Hawaii ATV tours come from a small group of operators that show up on every booking site, and two of the names you’ll still see have quietly stopped running. If you’re planning a summer 2026 trip and want a clean answer on what’s bookable, here’s the by-island shortlist with current 2026 prices and age limits. A note on scope: this guide covers the major commercial ATV and UTV tour operators with public booking pages on each island. Small private rentals, ranch stays that include rides for guests only, and defunct operators that still appear on aggregator pages are not included. Two operators travelers still book by mistake: Kahoma Ranch ATV in Lahaina, which has been listed as closed since the August 2023 wildfires, and ATV Outfitters Hawaii in North Kohala on the Big Island, which ceased operations in early 2021. Aggregator listings still surface both. Skip them. Everything below is verified against each operator’s own booking page as of late April 2026. Prices and age limits come straight from those pages. Most operators add Hawaii’s general excise tax ( up to 4.712% depending on county) plus any booking fees on top of the listed rate, so expect the final checkout figure to run a few percent higher than what’s quoted here.
Oahu
Oahu has two real operators and they’re nothing alike. One is a film-set backcountry tour. The other is a built-for-adrenaline adventure park. Pick by location and style.
Kualoa Ranch UTV Raptor Tour (Windward Coast)
The headline Oahu off-road experience. Kualoa’s 4,000-acre private reserve runs from the Koʻolau Mountains down to the ocean, and the Raptor route takes you through Kaʻaʻawa Valley — the valley behind Jurassic Park, Jurassic World, and Kong: Skull Island. The tour is two hours, runs about 45 minutes from Waikīkī, and costs $154.95 per adult per the Kualoa booking page. The driver age is the catch. Drivers must be 21 with a valid driver’s license; passengers can be as young as 5. If nobody in your group is 21+ with a license, book the ride-along version instead so you’re not turned away at check-in. Each Raptor holds 2 to 5 passengers per the operator’s own page, so a small family can ride together without splitting up. Compare Kualoa UTV options on Viator’s Oahu tours page if you want to see departure times across booking platforms before committing.
Coral Crater Adventure Park (Kapolei)
Coral Crater sits inside the rim of an actual volcanic crater in Kapolei, and the whole park is engineered for short, high-energy activities. The standalone ATV tour is one hour and starts from $119.99 per the Coral Crater ATV page, with combo packages that pair the ride with the zipline course or the adventure tower. If you want to zipline and ATV on the same day without driving between two operators, this is the only place on Oahu that does both under one roof. You can also book the Off-Road ATV Adventure direct on FareHarbor if you’d rather skip third-party sites. Coral Crater is in Kapolei, about 35 to 40 minutes west of Waikīkī and roughly 10 minutes from the Aulani resort area. Both operators offer Waikīkī shuttle add-ons ( Kualoa and Coral Crater), but for groups of three or more a rental car is usually cheaper and frees up the rest of the day. We use Discount Hawaii Car Rental for no-deposit, free-cancellation bookings.
Maui
Maui’s ATV options shifted in 2023. Kahoma Ranch in Lahaina, the decades-old operator most travelers used to book, has been listed as closed since the August 2023 wildfires. Two other operators are running for summer 2026.
Maui Off-Road Adventures (West Maui)
A major West Maui ATV operator currently running. The course sits on 1,400 acres above Kapalua Airport, just minutes from Lahaina and Kāʻanapali. Tours are two hours, run daily at 8 AM, 11 AM, and 2 PM in 4-passenger Polaris RZRs, and climb to roughly 2,000 feet of elevation with ocean and outer-island views. Pricing per the Maui Off-Road Adventures booking page is a flat $495 per vehicle for 1 to 4 riders, plus tax. That makes it expensive for a solo traveler and a strong value for a full group. Minimum passenger age is 7. Drivers must be 18, or 25 if a child under 18 is in the vehicle. Expect to get muddy and possibly soaked. Closed-toe shoes are required and the operator says outright that it’s a real off-road adventure, not a sightseeing drive.
Maui Mountain Activities (Wailuku, West Maui Mountains)
The other Maui option, with a course that climbs into the West Maui Mountains then drops down toward the coastline. Check-in is at 3040 Kahekili Highway in Wailuku and tours run Monday through Saturday with 8:15 AM and 12:15 PM starts. The 1.5-hour ride is $249 single ATV, $269 side-by-side driver, or $179 passenger per the Maui Mountain Activities tours page, plus 4.712% Hawaii GET. Minimum age is 16, and drivers need a valid driver’s license or learner’s permit, which is unusually strict for a Hawaii operator. Closed-toe shoes are required and long pants are recommended. If you want to compare other Maui activity options before committing, Viator’s Maui page lists the alternatives in one view.
Big Island
The Big Island has two very different styles: a family-friendly Kona tour with cultural add-ons, and a North Kohala backcountry ride with cooler weather and stream crossings. The long-time North Kohala name ATV Outfitters Hawaii is gone. Pick by location and group makeup.
Aloha Adventure Farms (Holualoa, near Kona)
The most family-friendly Big Island option, about 10 minutes uphill from Kailua-Kona. The two-hour ATV tour weaves through replica Polynesian villages — Hawaiʻi, Tonga, Samoa, and Fiji — and the operator runs companion add-ons including a wood-carving session with a fourth-generation master carver from Tonga and a Hawaiian-grown exotic-fruit tasting. Pricing per the Aloha Adventure Farms ATV page is $219 adult and $149 child. The big planning note: solo ATV riders must be at least 16, at least five feet tall, and weigh between 100 and 350 pounds with a valid ID. Children ages 3 to 15 ride in a guide-driven UTV instead, and ages 3 to 4 require an adult in the same UTV. Tours run Monday through Saturday at 10:30 AM and 1 PM. Summer dates can sell out, so book early. If the calendar shows full, call the farm direct ( 808-796-0110) to ask about same-day availability.
Kohala UTV Adventure (Hāwī, North Kohala)
The pick if you want a proper backcountry ride with cooler weather and stream crossings. Tours run from the plantation village of Hāwī at 8:30 AM and 12:30 PM and last about 2.5 hours through pasture and forest with waterfall stops on private Kohala lands. Pricing per the Kohala UTV Adventure booking page: $389 each for the first two riders, $185 third rider, $160 fourth rider, plus tax. Driver minimum age is 21 with a valid license. Passenger minimum is 5. Hāwī is roughly an hour and 15 minutes from Kona and close to two hours from Hilo, so this is a half-day commitment minimum. Pair it with the Pololū Valley overlook ten minutes up the road on the way back. Compare other Big Island tour options on Viator if you want the full picture before booking.
Kauai
Kauai has one major commercial ATV operator. There used to be a second on the North Shore (Princeville Ranch ran an ATV program for years and now offers other adventures instead). The remaining operator runs two long ranch routes with film locations and waterfall access.
Kipu Ranch Adventures (Līhuʻe)
Kipu Ranch is a 3,000-acre working cattle ranch about 10 minutes from Līhuʻe Airport. Per the operator’s own history page, the ranch was founded in 1872, and its filming locations page lists Jurassic Park, Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Descendants, and Outbreak among the productions shot on the property. Two tours run, both starting at $198 per person from the Kipu tours page and both about three hours. The Ultimate Kauai Off-Road Ranch Tour covers the headline filming locations in one go — meadow shots from Jurassic Park, the valley from Raiders, and the ridges from The Descendants. The Waterfall Trail Expedition is the more technical ride: more stream crossings, bamboo jungle, and a private waterfall stop with the option to swim. If you’re on Kauai specifically for the adventure, book the Waterfall tour. Two planning notes. Kipu only runs Tuesday through Friday, so build it into your itinerary early. Minimum age is 9 — kids under 9 cannot ride, period, and that’s the most common reason families get turned away at check-in. The 4-seat Teryx UTVs hold drivers and passengers together, and a solo-driver upgrade is available if you don’t want to share a seat with strangers. Compare Kauai tour options on Viator’s Kauai page if you want a side-by-side view of departure times.
Which course should you pick?
A rough guide by traveler type:
- Families with younger kids: Kohala UTV (Big Island) and Kualoa (Oahu) both take passengers from age 5. Kipu on Kauai requires age 9 minimum.
- Movie-set backcountry: Kipu Ranch (Kauai) for Jurassic Park meadows and Raiders jungle, or Kualoa (Oahu) for the Kaʻaʻawa Valley line-up. The Kauai version is longer and more remote.
- Most technical ride: Kipu's Waterfall Trail Expedition (Kauai) for stream crossings and bamboo, or Maui Off-Road Adventures for elevation gain and switchbacks.
- Most family programming: Aloha Adventure Farms (Big Island). The Polynesian villages plus the wood-carving and fruit-tasting add-ons turn the ATV into a half-day cultural experience instead of just a ride.
- Tighter, faster, more controlled: Coral Crater (Oahu). Single-rider ATVs, an actual crater floor, and the only zipline + ATV combo on Oahu under one roof.
- Budget pick for solo riders: Coral Crater's standalone ATV at $119.99 is the lowest entry point on a major island, though the one-hour duration is shorter than every other tour on this list.
What to wear and expect
Most ATV tours require closed-toe shoes; flip-flops typically get you turned away at check-in, and Maui Off-Road Adventures and Maui Mountain Activities both spell that out on their own pages. Check your operator’s confirmation email before you leave the hotel. Wear clothes you don’t care about. Hawaii’s volcanic soil is a deep red dust on the leeward sides and dark mud on the windward valleys, and both stain. Quick-dry pants beat shorts for stream crossings and engine-bay heat. A packable rain shell is the right call on most island tours — windward Kualoa and any Kohala forest tour catch trade-wind showers even on otherwise sunny days. Driver-license rules vary more than you’d expect. Kualoa and Kohala UTV require drivers to be 21 with a valid license. Maui Off-Road Adventures lets 18-year-olds drive (25 if a child is on board). Maui Mountain Activities accepts a 16-year-old with a learner’s permit, and Aloha Adventure Farms allows solo ATV riders at 16 if they meet its height, weight, and ID rules. Bring your physical license to every tour to avoid any check-in friction. Sunscreen is the other quiet need. Most tours stop somewhere with no shade, so pack it whether or not the day looks bright. A reef-safe mineral sunscreen is the smart default in Hawaiʻi anyway. Runoff from the leeward slopes feeds into nearshore reefs, and Hawaiʻi restricts oxybenzone and octinoxate sunscreens sold and distributed in the state.
One planning note on rental cars
Most of these tours sit well outside the resort areas. Kualoa is 45 minutes from Waikīkī, Kohala UTV is 75 minutes from Kona, Kipu is 10 minutes from Līhuʻe but the rest of Kauai isn’t, and the Maui operators sit above Kapalua Airport or in Wailuku. Operator shuttles from the resort areas are available on a few of these tours, but they add a per-person fee on top of the tour price and tend to burn most of the surrounding day. For groups of two or more, a rental car often comes out cheaper and gives you the afternoon back. Summer 2026 pickup windows fill fast, especially on Maui and Kauai. If you haven’t locked in a car yet, Discount Hawaii Car Rental is the aggregator we use on our own trips. They pull from the major Hawaii rental brands, hold a reservation with no deposit, and let you cancel free — the right shape for an outdoor activity that might get rain-delayed.
