Itinerary · Oahu
3 Day Oahu Itinerary: The Local’s Guide
Three days, three zones. Honolulu first, Pearl Harbor and the North Shore second, the Windward side third. Move with the traffic, not against it, and you will see more in 72 hours than most visitors do in a week.
Oahu is not big. The whole island is 44 miles long. But it has three worlds that feel completely different from each other, and most visitors spend all three days in one of them without knowing the other two exist.
This itinerary fixes that. Day 1 in Honolulu gets you Diamond Head, Waikiki, Iolani Palace, and a proper downtown dinner. Day 2 covers Pearl Harbor before it fills up, then the 40-minute drive north to the shrimp trucks, the turtles, and Sunset Beach. Day 3 is the Windward side: a sunrise pillbox hike above Kailua, the best beach on the island, and Byodo-In Temple at the foot of the Ko’olau cliffs.
A rental car is not optional. See how to rent a car on Oahu before you fly. The bus gets you around Waikiki. It does not get you from Pearl Harbor to Laniakea turtles before 3pm. Book three days, pick it up at the airport, and you will spend your time moving, not waiting.
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Day 1 — Honolulu & Waikiki
Diamond Head Hike
Set your alarm for 5:30am. Diamond Head crater fills by 9am and is genuinely unpleasant by 10am: full parking lot, lines at the tunnel sections, and no breeze at the summit. At 6am it is cool, quiet, and the light from the rim over the south shore is the best on the island. The hike is 1.6 miles round-trip with 560 feet of gain, two tunnel sections with overhead clearance, and old military stairs near the top. Reserve entry at gostateparks.hawaii.gov up to 30 days ahead ($5 per person). Walk-up spots release each morning but go fast. No reservation? Walk Diamond Head Road to Amelia Earhart’s landing marker on the outer slope for the same south shore view with no ticket required.
Kona Coffee Purveyors
Five-minute walk from the Diamond Head base on Kapahulu Avenue, inside the International Marketplace. 100% Kona single-origin coffee and pastries from b.patisserie. The pour-over is worth the extra two minutes. Order at the counter, grab a stool, and eat before the beach crowds arrive.
Waikiki Beach
Start at the Duke Kahanamoku statue at the east end of the beach. Duke is the reason modern surfing exists as a global sport. He surfed this break every morning for decades. The Canoes break directly in front of the statue is the gentlest wave on the island: long, slow, and perfect for first-timers or anyone who wants to bodysurf without getting worked. Get in the water before 10am. After that the beach chairs fill in and the energy shifts from local morning routine to full tourist scene. Both versions of Waikiki have their merits; the early one is better.
Iolani Palace
The only royal palace on American soil, and one of the most significant buildings in the state. King Kalakaua completed it in 1882 with electricity and telephone service before the White House had either. Queen Lili‘uokalani was imprisoned here for eight months after the 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom. The docent-led tour ($27) covers both floors with historical context that the self-guided audio version doesn’t match. Book the first afternoon slot online and allow two hours. If history is not the priority for your group, skip it and use the afternoon at the beach or Ala Moana, but this is one of the few sites on the island that genuinely earns its visit.
Magic Island at Ala Moana
Magic Island is the small peninsula at the east end of Ala Moana Beach Park. It juts into the ocean and faces the open horizon, which gives you a clean sunset view without Waikiki’s hotel skyline in the frame. Locals park here after work. The grass lawn fills with families, dogs off-leash, and people doing exactly nothing in a productive way. The sunset from the tip of the point, looking back at Diamond Head lit orange to the east and open water to the west, is the best free view in Honolulu. Get there by 5:30pm and stay until dark.
The Pig and The Lady
Vietnamese-Hawaiian fusion in Chinatown, 15 minutes from Waikiki. The lamb pho is the reason to come. The Vietnamese French dip is the reason to come back. Reserve two to three days ahead online; walk-up bar seats are available but the wait is real on weekends. Chinatown itself is worth a walk before or after: galleries, dive bars, and the Honolulu Night Market on the last Friday of each month.
Day 2 — Pearl Harbor & the North Shore
Pearl Harbor National Memorial
Arrive at the visitor center by 8am. The USS Arizona Memorial is free but requires a timed ticket booked at recreation.gov. Tickets release 60 days out and sell out fast, especially November through March. Book as soon as your travel dates are set. The boat tour to the memorial takes 75 minutes. Add the USS Bowfin submarine museum ($27) if submarines interest anyone in your group, or if you have kids who will appreciate crawling through a World War II boat. The full visit with both takes four hours. Build your Day 2 schedule around that, not less. Pearl Harbor is the most significant historical site in the state. It deserves a real morning, not a rushed hour.
Giovanni’s Shrimp Truck
Take H-2 north from Pearl Harbor through the central plateau. The drive is 40 minutes in normal traffic and drops you onto the North Shore with open pineapple fields on both sides. Giovanni’s is the white truck in the lot on Kamehameha Highway, just before you reach Haleiwa town. Garlic butter shrimp over rice, $15, cash preferred. A dozen shrimp, a scoop of rice, and a wedge of lemon. Get the garlic butter. Do not talk yourself out of it. Eat at one of the picnic tables in the lot.
Haleiwa Town
One main street, six walkable blocks. Surf shops, galleries, local restaurants, and Aoki’s Shave Ice. Go to Aoki’s, not Matsumoto’s. Matsumoto’s has the tourist line; Aoki’s has the better shave ice: denser, smoother, and less sweet. Get the rainbow with azuki beans on the bottom and condensed milk poured over the top. Walk the street for 45 minutes. That is enough. The North Shore runs all the way to Sunset Beach. Haleiwa is the gateway, not the destination.
Laniakea (Turtle Beach)
Three miles east of Haleiwa on Kamehameha Highway. A roadside pullout with a stretch of rocky sand where green sea turtles haul out most afternoons to rest. Volunteers stake a rope line at ten feet and keep the distance respectful. Stay behind the rope. The turtles are not performing; they are resting and they are federally protected under the Endangered Species Act. You will get a better photo from ten feet with patience than from two feet with a stressed animal. Give it 30 to 40 minutes and move on.
Sunset Beach
Five minutes north of Laniakea on Kamehameha Highway. Pull over and walk the sand. In winter this beach hosts waves that professional surfers travel from around the world to ride: the Eddie Aikau Invitational runs here when Waimea Bay breaks at 40 feet, and the Triple Crown of Surfing finishes on this stretch of coast. In summer it is calm, swimmable, and one of the most beautiful stretches of beach on the island either way. Banzai Pipeline is a ten-minute walk east if you want to see the break from shore. Stay until the light goes golden.
Day 3 — The Windward Side
Lanikai Pillbox Hike
The one sunrise hike on Oahu worth setting a 5am alarm for. Park on Kaelepulu Drive in Kailua and follow the trail up the ridge behind the neighborhood. The climb is steep in two short sections and the path is not paved; wear shoes with grip, not sandals. The two World War II military pillboxes at the top frame the twin Mokulua islands offshore, Lanikai Beach below, and the Ko‘olau mountains behind you. At sunrise the light on the Ko‘olau range turns pink and orange and the ocean goes blue-green all the way to the horizon. The whole hike is 1.5 miles round-trip and takes about 45 minutes. You will want to stay longer.
Over Easy (Kailua)
Kailua’s breakfast spot. The loco moco is the order: a fried egg and brown gravy over rice with a slow-braised short rib that holds together for exactly one pull of a fork. It is a better version of the dish than most plate lunch counters serve, and the outdoor seating is the right place to eat it after a sunrise hike. The line starts early on weekends. Get there by 8am or accept the wait. Morning Brew, two blocks away, is the alternative if you want coffee and something lighter.
Lanikai Beach and Kailua Beach Park
Two adjacent beaches with different characters. Lanikai is a narrow strip of private-access coast with zero facilities, powder-white sand, and a calm turquoise channel to the Mokulua islands offshore. No bathrooms, no lifeguards, no parking lot. Bring everything in and take everything out. Use Kailua Beach Park (five minutes away) for the bathroom before you walk down. Kailua Beach Park has everything Lanikai doesn’t: three miles of sand, lifeguards, bathrooms, shaded tables, and kayak rentals to paddle out to the Mokuluas. Do both if you have time. Park at Kailua, use the facilities, walk the half mile to Lanikai, then come back and rent a kayak.
Byodo-In Temple
A full-scale replica of a 900-year-old Japanese temple at the base of the Ko‘olau cliffs in the Valley of the Temples Memorial Park. The setting is almost unreasonable: a sacred Buddhist structure with a three-ton brass bell against sheer volcanic rock that rises 3,000 feet straight up. Ring the bell. Keep your voice low on the grounds. The koi pond runs along the front of the building and the peacocks own the property as if they know it. Entry is $5 per person. One hour is enough; the walk around the grounds is short and the peace of the place does most of the work.
Makapu‘u Lighthouse Trail
A paved two-mile trail along the southeastern tip of the island to a red-roofed lighthouse built in 1909. No shade. Bring water and wear sunscreen. The views from the upper switchbacks look down the Windward Coast from Makapu‘u Beach to Kailua and out to Rabbit Island and Manana Island offshore. Between December and April, humpback whales pass directly below this trail on their migration route. This is the best free whale-watching vantage point on the island during that window. Read our full Makapu‘u Lighthouse guide before you go. Stroller and wheelchair accessible. The trail ends at a locked fence below the lighthouse; the view from the upper switchback is the point anyway.
Moana Surfrider Banyan Bar
Makapu‘u is 35 minutes from Waikiki on the Kalanianaole Highway. Get back in time for a last drink at the Moana Surfrider. The banyan tree in the courtyard has been there since 1904. The hotel opened in 1901. The bar is under the tree, looking at the same stretch of beach that Duke Kahanamoku surfed every morning for 50 years. One round is $15 to $25 per person. It earns it. Order a mai tai and stay until it gets dark. That is the end of the trip.
Good to Know
Book These Before You Arrive
- Diamond Head entry opens 30 days in advance at gostateparks.hawaii.gov. Book it before you book your flights. Walk-up availability is real but unpredictable.
- Pearl Harbor USS Arizona tickets release at recreation.gov 60 days out. They sell out well in advance in peak season (November through March). Set a calendar reminder.
- Hanauma Bay is not on this 3-day plan, but if you extend to four days it belongs on Day 4. Tickets release at 7am HST two days ahead and sell out in minutes. Set a 6:55am alarm, have your payment ready. Full details in our how many days guide.
- Traffic runs west in the morning rush (which lines up with your Day 2 Pearl Harbor drive) and east in the afternoon. Leave for Pearl Harbor before 7:30am and leave the North Shore before 4pm to avoid the worst of it on H-2 south.
- Parking: Diamond Head has a lot inside the crater ($10). Pearl Harbor is free. North Shore is roadside pull-outs. Kailua Beach Park has a free lot. The only paid parking you will encounter outside Waikiki is the crater and a few metered beach lots.
Full-Day Circle Island and Haleiwa Tour from Waikiki
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