A First-Timer's Guide to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

Where to start in a park that runs from the ocean to 13,680 feet.

A cloud-filled volcanic crater at sunrise with a mountain rising behind at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
Sunrise over Kilauea Iki, one of the park's best first hikes. Photo: NPS Photo/J. Wei

Hawaii Volcanoes is not a "drive through and tick the box" park. It protects the summits of two of the world's most active volcanoes (Kilauea and Mauna Loa) and stretches from sea level to 13,680 feet, which means the weather, the crowds, and the volcano itself can change on you fast. Here's how to plan a first visit that actually works.

When to go

The park is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, year-round, and there's no single "best" season. The Big Island doesn't really do winter the way the mainland does. A few notes:

How to get in

The park is on the Island of Hawaii. From Hilo it's about 30 miles southwest on Highway 11, roughly a 45-minute drive. From Kailua-Kona, plan on 2 to 2.5 hours via Highway 11. There's no reservation system to enter. You just drive up to the entrance station.

A private vehicle pass is $30 and covers everyone in the car for 7 days. Motorcycles are $25, and anyone arriving on foot or by bike pays $15 (free for ages 15 and under). Your first stop should be the Kilauea Visitor Center for current trail and eruption conditions, then on to the Crater Rim Drive area.

A First-Timer's Guide to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
Photo: NPS Photo/J. Wei

The best first hikes

If you only have a day, here's where a first-timer should spend it, all real, named, well-marked routes:

Don't skip Chain of Craters Road

Chain of Craters Road drops roughly 3,700 feet from the summit to the coast over about 19 miles, ending where an old lava flow buried the road. It's the single best way to see the scale of the place from the car, with pullouts at old craters and lava fields the whole way down. Budget a few hours round-trip, fuel up first (there's no gas past the entrance), and remember the coast is hot and exposed even when the summit is cool and wet.

A note on dogs

Be honest with yourself before you bring the dog: like most national parks, Hawaii Volcanoes does not allow pets on its trails. Dogs are generally restricted to paved areas, parking lots, roadsides, and developed spots. Not the crater hikes or backcountry. Given the heat on the coastal end and the long drive, this is usually a park to visit without the pup. Check the park's pet rules before you go.

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