Colorful display of tropical fruits at a Hawaiian roadside fruit stand

Best Roadside Fruit Stands & Farm Stands in Hawaii

John C. Derrick

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

The grocery stores in Hawaii charge mainland prices (and then some) for tropical fruit that was probably picked three weeks ago in Central America. Meanwhile, a folding table on the side of the road two miles away has ripe apple bananas, fresh lilikoi, and just-cut pineapple for a fraction of the price.

Roadside fruit stands are one of Hawaii’s best-kept food experiences. Some are full farm operations with cafes and tours. Others are a card table under a tent with an honor box and a handwritten sign. Both are worth your time. Here’s where to find the best ones on each island.

Oahu's North Shore

Kahuku Farms is the flagship. This fourth-generation family farm in Kahuku grows papaya, banana, lilikoi, acai, and cacao along the North Shore. The farm cafe serves smoothies, acai bowls, and paninis made with ingredients harvested that morning. They also run farm tours that walk you through the growing fields — check their site for current pricing. It’s right off Kamehameha Highway — you’ll see the signs past Turtle Bay heading toward the Polynesian Cultural Center.

Tropical Farms in Kaneohe is less “roadside stand” and more established operation, but the free macadamia nut tastings are worth the stop. They coat them in everything from Kona coffee to garlic. Family-owned since 1987, it’s on the windward side near Kualoa Ranch, making it an easy add to a circle-island drive.

Between Haleʻiwa and Kahuku, a handful of unnamed fruit stands pop up along Kamehameha Highway. Look for tables under tents near the Dole Plantation turnoff and past Laniakea Beach. These rotate by season. In summer, expect mango, lychee, and rambutan. Winter brings apple bananas, starfruit, and citrus. Most are cash only.

Waimanalo & Windward Oahu

Frankie’s Nursery in Waimanalo is a tropical fruit farm that sells seasonal exotic fruit straight from their 5-acre property. This is where you find fruit you’ve never seen before — rambutan, longan, abiu, rollinia, cacao pods. They post availability on their Instagram and sell out fast on weekends. Waimanalo is also home to scattered honor-system stands along Kalanianaole Highway selling papayas, coconuts, and bananas.

Maui's Road to Hana

The Road to Hana is fruit stand paradise. Small operations line the highway from about mile marker 2 through East Maui.

Aunty Sandy’s Banana Bread sits on the Keʻanae Peninsula (turn left after mile marker 16). Aunty Sandy has been baking since 1983 — warm, dense, slightly sweet loaves from a family recipe. Featured on Gordon Ramsay’s Uncharted. Get there before noon on any day but Sunday — they sell out daily. The Nahiku Marketplace (mile marker 29) is a separate cluster of vendors selling smoothies, huli huli chicken, coconut candy, and lilikoi jam.

Halfway to Hana Stand (mile marker 17) has been open since 1982. Banana bread, shave ice, and fresh fruit. Also a solid turnaround point if you want the Hana experience without the full commitment. Ample free parking.

Coconut Glen’s (near mile marker 27.5) serves coconut-milk ice cream in a coconut shell with toppings like cacao nibs and lilikoi drizzle. It’s technically ice cream, not fruit, but it’s made from fruit and served from a roadside shack. Close enough.

Hana Farms (mile marker 31) has been selling banana bread since 2006 off a 7-acre tropical farm. They’ve expanded into lilikoi jam, artisanal hot sauces, and branch-to-bar chocolate. Worth a stop even if you’re full.

Between these named spots, you’ll pass dozens of smaller stands and honor-system tables selling banana bread, fresh-cut pineapple, and whatever’s in season. Most take cash only. Bring small bills.

Upcountry Maui

The Kula region sits at 3,000 feet elevation on the slopes of Haleakalā. The cooler temperatures and rich volcanic soil produce strawberries, lavender, tomatoes, and Maui onions. Kula Country Farms runs a farmstand selling seasonal produce, jams, and baked goods. Their strawberry season (roughly January through May) packs the parking lot on weekends — arrive before 10 a.m.

Along Kula Highway and Lower Kula Road, small stands sell avocados, citrus, and bags of Maui onions. These are hyper-local — often a farmer selling excess from their own land. The avocados alone are worth the detour — the size of softballs and twice as creamy as anything at Safeway.

Big Island: Hamakua Coast to Kona

The Big Island grows more variety than any other Hawaiian island. The climate zones range from tropical rainforest near Hilo to dry desert in Kona, producing everything from rambutan to macadamia nuts.

The Pepe’ekeo Scenic Route (Old Mamalahoa Highway, just north of Hilo) has several fruit stands tucked into the lush rainforest corridor. Look for tables selling rambutan, lychee (summer), starfruit, and local avocados. The four-mile detour off Highway 19 is worth it even without the fruit — the canopy of tropical trees over the road is beautiful.

South Kona along Highway 11 between Captain Cook and Honaunau has roadside stands selling coffee cherries, avocados, and fresh fruit alongside small Kona coffee farms where you can buy beans direct. Some stands are unmanned honor systems — you put cash in the box and take your bag.

Along the Hāmākua Coast between Hilo and Waimea, small roadside stands appear near Pepeʻekeo, Laupāhoehoe, and Honoka’a. These sell seasonal fruit, local honey, and mac nuts. The banana bread from small-batch bakers in this stretch rivals anything on Maui.

Near Punaluʻu (home of the famous black sand beach), fruit stands sell mac nuts, dried fruit, and seasonal tropicals alongside the well-known Punaluʻu Bake Shop, which claims to be the southernmost bakery in the United States.

Kauai

Kauai has fewer stands than the other islands, but the ones it has are worth finding.

The spot between mile markers 23 and 24 on Kūhiō Highway near Kilauea was home to Banana Joe’s for nearly 40 years — a North Shore legend famous for Sugarloaf pineapple and frozen banana “frosties.” Joe retired in late 2025, and the location now operates as Fehring Family Farmstand offering frosties, smoothies, acai bowls, and organic popsicles. The tradition continues, just under a new name. Call ahead at (808) 828-1092 to confirm hours.

Moloaʻa Sunrise Juice Bar on Koʻolau Road (off Highway 56 between Anahola and Kilauea) is a family-owned operation since 2003 selling fresh-pressed juice, smoothies, and seasonal fruit. The owners grow much of what they sell. Their lilikoi juice is outstanding.

Along the road between Kapaʻa and Kilauea, look for small stands selling apple bananas, coconuts, and papayas. The stretch of Highway 56 through Anahola often has roadside vendors. Near Kilauea, you’ll find a cluster of small farm operations selling tropical fruit, honey, and fresh-cut flowers.

The Southside near Koloa and Poipu has fewer stands, but the Kukuiula Village hosts a Sunday farmers market where local growers sell direct.

What's in Season When

Hawaii grows fruit year-round, but specific varieties peak in certain months:

  • Year-round: Apple bananas, papayas, coconuts, pineapple (peaks Apr–Jun), avocados (Big Island peaks Jun–Nov, varies by variety)
  • January–May: Kula strawberries (Maui), citrus (navel oranges, tangerines), starfruit
  • May–September: Mango season (peak May–Jul), lychee (May–Aug), longan (Jul–Sep), dragon fruit (May–Dec)
  • October–March: Rambutan (Oct–Mar), starfruit (Sep–Apr), avocado (Sep–Apr), lilikoi (Jun–Jan, peaks late summer through fall)

Mango season is the big one. From June through August, farm stands overflow with Hayden, Rapoza, and Pirie mangoes. Prices at roadside stands run a fraction of what mainland grocery stores charge — and the fruit was picked that morning, not shipped across an ocean two weeks ago.

Tips for Buying at Roadside Stands

Bring cash. Most small stands don’t accept cards. Established farm operations like Kahuku Farms and Tropical Farms take credit cards, but the best roadside finds are cash-only. Keep $20 in small bills in your rental car.

Honor the honor system. Some stands are unmanned. There’s a price list, a box for money, and bags of fruit. Pay what the sign says. These farmers trust you. Don’t be the reason they stop.

Ask what’s ripe today. Fruit at these stands was often picked that morning. If something looks unfamiliar, ask. Hawaiian farmers are proud of what they grow and happy to explain what a rambutan tastes like or how to eat a lilikoi.

Buy early. Popular stands sell out by mid-afternoon, especially on weekends. The banana bread stands on the Road to Hana are infamous for running dry by noon.

Check USDA rules before packing fruit home. All bags leaving Hawaii pass through a USDA agricultural inspection. Most fresh tropical fruits are allowed — papayas, pineapples, coconuts, and lychee typically clear inspection. Some items are restricted or require treatment. When in doubt, declare everything and let the inspectors sort it out. They’re fast and friendly.

One More Thing: Fruit You Won't Find at Home

Half the fun of roadside stands is finding fruit that never makes it to mainland stores. Look for:

  • Apple bananas — shorter, sweeter, denser than Cavendish bananas. The best banana you’ll ever eat, and nearly impossible to find outside Hawaii.
  • Rambutan — red, hairy exterior with translucent sweet flesh inside. Looks alien, tastes like a floral grape.
  • Lilikoi (passion fruit) — wrinkled yellow or purple skin with intensely tart, aromatic pulp. Eat it with a spoon, seeds and all.
  • White pineapple — lower acid, higher sugar than yellow pineapple. Maui grows most of Hawaii’s supply.
  • Abiu — smooth yellow skin, creamy custard-like flesh. Rare even in Hawaii. If you see it, buy it.
  • Rollinia — bumpy green exterior, tastes like lemon meringue pie. Grown on a few Big Island and Oahu farms only.

These are the kinds of things you’ll remember long after the sunburn fades.

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