Published on : 03 Jan 2026
BREAKING: Friday, January 3, 2026 β Hawaii’s controversial tourism tax increase went into effect January 1, making the islands one of America’s most expensive destinations with combined taxes reaching 18-19% on hotels and vacation rentals
Last Updated: Friday, January 3, 2026 at 9:00 AM HST
Effective January 1, 2026:
What This Means: Your Hawaii vacation just got significantly more expensive starting three days ago.
Example: A $200/night hotel room on Maui now costs $238/night after taxes.
That’s an extra $38 per night – or $266 for a week-long stay.
| Tax Component | Big Island | Oahu | Maui | Kauai |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State TAT (NEW) | 11.0% | 11.0% | 11.0% | 11.0% |
| County TAT Surcharge | 3.0% | 3.0% | 3.0% | 3.0% |
| General Excise Tax (GET) | 4.0% | 4.0% | 4.0% | 4.0% |
| County GET Surcharge | 0.5% | 0.5% | 0.5% | 0.5% |
| TOTAL TAX RATE | 18.5% | 18.5% | 18.5% | 18.5% |
What Changed January 1, 2026:
| Tax Type | Rate | On $200 Room | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| State TAT | 11.0% | $22.00 | State tourism programs, environmental projects |
| County TAT | 3.0% | $6.00 | County infrastructure, beach maintenance |
| General Excise (GET) | 4.5% | $9.00 | General state budget |
| TOTAL | 18.5% | $37.00 | – |
| Accommodation Type | Nightly Rate | 2025 Tax (17.75%) | 2025 TOTAL | 2026 Tax (18.5%) | 2026 TOTAL | Per Night Increase | Weekly Increase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Budget Hotel | $150 | $26.63 | $176.63 | $27.75 | $177.75 | +$1.13 | +$7.88 |
| Mid-Range Hotel | $200 | $35.50 | $235.50 | $37.00 | $237.00 | +$1.50 | +$10.50 |
| 4-Star Hotel | $250 | $44.38 | $294.38 | $46.25 | $296.25 | +$1.88 | +$13.13 |
| Vacation Rental | $300 | $53.25 | $353.25 | $55.50 | $355.50 | +$2.25 | +$15.75 |
| Luxury Resort | $500 | $88.75 | $588.75 | $92.50 | $592.50 | +$3.75 | +$26.25 |
| Ultra-Luxury | $800 | $142.00 | $942.00 | $148.00 | $948.00 | +$6.00 | +$42.00 |
Key Takeaway: Most travelers will pay an extra $10-26 per week for typical Hawaii vacations.
Previously, cruise ships visiting Hawaii were exempt from TAT.
Starting January 1, 2026, cruises are taxed based on time docked in Hawaiian ports.
How It Works:
Example Calculation:
Impact: Norwegian Cruise Line estimated this adds $350 per person to typical Hawaii cruises.
The 0.75% increase is designated for environmental and climate projects.
Projected Revenue: $100 million per year
Intended Uses:
2023 Lahaina Wildfire Context:
The Argument: Tourism stresses Hawaii’s fragile environment. Tourists should help fund protection and restoration.
β “Tourists Should Pay for Environmental Impact”
“15 million tourists visit annually. The environmental strain is real. Asking visitors to contribute $3 per $400 room night is reasonable.” – Environmental advocates
β “Post-Wildfire Necessity”
“Lahaina proved we must invest in prevention. This funds life-saving measures.” – Governor Josh Green
β “Tourism Funds Tourism Infrastructure”
“Visitors benefit from beaches, parks, trails. They should help maintain them.” – Hawaii Tourism Authority
β “Tourism Already Over-Taxed”
“At 18.5%, Hawaii has one of the highest hotel tax rates in America. This pushes people to other destinations.” – Hawaii Hotel Association
β “Residents Suffer Too”
“High tourism taxes don’t fix resident housing costs or infrastructure. Locals still pay 4% GET on everything.” – Local advocacy groups
β “Timing Is Terrible”
“Tourism still recovering from pandemic + wildfire. This discourages visits when we need economic recovery.” – Small business owners
β “Cruise Ship Tax May Violate Federal Law”
“Congress regulates maritime commerce. States can’t unilaterally tax interstate cruise operations.” – Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA)
Who’s Suing: Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA)
Their Argument:
What They Want:
State’s Argument:
Status as of January 3, 2026:
Possible Outcomes:
| Rank | City/State | Total Hotel Tax | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Houston, TX | 19.0% | City + county + state + special districts |
| 2 | Chicago, IL | 18.4% | High city tax + state tax |
| 3 | HAWAII (ALL ISLANDS) | 18.5% | NEW as of Jan 1, 2026 |
| 4 | New York City, NY | 18.4% | City + state taxes |
| 5 | Seattle, WA | 18.2% | City + state + tourism promotion |
| 6 | Boston, MA | 17.5% | City + state taxes |
| 7 | Los Angeles, CA | 14.0% | City + state taxes |
| 8 | Miami Beach, FL | 13.0% | City + resort tax |
| 9 | Las Vegas, NV | 13.4% | Clark County taxes |
| 10 | Orlando, FL | 12.5% | Tourist Development Tax |
Hawaii Now Ranks #3 Highest Hotel Tax in USA
| Destination | Hotel Tax | Avg Hotel (3-star) | Total w/ Tax | Flight from LA | Total Cost Estimate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hawaii (Maui) | 18.5% | $200/night | $237/night | $400 | $2,059 (7 nights) |
| Cancun, Mexico | 19.0% | $120/night | $143/night | $300 | $1,301 (7 nights) |
| Punta Cana, DR | 18.0% | $130/night | $153/night | $350 | $1,421 (7 nights) |
| Puerto Rico | 11.5% | $140/night | $156/night | $350 | $1,442 (7 nights) |
| US Virgin Islands | 12.5% | $160/night | $180/night | $500 | $1,760 (7 nights) |
| Florida Keys | 12.5% | $180/night | $203/night | $350 | $1,771 (7 nights) |
| Bahamas | 12.0% | $150/night | $168/night | $350 | $1,526 (7 nights) |
Key Insight: Hawaii is the most expensive option, but offers unique US-based tropical experience without passport.
β Tax Increase Is Small
β Unique Destination
β Environmental Investment Visible
β Currency Advantage for International Travelers
β Other Destinations Offer Better Value
Caribbean (Similar Climate, Lower Cost):
US Alternatives (Tropical Feel, Lower Taxes):
β High Base Prices PLUS High Taxes
β Over-Tourism Concerns
Too Late for Tax Increase (Jan 1), BUT:
Why Rentals Can Save Money:
Best Rental Platforms for Hawaii:
IMPORTANT: Hawaii vacation rentals must be legal. Many counties cracking down on illegal STRs. Verify permit before booking.
High Season (Expensive):
Shoulder Season (Cheaper):
Sample Savings:
Hotel Points:
Why This Works:
Best Credit Cards for Hawaii Travel:
Cruise Advantage:
BUT: Uncertainty around legal status. Could face surprise charges if Hawaii wins lawsuit.
Skip Oahu (Most Expensive):
Try Big Island or Kauai:
January-March:
April-September:
Possible Scenarios:
Scenario 1: Tax Accepted, Tourism Resilient
Scenario 2: Tourism Decline Forces Adjustment
Scenario 3: Cruise Tax Struck Down
From Twitter/X:
“Planning Hawaii 2026. Just saw 18.5% tax. That’s $185 extra on $1,000 hotel bill. Seriously considering Cancun instead.” – @BeachLover2024
“The Green Fee is literally $10 for my week in Hawaii. People complaining clearly can’t afford Hawaii anyway.” – @TravelJunkie
“Hawaii raised taxes on tourists to fund environment. GOOD. Tourism damages islands. Pay your share or stay home.” – @EcoWarrior
“First the Lahaina fire, now they’re taxing us more? Hawaii is pricing out middle-class families. So sad.” – @FamilyVacay
TripAdvisor Comments:
Google Reviews:
“This modest increase will fund critical environmental projects that protect Hawaii’s natural beauty for future generations. The Lahaina wildfire showed us the cost of inaction. We must invest now.”
“We recognize any cost increase affects travelers’ decisions. However, we believe visitors understand the importance of environmental stewardship and will continue choosing Hawaii for its unique offerings.”
“The cruise portion of this tax violates federal law and unfairly discriminates against interstate commerce. We will vigorously challenge it in court.”
“While we support environmental initiatives, Hawaii already has one of the highest hotel tax rates in the nation. This increase risks making us uncompetitive with other destinations.”
β Tax Increase Is Real – 18.5% total on Hawaii hotels starting Jan 1, 2026
β Cost Impact Is Moderate – $10-26 extra per week for typical travelers
β Environmental Purpose – Funds wildfire prevention, conservation, climate projects
β Cruise Status Uncertain – Lawsuit pending, may be struck down
β Hawaii Still Worth It – For most travelers, small tax won’t change plans
β Alternatives Exist – Caribbean, Florida Keys, USVI offer lower-cost options
β Smart Booking Saves Money – Off-peak, points, vacation rentals help offset
YES, if:
MAYBE RECONSIDER, if:
The Honest Answer: Hawaii’s 18.5% tax is high but not unprecedented. If you were willing to spend $2,000-5,000 on a Hawaii trip, an extra $20-100 probably won’t stop you.
But if you were on the fence about Hawaii’s value, this tax might push you toward cheaper alternatives.
The Choice Is Yours.
Keywords: Hawaii green fee 2026, Hawaii hotel tax, Hawaii tourism tax increase, TAT 18.5%, Hawaii vacation cost, Hawaii vs Caribbean, Hawaii cruise tax, is Hawaii worth it 2026, Hawaii travel budget
Share This: Help fellow travelers budget for Hawaii! π²
Published by: Travel Tourister News Team Lead Author: Vinay Category: Travel Costs & Budget Planning Last Updated: Friday, January 3, 2026 at 9:00 AM HST
πΊ PLANNING HAWAII 2026? Factor in the new 18.5% tax when budgeting. Every dollar counts! π°
Posted By : Vinay
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