
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.
Long before the resorts, Native Hawaiians lived along this shore for centuries, drawn by sheltered swimming coves, reef fishing, and fertile land just inland. Kauaʻi was also the first Hawaiian island reached by Europeans — Captain James Cook made landfall at Waimea, west of Poʻipū, in 1778. For a generation afterward the island kept its own ruler, King Kaumualiʻi, the last independent king in the Hawaiian Islands, before Kauaʻi joined the unified Hawaiian Kingdom in 1810.
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.