← All beaches & hotels
MAUI · WEST MAUI · LAHAINA

Waihikuli Beach

Water quality & family swimming conditions

📍 Honoapiʻilani Hwy, North Lahaina, West Maui — Local family beach

Checking live advisories…
If It Looks Brown, Don't Swim
Wait 72 hours after heavy rain and until the water clears before swimming.
Learn about brown water advisories →
About This Beach

Waihikuli Beach Park is a beloved local gathering spot on the Honoapiʻilani Highway between Lahaina and Kaʻanapali. The long, narrow beach park is shaded by large trees and features picnic tables, barbecue grills, and a grassy area that makes it popular for family gatherings, birthday parties, and weekend picnics. The beach is sandy with some rocky sections and offers calm, gentle water most of the year.

Lifeguards
None
Parking
Highway lot
Restrooms
Yes
Activities
Swim, Picnic, Fish
BBQ Grills
Yes
Vibe
Local family beach
Historical Bacteria Risk
⚠ Historical rating — not current conditions. Verify with Hawaii DOH.
Low Risk2 / 5

Waihikuli Beach Park stretches along West Maui's sunny leeward coast, just north of Lahaina. The beach is backed by the highway with minimal development in the immediate watershed. West Maui's typically dry climate limits runoff events, and the open ocean exposure provides good water circulation.

The beach is popular with local families for picnicking, swimming, and fishing. The sandy shoreline with some rock sections offers calm conditions for most of the year. This is a locals' beach β€” less touristy than nearby Kaʻanapali, offering a more authentic West Maui experience.

Based on: Leeward West Maui location, minimal nearby watershed, good ocean circulation

⚠️ The 72-Hour Rain Rule

Stay out for at least 72 hours after heavy rain. West Maui typically gets less rain than other areas, so extended rain events are less common but can affect water quality temporarily.

Nearby Accommodations
🌠 Kaʻanapali Beach Hotels
Major resort corridor ~2 miles north in Kaʻanapali
Nearby
🏠 Lahaina Vacation Rentals
Multiple options near Lahaina town, ~1 mile south
Info
Get Beach Safety Alerts

Free Maui water quality alerts and advisories.

No spam. Just safety alerts.

Check all Hawaii beaches & hotels →
Understanding Water Quality in Hawaii

Hawaii’s Department of Health monitors approximately 57 beaches statewide through regular bacteria testing. However, with over 300 swimmable beaches across the islands, many popular spots have no regular testing program. Water quality varies significantly based on rainfall, stream proximity, coastal development, and ocean circulation patterns.

After heavy rain, streams and storm drains carry bacteria, sewage, pesticides, and sediment into coastal waters. The DOH recommends staying out of the ocean for at least 48 to 72 hours after heavy rain, even if the water appears clear. Brown or murky water is a visible sign of contamination, but bacteria can be present in clear water near stream mouths.

This site aggregates data from six sources — DOH advisories, USGS stream monitoring (25 stations), NOAA tide and temperature data, NDBC wave buoys, NWS weather alerts, and City & County of Honolulu water testing — to provide a more complete picture than any single source.

72-Hour Rain Rule

The 72-hour rule is the standard guideline from the Hawaii Department of Health: avoid swimming for at least 72 hours after heavy rain stops, especially near stream mouths, canal outlets, and areas with brown or discolored water. This applies to all beaches across all islands.

Bacteria from urban runoff, agricultural land, and aging cesspool systems enters the ocean through streams and storm drains. Hawaii has approximately 88,000 cesspools — more than any other state — many of which leak untreated sewage into groundwater that eventually reaches the coast. Beaches near known cesspool contamination areas carry higher risk, particularly after rainfall.

Hawaii Beach Safety Tips
Check Before You Go
Always check live advisory status before swimming. Water conditions can change rapidly after rain, and the DOH may not have posted warnings yet.
Brown Water = Stay Out
If the ocean looks brown, muddy, or discolored, do not enter the water — even if no advisory is posted. Hawaii is often slow to test and update beach advisories.
Avoid Stream Mouths
Bacteria levels are highest where streams and canals enter the ocean. Swim away from visible freshwater runoff, especially after rain. Even small streams can carry contamination.
Open Wounds
Avoid ocean swimming with open cuts, scrapes, or wounds. Bacteria in coastal water — including Staphylococcus and Vibrio — can cause serious infections through broken skin.
About Our Data

Safe to Swim Hawaii aggregates water quality data from six independent sources to provide broader coverage than any single agency. Our sources include the Hawaii Department of Health Clean Water Branch (beach advisories and bacteria testing), USGS National Water Information System (25 stream monitoring stations across all islands), NOAA CO-OPS (tide levels and water temperature), NDBC (wave buoys and ocean conditions), NWS Honolulu (weather and marine alerts), and City & County of Honolulu Environmental Services (Kailua Bay water testing and spill reports).

Historical bacteria risk ratings on this site are based on DOH testing data, Surfrider Foundation monitoring, geographic analysis (stream proximity, cesspool contamination areas, coastal development), and advisory frequency. These are historical assessments, not live measurements. Always check the live advisory status at the top of each page and verify conditions with the Hawaii DOH Clean Water Branch before entering the water.

Seasonal Water Quality Patterns
☀️ Dry Season (May–October)

Less rainfall means less runoff and generally cleaner ocean water across all islands. Stream flows drop, reducing bacteria transport to coastal areas. This is typically the best time for ocean water quality, though localized contamination from cesspools and urban runoff can still occur.

🌧️ Wet Season (November–April)

Frequent heavy rain events cause stream flooding, sewage overflows, and brown water advisories. Windward and north-facing coasts receive more rain. The DOH issues the most advisories during this period. Leeward coasts (west-facing) generally stay drier and cleaner year-round.

Water quality patterns vary significantly by location. Beaches near stream mouths and urban areas show the most dramatic seasonal variation. Open ocean beaches with strong wave action maintain better water quality year-round. Check individual beach pages for location-specific seasonal data.

Hawaii’s Cesspool Challenge

Hawaii has approximately 88,000 cesspools — more than any other U.S. state. These underground chambers collect untreated household sewage and allow it to leach into the surrounding soil and groundwater. In coastal areas, this contaminated groundwater eventually reaches the ocean through submarine groundwater discharge, contributing to elevated bacteria levels at nearby beaches.

Hawaii Act 125 (2017) requires all cesspools to be upgraded or converted to approved septic systems by 2050. Priority areas near the coast and drinking water sources are being addressed first, but progress has been slow. Beaches in known cesspool contamination zones carry elevated bacteria risk even during dry weather. For more information, see our comprehensive cesspool guide.

⚠️ Important Disclaimer

Independent passion project β€” not affiliated with Hawaii DOH. Ratings are not real-time measurements.

Always verify with the Hawaii DOH Clean Water Branch before swimming.

This site does not recommend or advise anyone to swim at any beach. We share government data and geographic analysis so you can make your own informed decisions. By using this site you accept full responsibility for your own safety. See our Terms of Use for full details.

When in doubt, don't go out. 🤙

© 2026 Safe to Swim Hawaii · safetoswimhawaii@gmail.com