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Honolulu 5-Day O'ahu Classic

3-day + Polynesian Cultural Center + Hanauma Bay snorkel + Ko Olina luxury

Honolulu 5-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer

As of 2026
Trip length
5 days
Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
$1,550
Budget–luxury
$690–$3,300

As of 2026, the recommended Honolulu 5-day route runs Day1 Diamond Head Sunrise + Waikiki Beach + Duke's Sunset · Day2 Pearl Harbor + Iolani Palace + Royal Hawaiian Mai Tai · Day3 North Shore Loop + Giovanni's Shrimp + Roy's Waikiki Farewell · Day4 Hanauma Bay Snorkel + Polynesian Cultural Center + Lū'au · Day5 Ko Olina Luxury Resort Day + House Without a Key Farewell + Departure, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $1,550 on a mid-range budget. Days 1-3 are the same as the 3-day O'ahu core (Diamond Head + Waikiki + Pearl Harbor + Iolani Palace + North Shore). Day 4: Hanauma Bay morning snorkel + Polynesian Cultural Center afternoon-evening (six island villages + Hā: Breath of Life dance show + lū'au feast). Day 5: Ko Olina luxury resort day (Four Seasons or Disney Aulani) + final Waikiki sunset at House Without a Key, Halekulani + departure.

5-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$690

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,550

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$3,300

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Diamond Head Sunrise + Waikiki Beach + Duke's Sunset

O'ahu introduction + Hawaiian plate lunch + sunset cocktails

Activities

  1. 06:00 Diamond Head Crater (Lē'ahi) sunrise 2 hours

    232m volcanic crater hike — 1.5km round trip, 300m elevation, 360° O'ahu views from the summit including Waikiki Beach + Pacific Ocean + Koko Head. Reservation mandatory at gostateparks.hawaii.gov (book 30+ days ahead).

    Cost: $5 entry + $10 parking + reservation TIP: Reservation required. Sunrise is around 6:00-6:30. Bring water, sunscreen, and a headlamp for the dark approach. Wear sneakers — the trail has some steep stair sections.
  2. 08:30 Breakfast — Rainbow Drive-In (1961 plate lunch institution) 1 hour

    Honolulu's plate-lunch institution since 1961 — walk-up window order counter on Kapahulu Avenue. Kalua pork + 2 scoops rice + mac salad ($12) is the canonical first-time order. The loco moco ($10) is the comfort-food signature.

    Cost: $10-15 TIP: Cash or card. 15-min walk from Waikiki or 5-min Uber. Order at the window. The kalua pork plate or the mix plate are the canonical first orders.
  3. 10:30 Waikiki Beach + surf lesson 3 hours

    Waikiki Beach (3km of golden sand, Duke Kahanamoku's home break, 24-hour beach life with Diamond Head as the backdrop). Surf lessons available with multiple operators ($80-120 for 2-hour group lesson + board rental). The most-recommended introductory surf experience in Hawaii.

    Cost: Free beach; surf lesson $80-120/2h TIP: Reef-safe sunscreen is required by Hawaii law (oxybenzone + octinoxate banned since 2021). Surf lessons popular with first-timers. Book the lesson 1-2 days ahead via Klook or directly with operators (Hans Hedemann, Waikiki Beach Boys).
  4. 13:30 Lunch — Ono Seafood (Honolulu poke canon) 1 hour

    Honolulu's go-to poke counter — a Kapahulu Avenue neighborhood favorite that locals quietly insist is the best ahi tuna poke in Honolulu. The shoyu ahi (raw tuna in soy sauce + sesame + onion + chili) is the canonical order; the spicy ahi adds mayo + sriracha.

    Cost: $10-20 TIP: Cash or card. 15-min walk from Waikiki, 5-min Uber. Long lines at lunch peak (11-13) — arrive 13:30 for shorter waits. Closed Sundays.
  5. 15:00 Ala Moana Beach Park + Ala Moana Center mall 2.5 hours

    The calmer local-favorite alternative to Waikiki Beach (Honolulu residents prefer Ala Moana Beach over the tourist-crush Waikiki). Ala Moana Center mall (2 million sq ft, the largest open-air shopping mall in the US, with 350+ stores including the Hawaii-exclusive Shirokiya Japanese food hall) is right next door.

    Cost: Free beach; shopping varies TIP: Quieter than Waikiki. The Foodland poke counter at Ala Moana Center is the Honolulu locals' secret-best poke (cheaper than Ono Seafood, equivalent quality). Hawaiian souvenirs at the Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center.
  6. 18:00 Sunset — Duke's Waikiki (Outrigger Reef) 2 hours

    Duke's at the Outrigger Reef — Honolulu's iconic sunset bar named after Duke Kahanamoku (1890-1968, Hawaiian Olympic swimmer + father of modern surfing). Beachfront seating watches the sun set directly over the Pacific with Waikiki Beach + Diamond Head as the backdrop. Hawaiian-international menu (Hawaiian salmon, ahi tuna, classic burgers, Hula Pie dessert).

    Cost: $20-50 cocktails + light dinner TIP: Reservations required for Fri-Sat sunset (book 1-2 weeks ahead). The default sunset pick for Korean honeymooners. Book a 17:00 table to catch the sunset around 18:00-19:00 depending on month. Hula Pie dessert is the mandatory order.
  7. 20:30 Dinner — Marugame Udon Waikiki (cheap-eat Japanese) 1 hour

    Fresh-made Japanese udon noodles + tempura — Hawaii's go-to cheap-eat alternative when you've had enough plate lunch and want something familiar. The line outside Marugame stretches 1 hour at lunch peak — Hawaii's most-photographed-queue restaurant.

    Cost: $10-15 TIP: Card or cash. Multiple Waikiki branches. The line is shorter at dinner (after 20:00) than at lunch peak. Watch the udon being made through the open kitchen window.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Rainbow Drive-In plate lunch (1961)

Kapahulu Waikiki · $10-15

The Hawaiian plate-lunch institution. Kalua pork plate canonical.

Lunch

Ono Seafood poke (Honolulu canon)

Kapahulu · $10-20

The go-to Hawaiian poke shop — shoyu ahi or spicy ahi.

Dinner

Marugame Udon Waikiki (Japanese cheap-eat)

Waikiki · $10-15

Japanese-Hawaiian fusion cheap eat. Fresh-made udon noodles.

Transit:

Walking around Waikiki + 5-min Uber to Diamond Head + 5-min Uber to Kapahulu Avenue (Rainbow Drive-In + Ono Seafood + Leonard's Bakery). TheBus $3 single is the cheapest transport but Uber is faster for tight schedules.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $320 Luxury $700
DAY 2

Pearl Harbor + Iolani Palace + Royal Hawaiian Mai Tai

WWII history + royal Hawaii + traditional Hawaiian dinner

Activities

  1. 08:00 Pearl Harbor + USS Arizona Memorial (December 7 1941 attack site) 3 hours

    The December 7, 1941 attack site that brought the US into WWII. The USS Arizona Memorial is built directly over the wreckage of the battleship USS Arizona, where 1,177 sailors are entombed. FREE entry but timed-entry mandatory at recreation.gov (book 60 days ahead — same-day walk-ins are not possible).

    Cost: Free; pre-book 60 days ahead at recreation.gov TIP: Pre-book at recreation.gov 60 days ahead — same-day walk-ins are not possible. Bags larger than a clutch are prohibited (bag check $5). Photography permitted but be respectful — sailors are entombed below the memorial.
  2. 11:30 Battleship Missouri Memorial ('Mighty Mo' Japanese surrender ship) 1.5 hours

    The 'Mighty Mo' — the battleship where Japan formally surrendered to General Douglas MacArthur on September 2, 1945, ending WWII. Right next to Pearl Harbor at Ford Island. Walking the deck where the surrender was signed is the canonical photo.

    Cost: $35 ($90 combined with Arizona) TIP: Pre-book ahead through nps.gov or directly with the USS Missouri website. Combined ticket with USS Arizona + Aviation Museum + Bowfin submarine = $97 (saves $40 vs separate entries).
  3. 13:30 Lunch — Highway Inn (modern traditional Hawaiian, 1947) 1.5 hours

    Hawaiian classics done modern — kalua pork, lau lau (pork steamed in ti leaves), Hawaiian poke, Hawaiian sides. Third-generation Toguchi family operation with a modernized Kakaako location.

    Cost: $15-25 TIP: Card or cash. Family-friendly. 10-min Uber from Pearl Harbor to the Kakaako location. The accessible-modern alternative to Helena's.
  4. 15:30 Iolani Palace (the only royal palace on US soil, 1882) 1.5 hours

    The only royal palace on US soil — the Hawaiian monarchy ruled here from 1882 until the US-backed overthrow in 1893. Throne room + 1882 electric lighting (predates the White House electrification) + the canonical Hawaiian-history pilgrimage. King Kalakaua + Queen Lili'uokalani's actual royal residence.

    Cost: $25 self-guided + audio; $35 grand tour TIP: The Hawaiian guide tells the overthrow story with depth and emotion — the grand tour is recommended over the audio-only. Closed Sundays and Mondays. Modest dress recommended (no swimwear or beach attire).
  5. 17:30 Aloha Tower Marketplace + Downtown Honolulu + Chinatown walk 1.5 hours

    1926 Aloha Tower on the harborfront (Honolulu's iconic 'Welcome to Honolulu' landmark for arriving ships, now a Hawaii Pacific University campus), plus a walk through Downtown Honolulu and the historic Chinatown district.

    Cost: Free walking TIP: Chinatown Honolulu has its own character — the oldest Chinatown in the US (established 1860s). Walking distance from Iolani Palace. Stop at Lonely Tree Gallery or Pearl Harbor Smithsonian for cultural depth.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — Helena's Hawaiian Food (1946, James Beard America's Classics) 2 hours

    Traditional Hawaiian since 1946 — James Beard Award winner (America's Classics 2000). Three-generation Chock family operation. Kalua pork (slow-roasted in an imu earth oven), lomi lomi salmon (raw salmon massaged with tomato and onion), poi (mashed fermented taro paste), pipikaula (air-dried Hawaiian beef jerky). The canonical traditional-Hawaiian James Beard pilgrimage.

    Cost: $20-30 per person TIP: Reservations strongly recommended — book 1-2 weeks ahead. Cards and cash. 15-min Uber from Downtown Honolulu to Kalihi. Closed Sunday-Monday. The poi is acquired taste — try a small portion first.
  7. 22:00 Mai Tai Bar at the Royal Hawaiian ('Pink Palace', 1927) 1.5 hours

    The Mai Tai — invented at Trader Vic's in Oakland in 1944, then perfected at the 1927 Royal Hawaiian for the Hawaii market. The Royal Mai Tai ($18) is the canonical order. The 1927 'Pink Palace' beachfront setting is one of the most-iconic Waikiki venues.

    Cost: $15-40 Mai Tai cocktails TIP: Card or cash. The Royal Mai Tai ($18) is the canonical order. Common Korean honeymoon stop — pair with a 20-min walk along Waikiki Beach to House Without a Key + Duke's.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel + Iyasume Spam musubi to go

Waikiki · $3-8

Quick Spam musubi (Hawaii's lunchbox icon) for the early Pearl Harbor start.

Lunch

Highway Inn (modern Hawaiian)

Kakaako · $15-25

Hawaiian classics modernized — kalua pork + lau lau combo plate.

Dinner

Helena's Hawaiian Food (1946 James Beard)

Kalihi · $20-30

James Beard Award traditional Hawaiian — the canonical pilgrimage.

Transit:

TheBus #20 Waikiki to Pearl Harbor $3 (60 min) or Uber $25-35 (30 min). 15-min Uber to Kalihi for Helena's. 20-min walking circuit from Helena's back to the Royal Hawaiian Mai Tai Bar.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $280 Luxury $600
DAY 3

North Shore Loop + Giovanni's Shrimp + Roy's Waikiki Farewell

North Shore surf culture + Hawaiian food trucks + farewell dinner

Activities

  1. 09:00 North Shore loop drive (1h drive from Waikiki) 5 hours

    Banzai Pipeline + Sunset Beach + Waimea Bay — O'ahu's surfing coast. Winter (November-February) brings the pro surfing season (Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational + Vans Triple Crown). Summer is the swim-friendly season with calm waters.

    Cost: Rental car $50-80/day or Circle Island tour $80-150 TIP: Winter (Nov-Feb) brings pro surfing season (Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational + Vans Triple Crown of Surfing). Summer is the swim-friendly season. Self-drive rental car is the most flexible option; Circle Island bus tour ($80-150) is the no-driving alternative.
  2. 11:30 Banzai Pipeline + Sunset Beach (winter waves) 1.5 hours

    The famous Banzai Pipeline (the world's most-photographed wave, breaks over a shallow reef, drawing the world's top pro surfers November-February) and Sunset Beach winter waves. Free public viewing from the sand.

    Cost: Free TIP: Don't enter the water Nov-Feb — winter waves are dangerous (10-30+ ft swells, multiple drowning fatalities annually). Watch from the sand only. The Vans Triple Crown spectator parking fills by 7 AM on competition days.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — Giovanni's Shrimp Truck (Kahuku — North Shore canon) 1 hour

    The $14 garlic shrimp plate with 2 scoops rice — the most-famous food truck in Hawaii since 1993. 12 head-on shrimp swimming in garlic butter + 2 rice scoops. The defining North Shore food-truck dish that Korean and Japanese tourists drive 1 hour to taste.

    Cost: $14 garlic shrimp plate TIP: Cash only — no card. Expect 30-min lines at peak hours. Bring napkins — the garlic butter is messy. The graffiti-covered truck itself is Instagram-iconic.
  4. 14:30 Waimea Bay + Pu'u o Mahuka Heiau (ancient Hawaiian temple) 1.5 hours

    Waimea Bay (summer swimming, winter big-wave surfing — the 1986 Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational was held here when conditions allowed) plus Pu'u o Mahuka Heiau, the largest ancient Hawaiian temple on O'ahu (overlooks Waimea Bay from the bluffs above).

    Cost: Free TIP: Waimea Bay is swim-friendly only in summer (May-September). Respect the heiau as a sacred Hawaiian cultural site — no walking on the rock walls, no removing rocks.
  5. 16:00 Matsumoto Shave Ice (Haleiwa since 1951) 30 min

    The Haleiwa shave-ice institution since 1951 — three-generation Matsumoto family operation. Micro-thin ice shavings absorb tropical-flavored syrups (passion-pineapple-mango is the canonical flavor combo). Add-ons: condensed milk drizzle, azuki red beans, mochi balls.

    Cost: $5-10 TIP: Cash or card. Long lines on weekends — Sat-Sun arrive 9:00-11:00 for shorter waits, or after 15:30. The defining North Shore Hawaiian sweet.
  6. 16:30 Haleiwa Town walking + Hawaiian souvenir + return drive to Waikiki 2 hours

    The old plantation town of Haleiwa (the North Shore's main hub) plus its artisan shops (Hawaiian-made jewelry, surf shops, art galleries), then the 1-hour scenic drive back to Waikiki via Kamehameha Highway.

    Cost: Free walking + shopping varies TIP: Slow Hawaiian-town pace. Stop at the Haleiwa Beach House restaurant + Surf N Salsa Mexican food truck on the way. Sunset over the West Coast highway is the canonical drive photo.
  7. 19:00 Final dinner — Roy's Waikiki (Hawaiian Regional Cuisine fusion) 2 hours

    Roy Yamaguchi's Hawaiian-fusion fine-dining flagship since 1988 — Pacific Rim cuisine. Roy is the founding chef of the Hawaiian Regional Cuisine movement (1991, a 12-chef collaborative that elevated local Hawaiian cooking into recognized fine dining). The Misoyaki Butterfish (miso-glazed sablefish) and the Original Chocolate Souffle are mandatory orders.

    Cost: $60-120 per person TIP: Reservations 1-2 weeks ahead. Smart-casual dress. Card or cash. Common Korean honeymoon fine-dining pick. The chef's tasting menu is the canonical order.
  8. 22:00 HNL Airport departure 45 min

    Korean late-night flights to ICN (Korean Air, Asiana, Hawaiian Airlines) typically depart 22:00-01:00.

    Cost: Uber $35-45 TIP: Pre-book a Klook airport transfer ($25-40) to avoid surge pricing. International check-in 2-3 hours pre-departure. HNL Terminal 2 for international.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Leonard's Bakery malasada (1953)

Kapahulu · $3-8

Hawaiian malasada (Portuguese-rooted hot fried-dough donut) to go — best eaten 60 seconds after frying.

Lunch

Giovanni's Shrimp Truck, Kahuku

North Shore · $14

Hawaii's most-famous food truck. The garlic shrimp plate is the canonical North Shore food canon.

Dinner

Roy's Waikiki Hawaiian fusion (Roy Yamaguchi 1988)

Waikiki Beach Walk · $60-120

Honeymoon Hawaiian Regional Cuisine fine-dining. Chef's tasting menu canonical.

Transit:

Rental car (most flexible) or Circle Island tour bus ($80-150). 1h Waikiki to North Shore via H1-2 + Kamehameha Hwy. 45-min Uber back to HNL for the late-night Korean flights.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $320 Luxury $700
DAY 4

Hanauma Bay Snorkel + Polynesian Cultural Center + Lū'au

Marine reserve snorkel + Polynesian culture + traditional lū'au feast

Activities

  1. 08:00 Hanauma Bay snorkeling (volcanic crater marine reserve) 4 hours

    Volcanic crater snorkel bay 30 min from Waikiki — eroded crater crescent forming a sheltered bay, 1-3m coral reef with 400+ fish species. Hawaii's #1-recommended snorkeling site. The 90% fish-feeding ban (since 1990) means actually MORE diverse marine life now than at other reefs.

    Cost: $25 + $1 parking TIP: Reservation required at hanaumabaystatepark.com (book 2 days ahead, releases 7 AM Hawaii time, sells out within 1 minute). 9-min mandatory environmental video before beach access. Closed Mon + Tue. Reef-safe sunscreen only — Hawaii law enforced at gate.
  2. 13:00 Lunch — quick bite, return toward Waikiki for PCC pickup 1 hour

    Pack lunch from Waikiki, or grab a quick bite at Hanauma Bay's snack bar. Head back toward Waikiki before the Polynesian Cultural Center pickup window.

    Cost: $10-20 TIP: Hanauma Bay has limited food on-site (snack bar only). Easiest to pack lunch + drinks from Waikiki. Save room for the lū'au feast tonight.
  3. 14:30 Polynesian Cultural Center pickup (1h shuttle to Laie, North Shore) 8 hours

    PCC shuttle pickup from Waikiki hotels — 1-hour drive to Laie, North Shore. Six Polynesian island villages (Hawaii, Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Tahiti, Aotearoa), canoe pageant, Hā: Breath of Life dance show, traditional lū'au feast.

    Cost: $90-150 with lū'au + show TIP: Owned by BYU-Hawaii (Brigham Young University-Hawaii, faith-based but the experience itself is secular — no proselytizing). Pre-book online for a $20 discount + free Waikiki hotel pickup/dropoff. Closed Sundays.
  4. 16:00 PCC six island villages + cultural demonstrations 3 hours

    Hawaii, Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Tahiti, and Aotearoa village experiences — traditional homes, cultural demonstrations (Samoan fire knife, Tongan dance, Maori haka), canoe rides through the central waterway. Family-friendly, kid-engaging.

    Cost: Included in PCC ticket TIP: Cultural respect — these are working cultural representations, not theme-park performances. The Samoan fire knife demonstration and the Hawaiian hula at Aloha Theater are the highlights. Family-friendly.
  5. 19:00 PCC lū'au feast (traditional Hawaiian) 1.5 hours

    Traditional Hawaiian lū'au feast — kalua pork (slow-roasted in an imu earth oven, ceremonially uncovered tableside), lomi lomi salmon, poi, Hawaiian sweet potato, haupia, plus an open beer-and-wine bar. The biggest Hawaiian feast experience on O'ahu.

    Cost: Included with PCC ticket TIP: The biggest Hawaiian feast experience on O'ahu. Vegetarian options available with advance request. The Premier-tier ticket ($150) adds private dinner table + buffet line skip + VIP seating at the night show.
  6. 20:30 Hā: Breath of Life night dance show (PCC headline) 1.5 hours

    The Polynesian Cultural Center's main night dance show — six island traditions plus dramatic fire-knife dancing. 90-min production, 100+ performers, the most-spectacular Polynesian cultural performance on O'ahu.

    Cost: Included in PCC ticket TIP: Family-friendly. Premier-tier seating ($150 add-on) gets front-row. The fire-knife finale is the photo-worthy moment.
  7. 22:30 Return Waikiki shuttle (1h drive) 1 hour

    1-hour shuttle drive back to Waikiki — late return around 23:30. Includes hotel drop-off at all major Waikiki properties.

    Cost: Included with PCC ticket TIP: Late return — schedule no morning activities for Day 5 before 09:00. Pre-arrange any morning hotel breakfast if needed.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel + Iyasume Spam musubi to go

Waikiki · $3-8

Quick pre-Hanauma Bay snack — Hawaii's lunchbox icon.

Lunch

Hanauma Bay quick lunch

Hanauma · $10-20

Pack from Waikiki or grab from the snack bar on-site.

Dinner

PCC lū'au feast

Polynesian Cultural Center (Laie, North Shore) · Included with PCC ticket

Traditional Hawaiian lū'au feast — kalua pork canonical.

Transit:

Uber Waikiki to Hanauma Bay (30 min, $30-40 round trip) + PCC shuttle round-trip from Waikiki (included with PCC ticket).

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $150 Mid $280 Luxury $500
DAY 5

Ko Olina Luxury Resort Day + House Without a Key Farewell + Departure

Luxury resort + final Waikiki sunset + Korean late-night departure

Activities

  1. 09:00 Ko Olina day pass (luxury resort — Four Seasons or Disney Aulani) 5 hours

    Ko Olina luxury resort area (45 min west of Waikiki by Uber) — Disney's Aulani Resort & Spa (family-with-kids), Four Seasons Resort O'ahu at Ko Olina (top luxury, $800-1,800/night), or Marriott Ko Olina Beach Club (Marriott Bonvoy) all offer day-pass options for non-staying visitors.

    Cost: $50-150 day pass depending on resort TIP: Pre-book the day pass at Disney Aulani (kids + family) or Four Seasons Ko Olina (honeymoon). Hawaii's main luxury resort strip. Four protected man-made lagoons (Aulani, Lanikuhonua, Ulua, Honu) for calm swimming.
  2. 14:30 Lunch — Ko Olina resort dining 1.5 hours

    Resort Hawaiian-Pacific Rim dining with ocean views. Mina's Fish House at Four Seasons (Michael Mina, $40-80 lunch) or Aulani's Ulu Cafe ($25-40 quick-serve) or Roy's Ko Olina ($60-100 if available).

    Cost: $30-80 TIP: Resort dining is premium-priced. Card or cash. Mina's Fish House at Four Seasons is the upscale lunch option; Aulani's Ulu Cafe is the family-friendly alternative.
  3. 16:00 Return Waikiki + final shopping (Ala Moana Center + Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center) 3 hours

    Back to Waikiki by Uber (45 min from Ko Olina), then Ala Moana Center (2 million sq ft mall, 350+ stores) and the Royal Hawaiian Shopping Center for Hawaiian souvenirs and Aloha shirts.

    Cost: Shopping varies TIP: Ala Moana Center is the largest open-air shopping mall in the US. Hawaiian souvenirs and Aloha shirts (Hilo Hattie + Sig Zane Designs). Macadamia chocolates ($15-30/box) and Kona coffee ($25-50/bag) are the canonical Hawaii souvenir purchases.
  4. 19:00 Farewell — House Without a Key, Halekulani (1907 sunset cocktails) 2.5 hours

    The 1907 sunset bar at the Halekulani — Mai Tais plus the nightly free Hawaiian hula performance under the ancient kiawe tree (5:30-8:30 PM). Wraparound terrace with direct Waikiki Beach + Diamond Head views. Smart-casual dress required.

    Cost: $30-70 cocktails + light dinner TIP: Reservations required for Fri-Sat sunset (book 1-2 weeks ahead). Smart-casual dress (collared shirts for men). The honeymoon farewell pick — sunset hula performance is the canonical move.
  5. 22:00 HNL Airport departure (Korean late-night flights) 45 min

    Korean late-night flights to ICN typically depart 22:00-01:00 (Korean Air KE051, Asiana OZ232, Hawaiian HA459, United UA199). Late-night flights are the standard for Honolulu→Seoul routes.

    Cost: $35-45 Uber to HNL TIP: Pre-book a Klook airport transfer ($25-40) to avoid surge pricing. International check-in 2-3 hours pre-departure. HNL Terminal 2 for international flights.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast

Waikiki · Included or $20-35

Final hotel breakfast — most Waikiki luxury hotels include continental breakfast in resort fee.

Lunch

Ko Olina resort dining (Mina's Fish House or Ulu Cafe)

Ko Olina · $30-80

Resort dining — Mina's Fish House for honeymoon, Ulu Cafe for family-friendly.

Dinner

House Without a Key, Halekulani (1907)

Waikiki · $30-70

Halekulani 1907 sunset farewell — smart-casual dress, hula performance.

Transit:

Uber Waikiki to Ko Olina (45 min, $40-60 each way) + airport transfer Uber or Klook ($25-45).

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $150 Mid $350 Luxury $800

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Honolulu 5-Day Itinerary FAQ

Worth doing the Polynesian Cultural Center?
Yes — six Polynesian island villages (Hawaii, Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Tahiti, Aotearoa) plus a traditional Hawaiian lū'au feast and the Hā: Breath of Life night dance show. $90-150 with everything included. Pre-book online for a $20 discount + free Waikiki hotel pickup/dropoff. Owned by BYU-Hawaii (faith-based but the experience itself is secular — no proselytizing). Family-friendly. The Samoan fire-knife and the Hawaiian hula at Aloha Theater are the highlights. Closed Sundays.
Worth doing the Hanauma Bay snorkel?
Yes — a volcanic crater with a clear sheltered bay (1-3m coral reef, 400+ fish species). The 90% fish-feeding ban since 1990 means actually MORE diverse marine life now than at other Hawaii reefs. $25 entry + $1 parking. Reservation required at hanaumabaystatepark.com (releases 7 AM Hawaii time 2 days ahead, sells out within 1 minute — set an alarm). Closed Mon-Tue. Reef-safe sunscreen only — enforced at the gate.
5 days vs 3 days for Honolulu?
5 days adds the Polynesian Cultural Center, a Hanauma Bay snorkel, and a Ko Olina luxury day for a complete O'ahu trip. 3 days hits the Waikiki + Pearl Harbor + North Shore core. 5 days is the standard length for Korean tourists. 7 days adds a 2-day inter-island flight to Maui (Road to Hana + Haleakala) or the Big Island (Volcanoes National Park + Black Sand Beach) for the full Hawaii multi-island experience.

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Why you can trust 5-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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