more.


Keep Exploring

Planning a Hawaii honeymoon involves more decisions than just the package. These guides cover the specific angles:


FAQ

How much does a Hawaii honeymoon package cost?

A Hawaii honeymoon package for two people, including flights from the US mainland and 7 nights of accommodation, ranges from $3,000-$5,000 for a budget trip on Oahu to $10,000-$20,000+ for a luxury two-island experience. The mid-range sweet spot is $6,000-$8,000 for a Maui resort package with breakfast and daily credits included. Prices vary dramatically by season -- shoulder season (May, September-October) can be 20-35% cheaper than peak winter or summer months.

Are there all-inclusive resorts in Hawaii?

No, not in the Caribbean sense. Hawaii does not have true all-inclusive resorts where meals, drinks, activities, and tips are all bundled into one nightly rate. What you will find are resort packages that include breakfast, daily resort credits ($75-$200/day), and sometimes spa treatments or activity credits. The closest to all-inclusive is booking a luxury resort's honeymoon package, which can cover breakfast, one dinner, and spa credits -- but you will still pay out of pocket for most meals, drinks, and activities.

Which Hawaiian island is best for honeymoons?

Maui is the most popular honeymoon island and the best all-around choice for most couples. It has the best beaches (Wailea, Ka'anapali, Kapalua), the strongest resort infrastructure, an excellent restaurant scene, and the two most iconic day trips in Hawaii (Road to Hana and Haleakala sunrise). Kauai is better for adventure-oriented couples who prioritise hiking and natural beauty. Oahu is best for budget-conscious couples who want urban dining and nightlife alongside their beach time. The Big Island is best for couples who want unique experiences (volcanoes, stargazing, black sand beaches) and slightly lower prices.

When is the cheapest time to go to Hawaii for a honeymoon?

Late September through October offers the lowest prices and smallest crowds. Resort rates drop 20-35% from peak season, flights are cheaper, and rental cars are more available. The weather is excellent -- water temperatures peak in September, and the south/west coasts of all islands get reliable sunshine. The only downside: whale season has not started (humpback whales arrive in December), so if whale watching is important, consider late November or early December before the holiday price spike.

Should I book a Hawaii honeymoon package or plan it myself?

It depends on your travel style. Packages save money if you want resort extras (breakfast, spa credits, room upgrades) that you would purchase anyway. A Costco Travel bundle for a mid-range Maui resort typically saves 10-20% versus booking components separately, plus includes $50-$150/day in extras. DIY planning saves money if you are comfortable with a vacation rental, cooking some meals, and managing your own logistics -- in that case, you can undercut package prices by 20-40%. For multi-island trips, a curated package from Pleasant Holidays or a travel agent usually saves both money and headaches on inter-island logistics.

Do I need a rental car in Hawaii?

On Maui, Kauai, and the Big Island: yes, absolutely. Public transportation on these islands is minimal, and ride-sharing is unreliable outside resort areas. Budget $70-$120/day for a rental car. On Oahu, you can skip the rental car if you are staying in Waikiki -- it is walkable, Uber/Lyft coverage is good, and TheBus reaches most attractions. You would only need a car on Oahu for North Shore and windward coast day trips, which could be handled with a single-day rental.

How far in advance should I book a Hawaii honeymoon package?

Three to four months is the sweet spot for most packages. Booking earlier (6+ months) is advisable for peak season (December-March, June-August) at popular properties like the Four Seasons or Halekulani, which sell out premium room categories early. Booking later (1-2 months) can work for shoulder season travel but limits your resort and room selection. Rental cars should be booked as early as possible -- 3-4 months minimum on Maui and Kauai, where availability has been tight since 2022.

Can I do a multi-island honeymoon, and is it worth the extra cost?

Yes, and it can be outstanding -- but only if you have at least 10 nights total. A 7-night trip split across two islands means just 3 nights on each after accounting for travel days, which is too short to relax. With 10-14 nights, a two-island split (4-5 nights per island) works beautifully. The most popular honeymoon combinations are Maui + Big Island (beaches + volcanoes) and Maui + Kauai (beaches + adventure). Inter-island flights are $60-$120 one-way when booked in advance. Budget an extra $1,500-$3,000 for the second island (flights, accommodation, rental car) on top of a single-island honeymoon cost.

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