For a few seconds, twice a year, flagpoles in Hawaiʻi throw no shadow at all. The sun passes directly overhead and every vertical object’s shadow collapses into its own base. It doesn’t happen statewide at the same moment. Each island town gets its own narrow window, spread across about twelve days in May and thirteen days in July. Locals have a name for it: Lahaina Noon.
The phenomenon is strictly a tropics thing. Hawaiʻi is the only US state that sits between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, so it is the only US state where the subsolar point ever passes directly above an observer. If you are visiting in late May or mid-July 2026, you have a shot at catching it, and it takes about fifteen seconds of standing outside to do so.
Here is when it happens in 2026 across every main island, why it happens, and the best places to stand.
