Kauai Map with Attractions

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Kauai's attractions, mapped with bookable tours

Kauai is Hawaii's oldest island, often called the Garden Isle for its lush rainforest interior, dramatic sea cliffs, and waterfall-fed valleys. This map gathers 17 of Kauai's defining attractions, from the cathedral cliffs of the Na Pali Coast to the deer-quiet of Polihale Beach, with the Viator tours that visit each one.

Tours are conversion-scored: those flagged Likely to Sell Out, with 500+ reviews, or 4.8★+ ratings surface first inside each attraction's popup. Affiliate revenue routes through Viator's partner program at no extra cost to bookers.

The 17 Kauai attractions on this map

Na Pali Coast

29 tours · ★ 4.65 avg · 🔥 6 selling out

The 17-mile cathedral-cliff coastline on Kauai's north-west shore. Boat, helicopter, and (in summer) kayak only — there's no road. The single most-photographed stretch of the island.

Top tour: Napali Coast Boat Tour and Snorkeling

Poipu Beach

10 tours · ★ 4.72 avg · 🔥 1 selling out

South-shore drier-side beach hub. Snorkel coves, monk seals on the sand, family-friendly water, and the entry point for many south-shore boat tours.

Top tour: Semi-Private Surf Lesson in Sunny Po'ipu

Frequently asked questions

What's the most popular Kauai attraction?

By Viator booking volume, the Na Pali Coast boat tours dominate. The 17-mile cathedral-cliff coastline is reachable only by boat, helicopter, or (in summer) kayak, which makes a guided tour the practical entry point. Several operators run from Port Allen on the south shore — the Lucky Lady catamaran and the Holo Holo are the highest-reviewed.

How long do you need on Kauai?

Five to seven days is the local consensus. Three days lets you do Na Pali by boat plus Waimea Canyon, but you'll miss the slower-paced pleasures of Hanalei and the south-shore beaches. A full week comfortably covers the headline attractions plus a non-rushed pace at the beach, which is most of the point of Kauai.

What's the best time of year to visit Kauai?

April through June and September through October are the sweet spots: less rain than winter (which gets ~30+ inches at Princeville on the north shore), fewer crowds than summer or December holidays, and full operating schedules at all the boat and helicopter operators. Whale watching peaks January through March if that's your priority.

Do you need a rental car on Kauai?

Almost always, yes. There's no public transit between attractions of note, taxis and rideshare are scarce, and tour pickups don't reach the further attractions like Polihale or the Kalalau Trail trailhead. Book your rental as far in advance as your trip allows — the island has chronic fleet shortages, and last-minute prices can exceed your nightly hotel rate.

Is Kauai expensive compared to the other Hawaiian islands?

It's slightly cheaper than Maui or Oahu's Waikiki for accommodation, but food, gas, and tours are roughly equivalent across the four major islands. Tour prices on this map run from about $50 for a half-day kayak rental to $400+ for a private helicopter doors-off; the median is around $150-180.

Which Kauai attractions are good with kids?

Poipu Beach (calm reef-protected swimming), Wailua River for the family-paced kayak-to-Secret-Falls outing, the Kauai Coffee plantation tour, and the Kilauea Lighthouse wildlife refuge for ages 4+. Skip the Kalalau Trail beyond the first two miles — it gets exposed and steep — and skip the boat tours that promise dolphins for kids who get seasick.