title: “The Three Hawaii Food and Farm Tours Worth Booking This Summer” slug: hawaii-food-farm-tours-worth-booking-summer-2026 date: 2026-04-22 14:00:00 -1000 description: “Craft chocolate in Hilo, pineapple and farm dinner in Upcountry Maui, a Circle Island food tour on Oahu: three Hawaii food and farm tours for summer 2026.” featured_image: https://cdn.hawaiiguide.io/images/jcogs_img/cache/food-tour2-_abcdef-582d1bf5cb112e011cf8e599b2da13584464a062-abcdef-e73c688287e692a073ae8f502e860615bf357932.jpg featured_image_alt: “A guided food-and-farm tour group tasting local Hawaiian produce under a canopy — one of the quieter ways to spend a half-day between beach mornings in Hawaii.” author: John C. Derrick author_slug: john-c-derrick author_image: https://cdn.hawaiiguide.io/images/jcogs_img/cache/john-derrick-2022-lei-abcdef-_2470b9f653742f788a82d346ced2d8bed0b6557b.png author_bio: “Founder & certified Hawai’i travel expert with 20+ years of experience in Hawai’i tourism.” categories:
- Things to Do
- Food & Drink islands:
- Big Island
- Maui
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Oahu seo: title: “Hawaii Food and Farm Tours Worth Booking for Summer 2026” description: “Big Island craft chocolate, Maui pineapple farm and dinner, Oahu Circle Island food tour: three Hawaii food and farm tours worth booking for summer 2026.” og_title: “Hawaii Food & Farm Tours: Three Worth Your Summer” og_image: https://cdn.hawaiiguide.io/images/jcogs_img/cache/food-tour2-_abcdef-582d1bf5cb112e011cf8e599b2da13584464a062-abcdef-_e73c688287e692a073ae8f502e860615bf357932.jpg blocks:
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type: content_block content: > Most travelers plan Hawaii around water. Beaches in the morning, boat trips in the afternoon, sunset somewhere with a mai tai. That’s a great trip. It is also, by about day four, a slightly repetitive trip, and the heat does most of the talking.
Hawaii food and farm tours are the quiet counter-move. A small group, a real person walking you through how a local crop goes from a field in Upcountry Maui or an orchard near Hilo to something you can buy at a roadside stand. The good ones send you home with stronger opinions about pineapple, chocolate, and garlic shrimp than you had on arrival.
Here are the three we would book first for summer 2026. One on the Big Island, one on Maui, one on Oahu. Two half-day farm tours and one full-day food tour, with the details that matter (time, location, what the tour actually includes) and the ones that don’t.
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type: heading_block heading_text: “Big Island — Honoli’i Orchards Craft Chocolate Tasting, Hilo” heading_level: h2 heading_icon: fa-food
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type: content_block content: > Hawai’i is the only U.S. state where cacao is grown commercially, and the Hilo side of the Big Island is where the best of it is happening. Honoli’i Orchards sits on Puia Road about five minutes north of Hilo, runs a 3.5-hour tour three days a week, and caps each session at fourteen guests. If you have any interest in how chocolate gets made, or if you just want a cool, rainy-side morning that isn’t a waterfall hike, this is the one to book.
The tour is led by Colin Hart, a master agronomist who spent years in cacao post-harvest (the fermentation and drying stages most visitors have no idea exist). The whole experience is genuinely technical without being dry. You walk the orchard, taste the slushy white pulp around a fresh cacao pod, then sit down in the tasting room with ten single-origin craft bars sourced from farms across the Hawaiian Archipelago: Big Island, Oahu, Kauai, and Maui. It is, in effect, a flight of Hawaii-grown chocolate, and by the end you can taste the difference between Honoli’i’s own beans and the ones grown on the leeward side of the islands. Same crop, four different microclimates, four completely different bars.
Booking runs through FareHarbor. The standard 3.5-hour tasting is the flagship, and there’s also a longer farm-plus-tasting combination for visitors who want to dig further into the growing side. Book the Hawaiian Craft Chocolate Tasting on FareHarbor, or compare current Big Island food tours on Viator if your dates don’t line up. Minimum age is 9, so no stroller-age kids. Closed shoes and a layer are worth bringing because the orchard portion is outdoors and the Hilo side is the rainier side by design.
Who this is for: anyone who actually reads the label on a chocolate bar, and anyone looking for a real indoor backup plan on a wet Hilo morning. Who it isn’t for: kids under 9, and anyone who thinks chocolate is chocolate.
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type: heading_block heading_text: “Maui — The Pineapple Tour Farm and Feast, Upcountry” heading_level: h2 heading_icon: fa-pagelines
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type: content_block content: > Maui Pineapple Tour operates the last commercial pineapple farm on the island, at 870 Hali’imaile Road in Makawao. This is the small Upcountry plantation village where Maui Gold pineapples are still grown, picked by hand, and shipped worldwide. The standard farm tour is already worth doing. The version to book is the Farm and Feast Experience, which adds dinner next door at Hali’imaile General Store.
Here’s why that combination works. The farm tour itself is short and content-dense. You ride out into the field, your guide walks you through the plant’s three-year cycle (pineapples are slow), and you get to cut your own pineapple to take home. Then you walk across the street to Hali’imaile General Store, a restaurant that’s been open since 1988 under Chef Bev Gannon, and eat a meal built around the produce you just saw in the ground. The Farm and Feast runs about 3.5 hours, typically in the late afternoon to line up with the dinner service. Pricing starts at roughly $205 per person; check the operator’s current booking page for today’s rate and seasonal availability.
Book the Farm and Feast Experience on FareHarbor. If you want a shorter, kid-friendlier version without the dinner, the standard Maui Pineapple Tour is the same farm walk without the restaurant stop. Or compare current Maui food and farm tours on Viator if the schedule you need is booked out. Farm and Feast fills up for summer weekends well in advance, in part because the restaurant seating is capped.
Two practical notes. You will want a rental car to get to Makawao. It’s about 45 minutes from Wailea and 50 minutes from Ka’anapali, up a winding two-lane road that’s a pleasure to drive in daylight and less pleasant at 9 PM after two glasses of wine. Book a car through Discount Hawaii Car Rental if you don’t have one yet. And bring a long-sleeve layer for the restaurant portion. Makawao sits around 1,600 feet of elevation, and evenings up there run noticeably cooler than the coast, enough that a visitor in a swimsuit all day will feel it after sunset.
Who this is for: couples doing a nice dinner night, and anyone who wants to understand why Maui Gold pineapples taste different from supermarket ones. Who it isn’t for: young kids (the pacing is slow and the dinner portion is adult), and anyone trying to stay near a resort. Makawao is a drive no matter where you’re staying.
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type: heading_block heading_text: “Oahu — Sights and Bites Circle Island Foodie Tour” heading_level: h2 heading_icon: fa-truck
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type: content_block content: > If you only have one day on Oahu that isn’t already accounted for, and you’d rather not rent a car and DIY the full Circle Island drive, Aloha Hawaii Tours’ Sights and Bites is the 8.5-hour package that covers both sides of the island and puts food at most of the stops. It’s locally owned, runs out of Honolulu, and includes hotel pickup from the Waikiki area.
The itinerary hits the greatest hits in logical order: Diamond Head lookout with a poi-glazed donut from Kamehameha Bakery, Halona Blowhole, a stop at the Hanauma Bay overlook, Makapu’u Point, a macadamia nut and Kona coffee sample stop, garlic shrimp from one of the North Shore trucks (lunch is included), a fruit-stand pause for Sharwil avocados or lilikoi, and finally the Dole Plantation on the way back into Honolulu. It is, in effect, someone else driving the route we’d recommend anyway, with about five food stops built in so you’re not hunting for lunch and fighting parking at Giovanni’s on your own.
Book through the operator directly, or compare current Oahu food and Circle Island tours on Viator. Free cancellation up to 24 hours out, small group van format, and this is the tour on our shortlist that works best with teenagers. The stops are short, the food is the real payoff, and there’s no 3-hour technical component (chocolate tasting, farm lecture) that loses a 14-year-old halfway through.
Who this is for: first-time Oahu visitors without a rental car, and anyone who’d rather eat their way around the island than figure out Kamehameha Highway traffic at 2 PM on a Saturday. Who it isn’t for: visitors who want to linger at each stop (this is a lot of ground in one day), and travelers on a tight budget. The full-day food tour is priced in line with an 8-hour guided experience, not a food crawl.
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type: heading_block heading_text: “Booking Realities for Summer 2026” heading_level: h2 heading_icon: fa-clock
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type: content_block content: > A few things to know before you book any of these. First, summer weekends go early. Honoli’i caps at 14 people per session and runs three days a week. Maui Pineapple Tour’s Farm and Feast is capped by the restaurant seating. Aloha Hawaii Tours’ Sights and Bites is small-group van format. You are not the only person who read an article and had this idea, so book 3-6 weeks ahead for June, July, and August weekends, especially the week around the King Kamehameha Day celebrations and the July 4 stretch.
Second, treat the Big Island and Maui picks as half-day anchors, not full-day commitments. Both tours run 3.5 hours, which leaves you a morning or afternoon on the other side of it. On the Big Island, pair Honoli’i with the Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park morning or a Hilo waterfall loop. On Maui, pair the Pineapple Farm and Feast with an Upcountry morning in Makawao town or a Haleakalā summit sunrise if you’re willing to be on a big day. Oahu’s Sights and Bites is the exception. It’s a full day start to finish.
Third, treat this as a shoulder activity in your itinerary, not the centerpiece. Hawaii’s headline activities (snorkeling, hiking, beaches, luaus) are what the centerpieces look like. Food and farm tours earn their place by being the thing that isn’t any of those: cool, air-conditioned in parts, cultural without being performative. You will remember tasting something you can’t buy at home.
Fourth, pack accordingly. Closed shoes for the orchard and farm tours, even in dry season. A long-sleeve layer for the Upcountry Maui dinner and any morning on the Hilo side. A reusable water bottle, because Oahu’s Sights and Bites van has water but the farm tours on Maui and the Big Island expect you to bring your own. And cash for tips. These are small, guide-led operations and tipping in the $10-20 per person range is appropriate and appreciated (see our full Hawaii tipping guide for the specifics).
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type: heading_block heading_text: “One We Didn’t Pick — And Why” heading_level: h2 heading_icon: fa-question
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type: content_block content: > Worth a note. Kauai has some of the best agriculture in the state: taro fields in Hanalei, tropical-fruit orchards on the east side, a handful of cacao operations on the east side and north shore. Readers sometimes ask where the Kauai pick is on lists like this. Honest answer: the Kauai food-tour scene is quieter and more seasonal than the other three islands, and the operators we’d recommend run smaller, less frequent tours that don’t book well for short-notice summer trips. If a great Kauai operator is on your radar, call them directly rather than going through an aggregator. We’ll revisit Kauai on a dedicated post once the summer-2026 operator lineup stabilizes.
Everything on this list we’d send our own family to. That’s the bar.
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heading_text: “Related reading”
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items:
- path: big-island/activities/coffee-farm-tours
- path: maui/activities/agritourism-tours
- path: hawaii-farm-to-table
- path: hawaii-farmers-markets