Kalalau Trail along Na Pali Coastline on Kauai

Haena State Park and Kalalau Trail Reopen This Summer: What Kauai Visitors Need to Know

John C. Derrick

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

The DLNR Division of State Parks confirmed that Haena State Park and Napali Coast State Wilderness Park will reopen in early-to-mid June 2026. The reopening hinges on final trail repairs and weather cooperating, but the state is targeting full public access with the GoHaena reservation system by mid-June.

Back-to-back Kona low storms hit Kauai’s North Shore in March, triggering landslides that shut down sections of the Kalalau Trail. For a few weeks, nobody was hiking past Ke’e Beach. The closure is lifting, but if you are planning a summer visit, you need to understand the reservation system, shuttle logistics, and permit requirements before you book anything.

What Happened: March Storms and Trail Damage

Two Kona low-pressure systems swept across Kauai in rapid succession during March 2026, dumping heavy rain across the Na Pali Coast. Landslides blocked portions of the trail between Hanakoa Valley and Kalalau Beach, and the state closed the trail to all hikers while a four-person DLNR crew assessed the damage on foot.

The good news: they found far less destruction than expected. Most slides were surface-level debris rather than structural trail failures. The trail reopened on March 19 for permitted overnight hikers, and DLNR has been working on repairs since.

Meanwhile, volunteers with the Friends of the Kalalau Trail have been running twice-monthly work days since February, clearing fallen trees and rebuilding sections of the first two miles from Ke’e Beach to Hanakapiai Stream. That stretch sees the heaviest foot traffic and takes the most beating during storms.

The full park reopening with shuttle service is set for June, when the reservation system and daily visitor caps go back into effect.

How the Reservation System Works

All access to Haena State Park requires an advance reservation through GoHaena.com. There is no walk-up option. No reservation, no entry. This system has been in place since 2019, and it is not changing.

The park caps visitors at 900 per day. Reservations open on a rolling 30-day window at 12:00 AM HST. Summer slots sell out within minutes of becoming available, especially for weekends and holidays.

Your best shot at snagging a sold-out date: check GoHaena.com between 7 and 8 AM HST on the day you want to go. Cancellations trickle in overnight and early morning. It is not guaranteed, but it works more often than you would expect.

If you are visiting Kauai and this is a priority, set a phone alarm for 12:00 AM HST exactly 30 days before your target date. Have the site loaded, payment info ready, and do not hesitate.

Shuttle Access: Costs and Schedule

You cannot drive to Haena State Park. All visitors must take the GoHaena shuttle, which is included in the reservation fare:

  • $40 per adult (ages 16+) roundtrip, includes park entry
  • $25 per child (ages 4-15) roundtrip, includes park entry
  • Free for children under 3

Shuttles run daily from 6:20 AM to 5:40 PM, departing every 20 minutes. The route has six stops:

  1. Waipa Park & Ride (free parking, lot open 6 AM to 6:40 PM)
  2. Wainiha Country Market
  3. Hanalei Colony Resort
  4. Haena Beach Park
  5. Limahuli Garden
  6. Haena State Park (final stop, trailhead access)

Park your car at Waipa and ride the shuttle in. The Park & Ride lot is free but fills by mid-morning on busy days. Arrive before 8 AM to be safe.

One big change for 2026: overnight Kalalau campers can no longer leave vehicles at Haena State Park. If you are doing the full 11-mile hike to Kalalau and camping overnight, you must take the shuttle in or arrange a ride. Plan your return shuttle timing accordingly — the last shuttle leaves Haena State Park around 5:40 PM.

Planning Your Hike

Three options, depending on your fitness and ambition:

Hanakapiai Beach (4 miles roundtrip). The most popular day hike. The trail drops from Ke’e Beach down to a rocky beach at the mouth of Hanakapiai Stream. Steep, narrow, and muddy in sections, but manageable for anyone in decent shape. No permit required beyond your GoHaena reservation. Budget 3-4 hours.

Hanakapiai Falls (8 miles roundtrip). Same trailhead, but you continue 2 miles inland along the stream to a 300-foot waterfall. The stream crossing can be waist-deep after rain. This is a full-day commitment — budget 6-8 hours and bring plenty of water.

Full Kalalau (22 miles roundtrip). The crown jewel. Eleven miles each way along the Na Pali Coast to Kalalau Beach. This requires a separate camping permit through the state — your GoHaena shuttle reservation does not cover overnight access beyond Hanakapiai. Permits are limited and competitive. Most hikers do this as a 2-3 night trip.

If the full hike is not for you, a Na Pali Coast boat tour from the south shore shows you the same cliffs from sea level — no permits or trail legs required.

One logistical note: multiple bridges on Kuhio Highway between Princeville and Waipa are under construction. Expect delays of 15-30 minutes during active work hours. Build extra drive time into your morning if you are coming from Poipu or Kapaa.

What to Know Before You Go

The North Shore of Kauai is remote. Once you are past Ke’e Beach, you are on your own. A few things that trip up first-timers:

Book your shuttle 30 days out. Set that midnight HST alarm. Summer weekends sell out in minutes. Weekdays are slightly easier but still competitive.

Bring more water than you think you need. There are no water stations on the trail. Stream water is available but must be filtered or treated. Carry at least 2 liters per person for the Hanakapiai Beach hike, 3+ liters for the falls. A hydration backpack is the easiest way to carry that volume hands-free.

Wear real hiking shoes. The trail is slippery red clay after any rain, and it rains frequently. Sandals and running shoes are a recipe for a twisted ankle or worse. Proper trail runners or hiking boots with grip are non-negotiable.

Cell service drops to zero. Do not count on calling anyone once you pass Ke’e Beach. Download offline maps, tell someone your itinerary, and carry a basic first aid kit.

Check conditions before you go. GoHaena.com/conditions posts current trail status and weather advisories. Kauai’s North Shore weather can shift from sunshine to downpour in 20 minutes. Flash floods in the valleys are a real hazard, not a theoretical one.

Rent a car for the drive. The North Shore is 40+ minutes from Lihue Airport with no public transit options that connect well to the shuttle. Book through Discount Hawaii Car Rental for the best Kauai rates and leave your car at the Waipa Park & Ride.

Related Kauai Guides

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