Reductions in work hours and layoffs have started in Hawaii’s visitor industry following a softer than expected summer and fall.
The state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism reported Tuesday that there were 806,776 total visitors to the Hawaiian Islands in August. The 2.6% decline from August 2024 was the second-worst arrivals drop of the year after July, when visitor arrivals dropped 4.4%.
Keith Vieira, principal of KV and Associates, Hospitality Consulting said “July and August, which are traditionally our best months of the year for occupancy, ended up being way below expectations. We keep reforecasting. Our advance booking pace is bad and we have the Hawai‘i Convention Center closure (for repairs) weighing on us over the next two years. I think we’ll see a small number of layoffs, and I’m especially concerned about the small mom and pops.”
Vieira and other Hawaii visitor industry leaders say their concerns began mounting as they headed into summer. They’ve seen the market soften due to the Trump administration’s tariffs and tightening travel entry policies, as well as a domestic and international economic downturn and rising international tensions.
Hawaii’s visitor industry leaders say they also fear a pile-on from the lengthy convention center closure on top of a drop in state dollars to market Hawaii as a destination, as well as the lack of a cohesive destination marketing plan due to ongoing challenges at the Hawai‘i Tourism Authority and cuts to the state’s tourism marketing budget.
More recently, they worry that the government shutdown will cause further reductions in government travel, which began falling when Department of Government Efficiency halted the use of hundreds of thousands of credit and purchasing cards.
Jerry Gibson, president of the Hawai‘i Hotel Alliance, said Hawaii’s visitor industry is facing the worst downturn, outside of COVID-19, since the 2008 financial crisis when Hawaii also grappled with the shutdown of Aloha Airlines and the loss of two-homeported Norwegian Cruise Line ships — the Pride of Aloha and the Pride of Hawaii.
The University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization reported last week in its third-quarter forecast for 2025 that “visitor industry conditions deteriorated mid-year, and seasonally adjusted arrivals fell 8% between April and July.”
UHERO expects to see arrivals about 5% lower than last year by the middle of 2026, prompting a real visitor spending decline of more than $600 million.
UHERO also reported that payroll job growth in Hawaii has stalled since March, and that employment now is about 15,000 jobs below pre-pandemic levels. UHERO said that “many sectors are now contracting, led by federal job losses and tourism sector declines.”
Gibson said hoteliers already are cutting employee hours based on reduced hotel room occupancy.
“We saw hours reductions in September, which was a terrible month,” Gibson said. “Most of the properties had occupancy rates of 60% to 70% — that’s not good.”
Visitor industry job losses are showing up in the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN), which are published on the state Workforce Development Council website.
The Polynesian Cultural Center filed a WARN notice to the state on July 30 indicating it planned to lay off approximately 15 to 25 employees as of Sept. 30.
Cole Thompson, director of human resources, said in the WARN notice that the impending layoffs are “due to the recent downturn in tourism and subsequent reduction in attendance” at the Polynesian Cultural Center.
Watabe Wedding Corp. submitted a WARN notice to the state on Aug. 21 indicating that it planned to lay off 10 part-time employees effective Oct. 25.
Daiki Kimura, general manager of Watabe Wedding Corp., said in the WARN notice, “As previously communicated in our letter dated November 22, 2024, we initiated an employee furlough effective December 1, 2024, which was expected to continue through 2025. Unfortunately, our business conditions have not improved.”
Watabe Wedding Corp.’s most recent layoffs followed a WARN notice announcing that it planned on June 7 to lay off three part-time employees involved in its farmers market operation “due to the unexpected decision by our primary supplier to cease operations.”
This is on top of the merger-related layoffs at Hawaiian Airlines. There were 252 noncontract employees laid off on or about Sept. 17. There were 61 noncontract jobs eliminated in March and 57 noncontract jobs in December; although some of these employees found new work within the company.
Oshkosh Airport Sevices also planned to lay off about 119 workers, including 70 that worked at Daniel K. Inouye International Airport, around June 30 after losing its contract with the Airlines Committee of Hawaii Inc., according to a WARN notice.
Teri Orton, general manager of the Hawai‘i Convention Center, said that HTA is committed to keeping the facility’s 125 employees on staff during the closure. However, Vieira said hotel banquet staff will face significant losses from the sharp drop in group business during the center’s closure.
A brighter spot in DBEDT’s August tourism report is that visitor expenditures in August reached $1.72 billion, a 3% increase from August 2024. In the first eight months of 2025, total visitor spending was $14.62 billion, up 4.5% from the first eight months of 2024 and 21.3% from first eight months of 2019.
However, members of Hawaii’s visitor industry say the spending gains are not always keeping pace with the increased cost of doing business.
Josh Hargrove, general manager of the Westin Maui Resort &Spa, said the industry has seen dramatic price increases and “it’s hard to continue to run the same profitability.”
August’s drop in visitor arrivals to Hawaii was due to fewer visitors from the U.S. West, U.S. East, Canada and other international markets. Arrivals from Japan, Hawaii’s top international market, fueled by a strong Obon travel season, came in flat compared to last August.
Performance varied by island with arrivals to Oahu down 4.2%, arrivals to Hawaii island down 4.1%, and arrivals to Lanai down 1.1%. Arrivals on Molokai increased 13%, while arrivals on Kauai increased 3.2%, and arrivals on Maui rose 2.3%.
Hargrove said Maui hotels have been recovering from the Aug. 8, 2023, wildfires, but that occupancy at Maui hotels has been hovering at the mid-60% range, considerably below a healthy 75% to 80% range.
“Our staffing is based on our occupancy, but also as Kaanapali as a whole empties out, you see impacts to our food and beverage operations and to our spa and to all of these positions that are volume dependent,” he said.
Hargrove said the convention center shutdown next year will add to Maui’s challenges because conventioneers tend to stay in Hawaii an extra 3-1/2 days for a pre- or post-event trip, often on the neighbor islands. He said Maui also is bracing for a downturn next year related to losing The Sentry, which has long been the start of the PGA Tour. The PGA announced last month that ongoing drought conditions and “related challenges” on Maui prevent the tournament from being played at Kapalua Golf’s Plantation Course.
“It’s definitely a tough year, and it could be one of the more difficult years that we’ve seen in a long time,” Hargrove said. “This is the time for the state to invest and address this now versus waiting until it actualizes and we are too late.”
Source: The Garden Island
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