15 Best Sights in The West Side, Kauai

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We've compiled the best of the best in The West Side - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Polihale State Park

Fodor's Choice
View of the Napali coast from Polihale beach in Kauai, Hawaii Islands.
Nickolay Stanev / Shutterstock

The longest stretch of beach in Hawaii starts in Kekaha and ends about 15 miles west at the start of Napali Coast. On the far west end is the 5-mile-long, 140-acre Polihale State Park, a remote beach accessed via a rough, rutted, potholed, 5-mile road at the end of Route 50 in Mana. (Four-wheel drive is recommended, and rental car companies may prohibit use of their vehicles here.) In addition to being long, this beach is 300 feet wide in places and backed by sand dunes 50 to 100 feet tall. Cultural sites, including burial sites, are located within the sensitive dune system. It is frequently very hot, with almost no shade and scorching sand. Start the day with a full tank of gas and a cooler filled with food and drink.  Though it's a popular beach, the ocean here has dangerous currents and is not recommended for recreation. No driving is allowed on the beach. The U.S. Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility is adjacent, so access to the coastline in front of the base is monitored and restricted. The park is open for day use until sunset; permits are required for overnight camping. Amenities: parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: solitude; sunset; walking.

Kauai Coffee Estate Visitor Center

Fodor's Choice

Two restored camp houses, dating from the days when sugar was the main agricultural crop on the Islands, have been converted into a museum, visitor center, snack bar, and gift shop. About 3,100 acres of McBryde sugar land have become Hawaii's largest coffee plantation, with its 4 million trees producing more than half of the state's beans. You can walk among the trees; view old grinders and roasters; watch a video to learn how coffee is grown, harvested, and processed; sample various estate roasts; and check out the gift store.

The center offers free self-guided tours through a small coffee grove (about 20 minutes); a personalized one-hour "Coffee on the Brain" tour for $25; and a "seed-to-cup" farm tour in an open-air truck for $45. From Kalaheo, take Route 50 in the direction of Waimea Canyon (west) and veer left onto Route 540. It's 2½ miles from the Route 50 turnoff.

870 Halewili Rd., HI, 96741, USA
808-335–0813-for visitor center
Sight Details
Free; $25 for "Coffee on the Brain" tour; $45 for farm tour (fee discounted for children)

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Waimea Canyon

Fodor's Choice

Carved over countless centuries by the Waimea River and the forces of wind and rain, Waimea Canyon is a dramatic gorge nicknamed the "Grand Canyon of the Pacific"—but not by Mark Twain, as many people mistakenly think. Hiking and hunting trails wind through the canyon, which is more than 3,600 feet deep, 1 mile wide, and about 14 miles long. The cliff sides have been sharply eroded, exposing swatches of colorful soil. The deep red, brown, and green hues are constantly changing in the sun, and frequent rainbows and waterfalls enhance the natural beauty. This is one of Kauai's prettiest spots, and it's worth stopping at both the Puu ka Pele and Puu Hinahina lookouts within the state park.

Public restrooms and parking are at most proper lookouts, and the main one has ramps for strollers and wheelchairs. If you stop at small pullouts, park completely off the highway and look for cyclists before opening car doors.

Rte. 550 (Kokee Rd.), HI, 96752, USA
808-274–3444
Sight Details
$10 for parking; $5 per person daily fee for nonresidents at main park lookouts

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Kalalau Lookout

Wide angle panoramic view of the Kalalau Valley on the Na Pali Coast of Kauai, Hawaii. Taken from the Pu'u O Kila Lookout. Photo has white billowy clouds and a deep blue ocean in the background. Landscape shot, green foliage in foreground. cliffs in partia
Pcivello | Dreamstime.com

At the end of the road, high above Waimea Canyon, the Kalalau Lookout marks the start of a 1-mile (one-way) walk along the road to the Puu o Kila Lookout. On a clear day at either spot, you can see a dreamy landscape of gaping valleys, sawtooth ridges, waterfalls, and turquoise seas, where whales can be seen spouting and breaching during the winter months. If clouds block the view, don't despair—they tend to blow through, giving you time to snap that photo of a lifetime. You may spot wild goats clambering on the sheer rocky cliffs and white-tailed tropicbirds. If it's very clear to the northwest, drink in the shining sands of Kalalau Beach, gleaming like golden threads against the deep blue of the Pacific.

Waimea Canyon Dr., HI, USA
Sight Details
$10 for parking; $5 per person admission fee for nonresidents

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Hanapepe Swinging Bridge

This narrow, pedestrian-only bridge may not be the biggest adventure on Kauai, but it's enough to make your heart hop. What is interesting is that it's not just for show: it actually provides the only access to taro fields across the Hanapepe River. Considered a historic suspension bridge even though it was rebuilt in 1996 after the early-1900s original was destroyed—like so much of the island—by Hurricane Iniki, the bridge was also repaired following flood damage in 2019. If you're in the neighborhood, it's worth a stroll.

HI, 96716, USA

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Hanapepe Valley Lookout

From this roadside lookout, you can take in the farms on the valley floor with the majestic mountains and misty valley as a backdrop. The dramatic canyon-like divide and fertile river valley once housed a thriving Hawaiian community of taro farmers, with some of the ancient fields still in cultivation.

Rte. 50, HI, 96716, USA

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Hanapepe Walking Tour

This 1½-mile self-guided walking tour takes you to 14 plaques with historic photos and stories mounted on buildings throughout Hanapepe Town. This little main street had a colorful past––it was a portside "free town," not governed by sugar plantation company rules or decorum, and a deadly labor battle known as the "Hanapepe Massacre" happened here in 1924.

Kekaha Beach Park

This is one of the premier spots on Kauai for sunset walks and the start of the state's longest beach. We don't recommend much water activity here without first talking to a lifeguard. The beach is exposed to open ocean and has an onshore break that can be hazardous any time of year. However, there are some excellent surf breaks for experienced surfers. If you'd like to run or stroll on a beach, this is the one—the hard-packed sand goes on for miles, all the way to Napali Coast, but you won't get past the Pacific Missile Range Facility and its access restrictions. Another bonus for this beach is its relatively dry weather year-round. If it's raining where you are, try Kekaha Beach Park. Toilets at the west MacArthur Park section are the portable kind. Amenities: lifeguards; parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: sunset; surfing; walking.

Rte. 50, HI, 96752, USA
Sight Details
Free

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Kokee Natural History Museum

A great place to start your visit in Kokee State Park, the museum has friendly staff who are knowledgeable about trail conditions and weather, as well as informative displays and a good selection of books about the area's unique native flora and fauna and social history. You may find that special memento or gift you've been looking for. Note that there's generally no cell phone service in the park.

Rte. 550, HI, 96796, USA
808-335–9975
Sight Details
Donations welcome

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Kokee State Park

This 4,345-acre wilderness park reaches 4,000 feet above sea level, an elevation that affords you breathtaking views and a cooler, wetter climate that's in marked contrast to the beach. You can gain a deeper appreciation of the island's rugged terrain and dramatic beauty from this vantage point. Large tracts of native ohia and koa forest cover much of the land, along with many varieties of both native and introduced plants. Hikers can follow a 45-mile network of trails through diverse landscapes that feel wonderfully remote—until the tour helicopters pass overhead. The small nonprofit museum provides park information, and the lodge offers hearty lunches. Note that there's generally no cell phone service in the park.

Kukuiolono Park & Golf Course

Translated as "Torchlight of the God Lono," Kukuiolono has serene Japanese gardens, a display of significant Hawaiian stones, a meditation pavilion, and spectacular panoramic views of the south and west shorelines. This quiet hilltop park is one of Kauai's most scenic areas and is ideal for a picnic or easy hike through an ironwood grove. The nine-hole golf course has the island's least expensive fees, and there's a new minigolf activity. If the café is open, it's a good spot for lunch with a view. Nongolfers can explore walking paths with interpretive signage; just stay alert.

Lucy Wright Beach Park

Named in honor of the first Native Hawaiian schoolteacher, this beach is on the western bank of the Waimea River. It is also where Captain James Cook first came ashore in the Hawaiian Islands in 1778. If that's not interesting enough, the sand here is not the white powdery kind you see along the South Shore. It's a salt-and-pepper combination of pulverized black lava rock and lighter-color reef. Unfortunately, the intrigue of the beach doesn't extend to the waters, which are reddish and murky (thanks to river runoff) and choppy (thanks to an onshore break). Don't swim here after heavy rains. Instead, watch the local outrigger canoe club head out or stroll the Waimea State Recreational Pier, from which fishers drop their lines, about 100 yards west of the river mouth. Amenities: parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: sunset; walking.

Pokile Rd., HI, 96796, USA
Sight Details
Free

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Paulaula State Historic Site

The ruins of this stone fort, built in 1816 by an agent of the imperial Russian government named Georg Anton Schäffer, are a reminder of the days when he tried to conquer Kauai for his homeland, or so one story goes. Another claims that Schäffer's allegiance lay with King Kaumualii, who was attempting to keep leadership of his island from the grasp of Kamehameha the Great. The crumbling walls of this National Historic Landmark are not particularly interesting, but the signs loaded with historical information are. A bronze statue of King Kaumualii was installed in 2021, marking 200 years since the king was kidnapped to Oahu aboard the ship Haaheo o Hawaii in July 1821, during a reception aboard. Follow the statue's gaze for a splendid view of Niihau.

Salt Pond Beach Park

A great family spot, Salt Pond Beach Park features a naturally made, shallow swimming pond behind a curling finger of rock where keiki (children) splash and snorkel. This pool is generally safe except during a large south summer swell. The center and western edge of the beach are popular with bodyboarders and bodysurfers. The beach is also an easy spot to see stilts, tattlers, shearwaters, and other seabirds, as well as an occasional resting monk seal. Pavilions with picnic tables offer shade, and there's a campground that tends to attract a rowdy bunch at the eastern end. On a cultural note, the mudflat behind the beach is the last spot in Hawaii where salt is harvested in the dry heat of summer, using pans passed down within families. The park is popular with locals, and it can get crowded on weekends and holidays. Amenities: lifeguard; parking (no fee); showers; toilets. Best for: sunset; swimming; walking.

Lolokai Rd., HI, 96716, USA
Sight Details
Free

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West Kauai Heritage Center

Cultural information and local exhibits about sugar, weaving, shells, and poi-making highlight this small museum-style resource center in Waimea Town. Shop counters offer Island-made items, Niihau-shell jewelry, photographs of Kauai, children's books, and snacks. Lei-making and music sessions happen regularly on the patio, and you can get a map for a walking tour.

9565 Kaumualii Hwy. (Rte. 50), HI, 96796, USA
808-338–1332
Sight Details
Donations welcome
Closed Mon. and weekends

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