
Our Poʻipū logo carries the Hawaiian hibiscus above “Hawaiian Kingdom — Est. 1795,” the shared retro emblem of our Hawaiʻi places, drawn in worn black-and-white like an old travel decal or crate label. The hibiscus is the through-line that links Poʻipū to every other Hawaiʻi town we make; what makes this one Poʻipū is everything around it — the Tree Tunnel, the crashing waves, the sugar town up the road, and the sunniest stretch of coast on the Garden Isle. Wear the crashing waves. Wear the south shore.
Poʻipū means “crashing waves” in Hawaiian, and the name fits the southernmost tip of Kauaʻi, where the surf rolls straight in off the open Pacific. This is the island's south shore — and, by a quirk of geography, its driest and sunniest corner. The trade winds blow in from the northeast and drop their rain on Mount Waiʻaleʻale, one of the wettest places on earth at some 450 inches a year; by the time that air reaches Poʻipū it has wrung itself out, leaving roughly thirty inches and a coast that stays warm and bright nearly year-round. It is the reason the resorts are here, and the reason Poʻipū feels like summer in any season.
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.