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229 thoughts on “Maui Arrival Requirements Revealed for Visitors In 2024”

  1. I and my wife have been to Maui six times and only want to visit Maui. We stay in Kihei every time. We love the people and the atmosphere. We always have a great time. We are planing our next trip to Maui to celebrate our anniversary and my wife’s 80th birthday.

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  2. Businesses may want you back but most locals do not!
    We are tired of being the host and not the recievers of Aloha .
    Regardless of all the show respect to our healing, we are bombarded with the curious questions of visitors.
    When I answer “No, we are not ready for vacationers”. The flippant response to my honest answer gets twisted in their minds. They have a comeback well We “donated!”
    I just get deflated and say if you feel privileged because you made a donation, then don’t donate. It’s the arrogance of the Communicated exchange.. they want a reaction of how wonderful you are.
    We are thankful for people reaching out and donations.If you give with an open heart, then we don’t need snide remarks of your expectations.

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  3. My husband and I have been going to Maui for over 20 years. 11 years ago we purchased what we thought was going to be a retirement home. Unfortunately, we lost our home at Ho’onanea and the best renter ever. We will rebuild and our renter is on board with us. I am very sad that people feel the need to tear down the people of Lahaina and to think this disaster is the same as another, it’s an island, things do not happen quickly. We will be returning 1/19-1/26 and will support the local economy as much as we can. It’s expensive everywhere, if you don’t want to spend the money, please go somewhere else.

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  4. My family and I will be traveling to Maui 1/19-1/26/24, we would like to visit the Cat Sanctuary on Lanai, are their still boats from the Lahaina Harbor going to Lanai or have those be rerouted to another marina?

    1. Maalaea Small Boat Harbor has been cleared of ash and debris to accommodate the Maui-Lanai Ferry

      The Lanaʻi Ferry is currently running 2 round-trip voyages per day, 7 days per week, out of Maalaea Harbor in Central Maui.

  5. I visited a family member on Maui around Thanksgiving. The worst behavior I observed was by a group of people who appeared to be locals who set up a party/get together on a weekend at the local park and beach, played a boom box so loud all day that you couldn’t avoid the booming racket even far away down the beach and in the water, and illegally parked a huge pickup, blocking the park entrance. This rude, thoughtless, and aggressive behavior comes to mind every time I read about some Hawaiian government official lecturing would be tourists about having the correct, respectful, reverent attitude towards others.

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  6. After the Lahaina fire, we will respectfully hold off on going back for at least one or two years. We visited in January 2023 for a destination wedding and visited Lahaina and will wait until it has healed.
    It is very difficult to imagine the devastation that happened and to try to vacation there.

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  7. Aloha Gents,
    Boy, you guys sure pressed “The BIG Red Button” on this post. Point of confusion though; Hawaii has been overcrowded for a long time. Did the HTA create the overcrowding? No? Then what exactly have they been doing? I suggest there has not been a need for the HTA to do anything except collect large pay checks. Obviously anybody that can operate a keyboard knows how to get to Hawaii. Advertising is not necessary. So, what is the HTA tasked with doing now? I recently read here that the government wanted to increase tourism while reducing accommodation. Great. In stumbles the HTA to justify their existence. It looks like they’ve offended most folks that have been exposed to their message so far. A polished act indeed.
    Mahalo

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  8. Despite one frequent mutli-comment person stating the Maui toxic waste “. . . must find its new “home” on ships and barges to a yet unknown destination” the County of Maui is investigating and working on other immediate plans including already building a “temporary” landfill adjacent to what may become the permanent landfill.

    civilbeat.org/2023/12/maui-starts-building-temporary-landfill-for-wildfire-ash-and-debris-despite-public-concerns/?mc_cid=b1e1b35d03&mc_eid=74edbdf4d4

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    1. If you had read the article in full, you would have discovered that the cost of passing EPA muster would almost equal the cost of shipping. Olowalu, if you know the area, is just a bit above the coastal water line. Any serious effort to dig, prepare, and shield the area from leakage would approach multi-billions of dollars. Add the time element involved to plan, apply for and approve a permanent site would add to the delays in infrastructure.

      That is a Temporary site so that Lahaina’s toxic waste can await a more permanent solution.

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  9. Ironically, I believe this message will discourage the tourists who honor Hawaii’s culture and be ignored by the rest. I have been coming to Hawaii for over 30 years and believe I fully respect the culture and the people. I am going to give Maui a miss, not wishing to inadvertently give offense. What put me over the edge was an article about a Maui resident reaming out his seatmates for taking a picture from the window of a departing plane.

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    1. Just returned to Michigan from 8 day trip to Maui. Enjoyed halaleakea sunrise. Ecotours whale watching, Road to hana,molokini crater snorkel and turtle scuba dive, kayak fishing, mama’s fish house. Honeybee farm tour, and iao valley. Found maui peaceful and inviting. We hope we visited respectfully and would love to return . Mahalo!

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  10. I love Maui and always will. Lahaina is a tragedy and nearly five months later its collective government seems incapable of a strategic plan for residents.
    Maui, Hawaii, locals and tourists are not the problem. Too broad a paintbrush like any other generalization.
    Culprits begin in the insatiable greed of hotel, airline, rental, food service, and, yes, government systems. These institutions that regulate and operate tourist-based functions know that tourism is a very deep pocket.
    Lots of ways to get that money and local residents survive as best they can.
    I won’t be back…too expensive. I hope Maui (and Hawaii) can survive the pillaging.

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  11. After 35 years of vacationing in Maui I think we have likely made our last trip to our “previously” favorite vacation destination. IT was not the usual 2 to 4 weeks of relaxing Bliss that we have enjoyed for years. Prices are now in the “rip off” category. $70 dollars for a lunch of hamburgers and milk shakes is outrageous. $350 per week for a rental car is excessive. The $70 tax added to my car rental is unacceptable. The service people we encountered were helpful, pleasant, and polite. However their demeanor does not out outweigh the many negative aspects of our trip. So, after 35 years, I am not returning to Maui any time soon.

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    1. Bill, we were scheduled to visit Maui for the first time, just 9 days before the devastating fire. Our trip (family of 3) was pushed to this month. We were unable to push it out further. I am very sad to read your comment, as you have been for 35yrs., and feel this was your last trip. Besides the uprising costs of everything(we were expecting this), could you please share your further negative experiences, but also any positives that you still enjoyed? We leave in less than a week, and I am hoping that we can still enjoy our bucket list trip we have planned for 7 yrs). Thanks so much!

  12. My wife and I have visited Hawaii many times in the last 20 years. We last visited in September 2023. People were friendly, but we felt that we were being price gouged on almost everything. Until Hawaii gets it act together, we will start vacating in Europe and other places.

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  13. We vacation in Maui for 3 weeks every March/April. It is often the highlight of our annual travels to various places. While the fire in August 2022 has destroyed Lahina, and we will miss visiting the town, we are still looking forward to a relaxing 3 week stay in the Ka’anapali area. Hopefully, the residents will be welcoming and friendly.

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  14. The past few years we would stay 2 to 3 weeks (Timeshare plus hotel).

    We will only be there a week and will be spending the other 2 weeks elsewhere.

    We only have respect for the island and the people of Maui.

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  15. Does anyone know if Maui has a plan in place to remove the non native wild grass that so much fumed the fires?
    Or, are they just focusing on how tourists should behave?

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  16. If Maui had not allowed Oprah Winfrey to buy 1000 acres, Willie Nelson 700 acres ( at least he uses it to rescue horses), Jeff Bezos 14 acres, Larry Ellison 90,000 acres and that is Not a typo, Woody Harrelson 8.5 acres, just to name a few to buy up gross amounts of land there would be more land for Maui locals to live on. Then there would not be this predicament now.
    Also, to help the locals who lost their homes in the fires, these people who own these gross amounts of land should have to open it up to the locals before the govt forces the individual who owns a small vacation rental property to those who lost their homes in the fires.

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    1. No offense but the land these Billionaires purchased is not the reason there is a housing issue.

      As far as Oprah her land was a ranch, there is not the infrastructure to just plop houses there. Feel free to blame the rich, but it is the lack of a master plan for the island and it’s development.

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      1. Agreed… there is plenty of land that could be developed, they are just resistant to development (understandable to some extent) and it is now causing a real issue for them.

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      2. (Not a Bezos fan but worth sharing) The lieutenant governor thanked the Bezos Academy for taking a chance on Hawaiʻi with its Montessori-inspired preschool for low-income families. “What Bezos is offering is so unique because it is free of cost for every family that will be sending their kids to the preschool… What this academy will do is not only provide lunch services—it provides breakfast, lunch, snack and a take-home dinner so that the child will have a healthy, warm meal throughout the entire day,” said Lt. Gov. Luke.

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      3. I agree with your statement. The problem is the locals keep voting the same type people back into office expecting a different outcome .

  17. I can understand both sides of the aisle.
    I have been to Maui a handful of times in the past five years. There are some really rude tourists and some really polite ones. There are some really nice residents and not nice ones.
    If I lived there, I would be upset with the cost of housing and living there also. That does not have to do with the individual tourists itself, but the greedy politicians. The beef is with them.
    Maui is sending so many mixed arrogant messages to would be tourists and to those that have travelled their before
    Now they are spending $900,000 to promote Canadian tourists, they say Canadians are the most respectful tourists. What does that say about anyone who does not come from Canada. What a slap in the face!

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  18. Been going to Maui since 1985. Was married there. I want to go, I don’t want to go. So I will probably go June ’24. Depending on what the experience is will determine whether I ever go back. Other people have gone through trauma and disasters also, they are not the only ones.
    P.S. 4 million visitors to the small area I’m from, last summer.

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    1. Teresa, I have been thinking the same thing.
      So many people and towns have gone thru terrible disasters and death due to them for centuries.
      Maui seems to be milking it.
      It is beginning to rather frustrate me.

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      1. @TomH… As a Lahaina resident and a displaced fire victim who has moved from hotel to hotel, 8 times since August 8, 2023, I find your posts extremely disrespectful. You are exactly the type of visitor who isn’t welcome on Maui and I hope you find other destinations to disrespect. Florida may be a great match for your personality.

        Maui needs visitors to return as quickly as possible. However, if you think any of the 7,000 displaced residents are “milking the system,” please stay away. We welcome visitors who are respectful to people who have lost everything, including loved ones. @TomH is a perfect example of the type of visitor who should visit elsewhere. Mahalo!

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  19. We are traveling to Maui in February. We are frequent Hawaii visitors, and have always been respectful to the land and its people. We will still continue to visit as tourists. Because the rest of the world moves on. It doesn’t stop for a disaster. We had family experience similar losses during CA wine country wildfires. The world didn’t stop, and visitors were still welcomed. Trying to sound like a realist and not insensitive, but at some point, Maui needs to count it’s losses, pick up the pieces, and stop expecting the rest of the world to walk on eggshells for them. They need the tourism. Because the money isn’t going to magically come once the fundraising stops (my 5yo daughter raised over $500 for Maui).

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