Best Botanical Gardens in Hawaiʻi: 13 Gardens Worth Your Time (and What They Cost)

John C. Derrick

Founder & certified Hawai'i travel expert with 20+ years of experience in Hawai'i tourism.

Hawaiʻi’s botanical gardens are not the manicured rose-and-tulip variety you find on the mainland. These are rainforest valleys, volcanic slopes, ancient taro terraces, and coastal preserves where thousands of tropical species grow in soil that has been cultivating plants for a thousand years. Some are free. Some charge $50 for a guided walk. All of them beat another afternoon at the hotel pool.

Here are 13 gardens across four islands — what they cost, when to go, and which ones are actually worth the detour.

Oʻahu

Hoʻomaluhia Botanical Garden (Kāneʻohe) — Free

Four hundred acres at the base of the Koʻolau Mountains, and it does not cost a dollar to walk in. Hoʻomaluhia is organized by geographic region — Hawaiian, Polynesian, African, Indian, Southeast Asian — with a 32-acre lake and catch-and-release fishing. The entrance road, framed by mountains and palm trees, is one of the most photographed spots on Oʻahu.

The garden drew over 723,000 visitors in fiscal year 2025, blowing past its 600,000 capacity. Starting January 2026, the garden is closed every Thursday for maintenance. Plan around that. Open daily 9 AM to 4 PM all other days.

Foster Botanical Garden (Downtown Honolulu) — $5

The oldest botanical garden in Hawaiʻi, planted in 1853. Foster is compact — you can walk it in an hour — but the trees here are enormous. Several are listed as Exceptional Trees of Hawaiʻi, including a massive Bo Tree and century-old palms. The orchid conservatory alone is worth the $5 admission. Free docent tours Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday at 10:30 AM (Thursdays added in March 2026). Easy to pair with a Chinatown lunch.

Waimea Valley (North Shore) — $26

Waimea Valley is part botanical garden, part cultural site, part swimming hole. The main trail is a paved, 0.75-mile walk through 5,000 plant species to Waimea Falls — a 45-foot waterfall where you can actually swim (life jackets provided). The valley holds 78 archaeological sites, including ancient Hawaiian house platforms and religious heiau.

Open Tuesday through Thursday and weekends, 9 AM to 4 PM. Closed Fridays year-round and Mondays from September through May. Thursdays close early at 2:30 PM. Admission is $26 adults, $20 seniors/students, $18 ages 4-12. Wednesdays are free for kamaʻāina and military children. Every third Sunday is half-price for kamaʻāina.

Lyon Arboretum (Mānoa Valley) — Free

A 200-acre University of Hawaiʻi research arboretum tucked into the wet end of Mānoa Valley. Six thousand tropical plant taxa, native forest restoration plots, and trails through genuine rainforest. The catch: weekdays only, 9 AM to 3 PM. Bring shoes that handle mud — this is one of the wettest spots on Oʻahu. Check their website before visiting; intermittent closures for utility maintenance are happening in April 2026.

Maui

Garden of Eden Arboretum (Road to Hāna, Mile 10.5) — $20

If you are driving the Road to Hāna, this is the first botanical stop worth pulling over for. Twenty-six acres of curated tropical plants, ocean overlooks, and peacocks wandering the paths. Parts of Jurassic Park were filmed here. At $20 adults, $10 ages 5-16, it is reasonable for what you get — plan 60 to 90 minutes. Open daily 8 AM to 4 PM. No reservation needed.

Kula Botanical Garden (Upcountry) — $15

Kula Botanical Garden sits at 3,300 feet elevation in Upcountry Maui, which means cooler temperatures and different plants than you will see at sea level. Koi ponds, a small aviary, protea gardens, and a covered bridge. It is modest in scale — more “relaxing morning walk” than “full-day excursion.” $15 adults, $5 ages 6-12. Open every day of the year, 9 AM to 3:15 PM. Combine it with a visit to the nearby Kula Lavender Farm.

Maui Nui Botanical Gardens (Kahului) — $10

The sleeper pick on this list. Maui Nui focuses exclusively on native Hawaiian and Polynesian-introduced plants — the species that were here before Western contact. It is a conservation garden, not a tropical showpiece, and it is directly relevant if you want to understand what Hawaiʻi looked like 500 years ago. $10 admission includes an audio tour. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 8 AM to 4 PM. Located minutes from Kahului Airport — a solid option for arrival or departure day.

Big Island

Hawaiʻi Tropical Botanical Garden (Papaikou) — $30

The crown jewel. Forty acres of rainforest valley descending to Onomea Bay, with over 2,500 tropical species, waterfalls, and a boardwalk trail through triple-canopy jungle. This is the garden that makes people rethink what a “botanical garden” can be. It feels more like a national park than a curated collection.

$30 adults, $22 ages 6-12. Open daily 9 AM to 5 PM (last entry 4 PM). Budget 90 minutes to two hours. Located on the scenic Old Māmalahoa Highway north of Hilo — take the Pepeʻekeo detour off Highway 19. No reservations needed.

Amy B.H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden (Captain Cook) — Free

A living museum of pre-contact Hawaiian agriculture. Instead of ornamental tropicals, Greenwell grows the plants that sustained Hawaiian civilization — taro, breadfruit, sweet potato, sugarcane — in the same field systems used centuries ago. Free admission (donations accepted). Open Tuesday through Saturday 9 AM to 4 PM, Sunday 9 AM to 2 PM. Free guided tour Sundays at noon. Located in Captain Cook on the Kona side — pair it with a coffee farm visit down the road.

Kauaʻi

Allerton Garden (National Tropical Botanical Garden, Pōʻipū) — $50

The most expensive garden on this list, and the one people talk about for years. Allerton is guided-tour only — you cannot wander on your own — but the guides are excellent and the setting is ridiculous. This is where the Moreton Bay fig trees from Jurassic Park live. Formal garden “rooms” designed in the 1930s, Lāwai Stream running through the middle, and a coastal valley that feels like it belongs in a film. Because it does.

$50 adults, $25 ages 6-12. Tours daily 9 AM to 3 PM. Reservations required. The sunset tour ($95) is the premium option — smaller groups, golden light, cocktails. Worth the splurge on a special trip.

McBryde Garden (NTBG, Pōʻipū) — $30

Allerton’s self-guided neighbor, accessed via tram from the same NTBG Visitor Center on Lāwai Road. McBryde holds the largest collection of native Hawaiian plants anywhere, plus extensive spice and palm collections. Less dramatic than Allerton, more educational. $30 adults, $15 ages 6-12. Combo ticket with Allerton: $60 adults. The combo is the best value if you are doing both.

Limahuli Garden (NTBG, Hāʻena/North Shore) — $30

Limahuli is where a 1,000-year-old Hawaiian taro irrigation system meets a mountain-to-ocean native plant preserve. The self-guided trail climbs through ancient loʻi (taro terraces) with views of the Nā Pali Coast. Endangered native species grow alongside the crop plants that fed entire communities.

$30 adults, $10 kamaʻāina. Free for children under 13. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 8:30 AM to 4 PM (last check-in 2:15 PM). Reservations strongly recommended — parking is extremely limited at the end of the road in Hāʻena. A new ADA-accessible guided cart tour launched in July 2025.

Nā ʻĀina Kai (Kīlauea) — $35-$85

Nā ʻĀina Kai is 240 acres of gardens, hardwood forest, a hedge maze, and over 70 bronze sculptures placed throughout the property. Tours range from a 1.5-hour garden walk ($35) to a 5-hour full-property tour ($85). Tuesday through Friday only. Reservations required — no walk-ins. Most tours are restricted to ages 13 and up, so this is an adults-only experience for most visitors.

How to Pick the Right Garden

On a budget: Hoʻomaluhia (Oʻahu) and Amy Greenwell (Big Island) are both free and genuinely worth visiting. Foster at $5 is practically free.

With kids: Waimea Valley wins. The waterfall swimming hole, the easy paved trail, and the cultural demonstrations keep children engaged for hours. Hoʻomaluhia’s lake and open spaces are a close second.

For photographers: Hoʻomaluhia’s entrance road at sunrise, the Hawaiʻi Tropical Botanical Garden’s rainforest valley, and Limahuli’s terraces with Nā Pali views.

For plant nerds: Allerton’s formal garden design, Lyon Arboretum’s research collections, and Greenwell’s ethnobotanical field systems.

Best single garden per island: Hoʻomaluhia (Oʻahu), Garden of Eden (Maui, especially if driving the Road to Hāna), Hawaiʻi Tropical Botanical Garden (Big Island), and Allerton (Kauaʻi).

One practical note: a rental car is essential for reaching most of these gardens. Only Foster Botanical Garden in downtown Honolulu is accessible by public transit. The rest require driving.

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