Waimea Town

Waimea Town

Located within the West Region on Kauai

03-29-2026

John C. Derrick

Founder & certified Hawaii travel expert with 20+ years of experience in Hawaii tourism.

In 1778, the British sailor Captain James Cook sailed into Waimea Harbor and forever changed the history of Hawaii. The Captain Cook Monument, is located in downtown Waimea and is set facing the ocean. In the early 1800's, the Russian-American Company, through agent Georg Anton Schaffer, allied with King Kaumualii to build Fort Elisabeth on the banks of the Waimea River. The fort was completed in 1817, but Schaffer was expelled shortly after when Kaumualii learned he lacked official Russian government backing. The fort was later used by the Hawaiian monarchy until it was abandoned in 1864; its remains can still be visited today as Pa'ula'ula State Historic Site. New England missionaries arrived in 1820 and set up Kauai's first Christian mission and churches, many of which still stand today. Later, Chinese, Europeans, Japanese and Norwegians came to Waimea and established businesses still in operation.

From Waimea you can head north along Highway 550 to Waimea Canyon and Koke'e State Park, or continue west towards Polihale Beach park. Waimea is located around Mile Marker #23 on Highway 50.

Waimea Town Guide

Where Western Contact Changed Hawaii Forever

On January 20, 1778, Captain James Cook and the crew of HMS Resolution stepped ashore at Waimea Bay. It was the first documented Western contact with the Hawaiian Islands. A bronze statue of Cook stands in the center of town, facing the ocean where his ships anchored. That single landing set off a chain of events that transformed Hawaiian civilization within a generation.

The weight of that history is everywhere in Waimea if you look for it. The town sits at the mouth of the Waimea River, which carved the canyon that bears its name over millions of years. Red dirt stains everything here. Your shoes, your car, your clothes. That red is the signature of Kauai's west side.

Gateway to Waimea Canyon

Most visitors blow through Waimea on their way up to Waimea Canyon. Fair enough. Waimea Canyon Drive (Highway 550) starts right in town and climbs 3,400 feet over about 12 miles to the canyon lookouts and Kokee State Park. The views from the top rank among the best in all of Hawaii.

But the town itself deserves more than a gas stop. Give it an hour on your way up or down.

Russian Fort Elisabeth

On the east bank of the Waimea River sit the stone ruins of Fort Elisabeth, built in 1817 by agents of the Russian-American Company. Georg Anton Schaeffer convinced King Kaumualii of Kauai to ally with Russia and construct the fort. The scheme collapsed when Kaumualii realized Schaeffer had no real backing from the Russian government. Schaeffer was expelled, and the Hawaiian monarchy used the fort until abandoning it in 1864.

Today it is Paʻulaʻula State Historic Site. The star-shaped walls are still partially standing. Free to visit, rarely crowded, and a genuinely strange chapter in Hawaiian history that most visitors never hear about.

The Town Itself

Waimea is not a tourist town. It is a working town that happens to sit on a historically significant stretch of coastline. The main drag has a handful of shops, a couple of restaurants, and not much else. That is the appeal.

Waimea Brewing Company, inside the Waimea Plantation Cottages property, pours solid craft beer and serves decent pub food. Ishihara Market is the local grocery store and has some of the best poke on Kauai's west side. Grab a container before you head up to the canyon.

Jojo's Shave Ice, right on the main road, is a popular stop for a cold fix on hot west-side afternoons.

Waimea Plantation Cottages

Strung along the beachfront just west of town, these restored plantation-era cottages date back to the early 1900s. They were originally housing for sugar plantation workers. Now they are vacation rentals with that old-Hawaii feel that the big resorts on the east and north shores cannot replicate. No high-rises. No lobby bars. Just wooden cottages, coconut palms, and a black-sand beach.

The beach itself is not great for swimming. The Waimea River mouth muddies the water, and the surf can be rough. But the sunsets from the property are world-class.

Waimea River

The Waimea River is the widest river in Hawaii. It drains the entire Waimea Canyon watershed and empties into the ocean at Waimea Beach. After heavy rains, the river runs deep red with the iron-rich soil that gives Waimea Canyon its color. The river mouth shifts with the seasons and surf conditions, sometimes creating a wide sandbar that locals use for fishing and hanging out.

West Side Weather

Kauai's west side is the dry side. While the north shore gets drenched with rain (Hanalei averages around 85 inches per year), Waimea sees roughly 20 inches annually. If it is raining everywhere else on Kauai, there is a decent chance the sun is out in Waimea.

Temperatures run warmer here too. Mid-80s in summer, upper 70s in winter. Bring sunscreen and water, especially if you are hiking.

Practical Information

Waimea is about 25 miles west of Lihue on Highway 50. The drive takes roughly one hour depending on traffic. There is one main highway along the south and west coast, so plan accordingly.

Fill your gas tank in Waimea before heading up to Waimea Canyon. There are no gas stations on the canyon road or at Kokee. The drive up and back will eat more fuel than you expect on those steep grades.

Dining options are limited. Aside from Waimea Brewing Company and a few takeout spots, there is not much to choose from. If you want a sit-down dinner, Poipu or Hanapepe are your closest bets heading back east.

If you are planning to rent a car on Kauai, check rates with Discount Hawaii Car Rental before booking. You will need a car to get out here. No bus service runs frequently enough to make the west side practical without one.

Geolocation Data

Geographic Coordinates

Latitude: 21.95861106
Longitude: -159.6708333

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Waimea Town, Kauai