Lanterns floating on the water during Hawaii's Lantern Floating ceremony on Memorial Day

Memorial Day Weekend in Hawaiʻi 2026: What to Know

John C. Derrick

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

Memorial Day weekend 2026 falls on May 23-25, and it marks the unofficial start of summer tourism across all four major Hawaiian islands. Flights fill up and resort rates spike. But the weekend also brings some of Hawaiʻi’s most meaningful cultural events, ceremonies you won’t find anywhere else in the country. If you’re headed to Hawaiʻi over this weekend, here’s what to plan around and what to book before it’s gone.

Lantern Floating Hawaiʻi — Oʻahu's Signature Event

The single most striking event of Memorial Day weekend in Hawaiʻi is Lantern Floating at Ala Moana Beach Park on Magic Island. Organized by the Shinnyo-en Foundation, this ceremony draws roughly 50,000 people each year to set thousands of paper lanterns adrift on the water at sunset. Each lantern carries personal messages honoring loved ones who’ve passed. (Lantern Floating Hawaii)

The ceremony starts around 6:00 p.m. on Memorial Day evening (Monday, May 25). Gates open earlier — typically by 4:00 p.m. — and the park fills fast. Attendees write messages, prayers, and names on lanterns provided on-site (free, no registration required). As the sun sets, participants wade into the shallow water along Magic Island’s lagoon and release their lanterns. Thousands of glowing lanterns drift across the water as the sky darkens. Nothing else on Hawaiʻi’s event calendar looks like this. (Shinnyo-en Foundation — About the Ceremony)

Arrive by 3:30 p.m. if you want a decent spot near the water. Bring a blanket to sit on. Leave the chairs at the hotel — the park restricts them during the event. Parking at Ala Moana Center fills early; take TheBus or the Skyline rail to Ala Moana Station and walk over. The ceremony is broadcast live on local television for those who can’t attend in person.

Pearl Harbor and Punchbowl Ceremonies

Memorial Day carries particular weight on Oʻahu. Pearl Harbor — the site of the December 7, 1941 attack that pulled the United States into World War II — hosts a formal ceremony each year at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial. The event includes military honors, a keynote address, wreath-laying, and a missing man formation flyover. It’s open to the public, but seating is limited and fills early. (National Park Service — Pearl Harbor National Memorial)

The National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific at Punchbowl Crater holds a separate ceremony, typically at 9:00 a.m. on Memorial Day. Volunteers place thousands of lei and American flags on the graves of service members buried in the crater. Punchbowl honors over 53,000 service members — including those interred in the cemetery and names inscribed on the Courts of the Missing — many connected to Pearl Harbor and the Pacific Theater. The ceremony is solemn, moving, and free to attend. (National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific)

There’s also the American Gold-Star Families Memorial Day Parade on Kalakaua Avenue — a 1-mile march from Fort DeRussy to Kapiʻolani Park starting at 5:00 p.m. on Memorial Day, with floats, marching bands, and military groups. The 2026 theme honors the 85th Anniversary of WWII. Free to watch from anywhere along the route. (memorialdayparade.com)

If you’re on Oʻahu over the weekend, visiting both memorial sites is worth a full morning. Pearl Harbor requires advance reservations for the USS Arizona Memorial program — book through the National Park Service website as soon as tickets become available, typically 60 days in advance. (Recreation.gov — Pearl Harbor Tickets)

Crowd Levels and Pricing: What to Expect

Memorial Day weekend is peak travel season in Hawaiʻi. The Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority reported that May 2025 visitor spending reached $1.68 billion statewide, with the Memorial Day corridor accounting for a significant share. (Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority — Monthly Visitor Statistics)

Based on historical holiday pricing trends, expect round-trip airfare from the West Coast to run $450-$700 during the holiday window — roughly 30-40% higher than midweek flights in early May. From the East Coast, $650-$1,000 is typical. If you haven’t booked flights yet, check prices now. Fares tend to jump sharply inside the 60-day window for holiday weekends. (Google Flights)

Hotel rates across Waikiki typically average $350-$500/night during Memorial Day weekend, compared to $250-$350 during non-holiday periods (based on prior-year booking data from major travel sites). Outer island resorts (Wailea, Poipū, Kohala Coast) run $400-$700/night. Vacation rentals — where legal — follow similar patterns but book out faster. Check Hawaiʻi’s county-level vacation rental rules before booking any non-hotel accommodation. (Hawaiʻi vacation rental regulations)

What to Book Right Now

Two months out is the sweet spot for Memorial Day weekend bookings. Here’s the priority list:

Book flights immediately if you haven’t already. Set fare alerts on Google Flights or Hopper, but don’t wait for a miraculous drop — holiday weekend fares rarely crater inside 60 days. Tuesday/Wednesday departures (May 19-20) and Wednesday/Thursday returns (May 27-28) will save you money versus Friday-Monday travel.

The USS Arizona Memorial program releases tickets on a rolling 60-day basis through Recreation.gov. May 25 tickets are available now. These sell out. Book today. (Recreation.gov — Pearl Harbor)

Memorial Day weekend consistently produces the highest rental car prices of the year in Hawaiʻi. Book early and compare rates at Discount Hawaii Car Rental for competitive island pricing. If you’re staying in Waikiki only, skip the car — parking alone runs $40-$60/night at most hotels.

Waikiki fine dining (Senia, Orchids at Halekulani, 53 By The Sea) books up weeks ahead for holiday weekends. Make reservations now for Friday and Saturday dinner. Casual spots and plate lunch counters don’t take reservations, so just expect longer waits.

Popular tours like snorkeling charters and helicopter rides fill fast. On Maui, Haleakalā sunrise requires a National Park Service reservation, available 60 days in advance at Recreation.gov. (Recreation.gov — Haleakalā Sunrise)

Island-by-Island: Where to Go

Oʻahu

The busiest island for Memorial Day. Waikiki Beach, Hanauma Bay, and the North Shore all see peak crowds. The upside: Lantern Floating, the Pearl Harbor/Punchbowl ceremonies, and the Gold-Star Families parade make Oʻahu the most meaningful place to spend the actual holiday. If you’re here, plan beach time for early morning (before 9:00 a.m.) and late afternoon. Both Hanauma Bay and Diamond Head require advance reservations year-round — book through their online systems before you go. (Hanauma Bay Reservations)

Maui

Wailea and Kāʻanapali resorts run near capacity over the holiday. South Maui beaches (Big Beach, Wailea Beach) get packed by 10:00 a.m. Head to less-trafficked spots like DT Fleming Beach in Kapalua or Ulua Beach in Wailea. The Road to Hana is spectacular in late May — waterfalls are flowing from spring rains — but the drive is long and the pullouts get crowded on holiday weekends. Start early (before 7:00 a.m.) or consider a guided tour. Maui also holds a commemorative ceremony at Makawao Veterans Cemetery on Memorial Day morning, including a lei drop by helicopter. (A Maui Blog — Memorial Day)

Big Island

The Big Island absorbs crowds better than any other island because of its sheer size. Kohala Coast resorts (Mauna Lani, Waikoloa) fill up, but the rest of the island stays relatively uncrowded. Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park is a must — and late May is an excellent time to visit. Kīlauea has been active in recent months; check the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory for current eruption status before your visit at USGS HVO. Hapuna Beach, consistently rated one of the best beaches in the state, is big enough to spread out even on busy weekends.

Kauaʻi

Kauaʻi is the quietest major island over Memorial Day, though “quiet” is relative during a holiday. Poipū Beach on the south shore is the most popular, but the north shore — Hanalei Bay, Kēʻē Beach (Hāʻena State Park, advance reservation required through gohaena.com) — offers stunning late-May conditions. The Nāpali Coast is accessible by boat or Kalalau Trail, and May weather is generally favorable for both. Kauaʻi has fewer resort-density areas, so crowds disperse naturally.

Tips for Beating the Memorial Day Crowds

Late May weather across all islands is warm and mostly dry — daytime highs in the low-to-mid 80s, ocean temperatures around 77-79°F, and consistent trade winds. Rain is possible but brief, especially on windward sides. Pack light layers for early mornings and a rain shell for quick showers.

Go early. Beaches, trails, and attractions across all islands are least crowded between 7:00 and 9:00 a.m. By 10:00 a.m. on a holiday weekend, every popular beach has a parking problem.

Book the shoulder days. Flying in Tuesday or Wednesday before the weekend and leaving Wednesday after gives you the holiday experience without the Friday/Monday airport chaos. Honolulu’s Daniel K. Inouye International Airport gets intense on peak travel days.

Eat where the locals eat. Skip Waikiki’s main drag restaurants on Saturday night. Head to Kaimukī or Kapahulu for better food at half the price. On Maui, Pāʻia and Wailuku have strong local restaurant scenes away from the resort strips.

Don’t skip the ceremonies. It’s easy to treat Memorial Day as just a beach weekend. But the Lantern Floating ceremony puts 50,000 people on a dark beach watching paper lanterns disappear over the water, and the services at Pearl Harbor and Punchbowl carry real weight. You’ll remember those long after the sunburn fades.

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