Visitor arrivals to Hawaii fell nearly 3% in October, marking the sixth consecutive month of decline, even as overall spending climbed to $1.7 billion, according to preliminary data released Friday by the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism.
Some 749,095 visitors came to the Hawaiian islands last month, down from 771,673 in October 2024. However, nominal daily spending per person, not adjusted for inflation, rose to nearly $277, a 12% year-over-year, revenue-boosting increase.
Nominal visitor spending in Hawaii rose to $1.7 billion in October, up 6.7% from a year earlier. Through October, Hawaii hosted nearly 8.04 million visitors, flat compared to 2024, while spending rose 5% to $17.87 billion.
The figures underscore a trend that began in May, when tourism officials warned of slowdowns tied to global political and economic uncertainty. Fewer visitors are coming, but those who do are spending more — a dynamic that has buoyed revenues even as hotels brace for a soft holiday season.
Hawaii tourism officials and travel sellers expect the arrivals slowdown to continue into November, even as the Transportation Security Administration is in the midst of one of the busiest Thanksgiving travel periods in its history, with more than 17.8 million passengers expected nationwide between Nov. 25 and Dec. 2.
Nationally, TSA officials project more than 3 million passengers will be screened Sunday alone.
Still, Hawaii hotels report seeing softness in November and said bookings for the so-called festive season remain below expectations, with rooms still available in late December — a rarity for Hawaii.
Jerry Gibson, president of the Hawai‘i Hotel Alliance, said October came in better than September. He said some hotels had decent group business on the books and others on Oahu saw occupancy bolstered by traveling nurses coming to replace striking workers.
Gibson said it was a quiet Thanksgiving. He added that hoteliers are expecting that to pick up with the JAL Honolulu Marathon on Dec. 14, but are bracing for a lackluster festive season, the peak holiday travel period from Dec. 22 to Jan. 4.
“It’s just not coming in as strong as expected,” he said.
Lynette Eastman, general manager of The Surfjack Hotel &Swim Club in Waikiki said this November is the worst month for the hotel in the past 47 months. She said the federal government shutdown disrupted military orders and housing assignments, which typically provide a steady base of business for the hotel.
“We survived October but we are not surviving November,” Eastman said.
Arrivals from Hawaii’s core U.S. West market fell a scant 0.7% in October, but nominal spending jumped 15.5% to $856.1 million. U.S. East arrivals grew 2.5%, with nominal spending up 14.6% to $478.3 million.
Arrivals from Japan, Hawaii’s top international market, surged 16% to 70,991, contributing $103.7 million in nominal spending. But arrivals from Canada dropped 20.3%, with nominal spending down 18.4% to $50.7 million.
Out-of-state cruise arrivals fell to 21,883 in October, down 38.6% from 35,616 a year earlier.
DBEDT Director James Kunane Tokioka said the gain in visitors from the U.S. East in October offset a slight drop in visitors from the U.S. West. He said he was encouraged to see improvement from the Japan market but expressed concern about drops from other international visitor source markets.
“Impacted by economic and political uncertainty, there have been fewer visitors from Canada in every month of 2025 so far compared to 2024,” Tokioka said in a news release. “As we continue to face tough competition from other travel destinations, it is important that we continue to market to our key major market areas during this challenging time.”
Results were mixed in October across the islands.
Oahu, which gets the bulk of Hawaii’s visitor arrivals, saw modest 0.5% growth in arrivals and a 3.8% rise in nominal spending.
But Maui arrivals dipped 1.1% from 2024, which was a lackluster year as the island continued recovering from the August 2023 wildfires. However, nominal spending rose 11.3%.
Kauai posted nearly 10% more visitors and a 16.2% jump in nominal spending. Hawaii island arrivals grew 9.2%, with nominal spending up 4.8%.
Tokioka said Molokai saw gains in October as more than 3,000 out-of-state visitors came for the Moloka‘i Hoe World Championship men’s canoe race, which took place Oct. 12.
“This year saw a record 106 participating teams, including 83 from Hawaii and 23 from California, Washington, Australia, French Polynesia, Hong Kong and New Zealand,” he said.
Source: The Garden Island
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