April–early June and late August–early December are the cheapest, least-crowded times to visit Hawaii with great weather. Avoid Christmas/New Year (most expensive week of the year).
Hawaii is a year-round destination, but each month has trade-offs. Here's how to time your trip for the experience and price you want.
January – March (Whale Season, Big Surf, Higher Prices)
Humpback whales return to Maui's waters; the North Shores of all islands see massive winter waves; crowds peak around Presidents' Day weekend. Prices high but not at absolute peak. Weather is the warmest dry land + cool ocean combo of the year.
April – Early June (Sweet Spot)
The single best window. Spring break crowds clear by mid-April. Weather is reliable. Flight prices drop 15–25% from winter peak. Cherry blossom-equivalent for Hawaii planners.
Mid-June – August (Family Peak)
School's out → family crowds → highest prices outside Christmas week. Hot and humid; rain rare. Book accommodations 4–6 months ahead.
September – Mid-October (Cheapest)
Quiet shoulder season. Weather still beautiful. Prices drop sharply after Labor Day. Statistically the lowest hurricane risk period actually starts late October.
Mid-October – Mid-December (Underrated)
Excellent value, smaller crowds, big-wave surf season begins on North Shore Oahu. Avoid the week of Thanksgiving and the Honolulu Marathon weekend.
Christmas – New Year (Most Expensive)
The single most expensive week of the year in Hawaii. Book 9+ months in advance or expect to pay 2–3× normal rates.
Cheapest Times to Fly to Hawaii from the US Mainland
- Late April to mid-June
- Late August to early December (excluding Thanksgiving week)
- Mid-January to mid-March (relatively, vs Christmas)
Pro Tip: Tuesday Departures
Inter-island and US mainland → Hawaii fares on Tuesday and Wednesday consistently undercut weekend departures by $100–$200.