
Down at the water, Poʻipū Beach Park has been called the best beach in America — a pair of golden crescents with calm, protected swimming and a gentle break that has taught generations of beginners to surf. Nearby, the Spouting Horn forces the surf up through a lava tube and throws spray forty or fifty feet into the air, with a low moan that the old stories tied to a giant moʻo, or lizard, caught in the rock. West of town, the Allerton and McBryde Gardens fill Lāwaʻi Valley — two of only five National Tropical Botanical Gardens in the country.
In Old Kōloa Town, a row of wooden plantation-era storefronts still stands beneath a monkeypod tree planted in 1925, restored now as shops, galleries, and small eateries. The Sueoka family has run their store there since 1918 and runs it still. A free history center and the ten-mile Kōloa Heritage Trail — fourteen marked cultural, historical, and geological stops — tie the old town to the coast, so the plantation past and the beach sit a short walk apart.
Why People Visit Poʻipū
Poʻipū rewards visitors who want Hawaiʻi at its sunniest and most easygoing — a warm, protected coast with a century of south-shore history behind it. People come for Poʻipū Beach and the Spouting Horn, for the gardens and the golf, and for the plantation-era streets of Old Kōloa Town, where the Garden Isle's layered past sits a short walk from the sand.