
Today Wailea is five crescent beaches in a row — Keawakapu, Mokapu, Ulua, Wailea, and Polo — strung together by a mile and a half of shoreline path, with resorts, golf, and shops where scrubland once ran. Matson Navigation bought those fifteen hundred acres in 1957; Alexander & Baldwin and Northwestern Mutual built the planned coast in 1971. The crescents and the reef are older than any of it, and the goddess’s water still runs to the same shore. Wear the history, and carry a little of it home.
What’s with the goddess of canoe-builders? Wailea’s name is, quite literally, her water — wai o Lea, the water of Lea, the goddess Hawaiian canoe-makers prayed to before they felled a koa tree and shaped its trunk into a hull. She is remembered too as a guardian of the hula, and one tradition says she turned this stretch of shore into a forest so lovely she would fly above it just to admire the birds. So when you stand on the warm leeward sand here, you are standing in a place named for the patron of master craftsmen — not a resort slogan, but an old prayer carried in three syllables.
Why People Visit Wailea, Hawaiʻi
Wailea offers a seamless beach-and-path experience: swimming, snorkeling, strolling, and light shopping between coves. It is sunny, refined, and family friendly, with year-round appeal in its beaches, walkways, and public access. Natural beauty and easy comfort sit side by side, and a deep Hawaiian past — the goddess Lea, the fishing shore of Kahamanini, the Marines’ “Little Tarawa” — runs quietly beneath the polish.