Road to Hana Attractions Map

An interactive Road to Hana attractions map: all the best stops in driving order along the Hāna Highway, with mile markers — Twin Falls, Garden of Eden, Waiʻānapanapa black-sand beach, Hāna, Wailua Falls and the Pīpīwai Trail.

Updated June 2026 · 3 highway segments · 13 stops

The Road to Hana isn’t a single destination — it’s a 64-mile string of stops strung along one winding coastal highway, and the only way to make sense of it is to see them in order. This interactive map plots the 13 highest-value stops along the Hāna Highway (Highway 360), grouped into three driving segments and tagged with their mile markers, so you can read the route the way you’d actually drive it: northwest to southeast along the rainforest coast, then south around to the bamboo forests of Kīpahulu.

How to use it: tap a segment — Pāʻia to the Waterfalls, the Keʻanae Stretch, or Hāna & Beyond — to light up its stops on the map, then click any pin (or a stop’s card) for a quick description and its mile marker. Because the highway is essentially linear, the pins fall in driving order, so a pin further right on the map is a stop further along your day. For the full write-up of each stop, the companion Road to Hana stops in order guide goes deeper on what to see and the practical details.

One honest caveat the map makes obvious: there are far more pins than any single day allows. The smart move is to pick four to six and savour them rather than racing the whole list — and on a guided Road to Hana tour a local driver simply swaps in whichever waterfalls are running best that day, while you watch the scenery instead of the road.

Tap a segment below (or a coloured pin) to light up its stops — the rest stay as dots. Pins run in driving order from Twin Falls in the northwest around to Kīpahulu in the south. Click any pin for its stop card, or ◉ Locate on a card to fly the map to it. Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

The first stretch out of Kahului and the surf town of Pāʻia — the last place to fuel up and buy food before Hāna — eases you into the jungle with the route's first falls, a famous painted-tree grove and the easiest panorama of the day.

Road to Hana tour on Maui — jungle waterfall along the Hāna HighwayMM 2
Twin Falls
The gateway waterfall stop, on a working farm with short easy trails to cascades and a swimming pool, plus a roadside fruit stand. The first place most itineraries pause — an early start means you have it nearly to yourself.
Rainbow Eucalyptus “Painted Forest”MM 7
Rainbow Eucalyptus “Painted Forest”
A quick, free roadside pull-out leads a short walk to a grove of rainbow eucalyptus (Eucalyptus deglupta) whose shedding bark streaks green, orange and purple — one of the most photographed natural oddities on the route.
Garden of Eden ArboretumMM 10.5
Garden of Eden Arboretum
A manicured rainforest garden with panoramic coastal overlooks and an admission fee (around $20 adult — verify on arrival). The opening sequence of Jurassic Park was filmed along this stretch of coast.

The middle of the drive packs the most in: a free streamside plant walk, the old Hawaiian village on the Keʻanae Peninsula, the classic banana-bread pit stop and a run of bridge-view waterfalls, including the route's rare “upside-down” fall.

Keʻanae ArboretumMM 16.7
Keʻanae Arboretum
A free, flat, paved ~0.5-mile walk along Piʻinaʻau Stream past some 150 labeled plants — the easiest leg-stretch on the drive and a quiet alternative to the paid gardens. Distinct from the peninsula of the same name.
Keʻanae Peninsula LookoutMid-route
Keʻanae Peninsula Lookout
A short detour onto a flat lava peninsula where the old Hawaiian village of Keʻanae meets a churning, rocky coast — taro patches, a small stone church, and a window into pre-resort Hawaiʻi.
Halfway to Hāna StandMM 17.5
Halfway to Hāna Stand
The classic banana-bread pit stop, roughly halfway along the highway. A quick momentum stop between the bigger ones — grab a slice and the famous shave ice.
Three Bears / Upper Waikani FallsMM 19.6
Three Bears / Upper Waikani Falls
A trio of side-by-side cascades — nicknamed “Three Bears” — visible right from the bridge. One of the most photogenic falls you can see without a hike.
Makapipi “Upside-Down” FallsMM 25
Makapipi “Upside-Down” Falls
The route's rare “upside-down” view: park on the bridge and look down onto the plunge rather than up at it. Seasonal — runs best after rain; nearby Upper Hanawī Falls (MM 24) is another quick bridge view.

The headline stretch: a weather-proof lava cave, the famous Waiʻānapanapa black-sand beach (advance reservation required for non-residents), the quiet village of Hāna, and — for those who push past it — a roadside ribbon falls and the bamboo-forest finale in Haleakalā's Kīpahulu district.

Hāna Lava TubePast MM 31
Hāna Lava Tube
The largest lava tube on Maui, off Ulaino Road. A self-guided ~30–40-minute walk through the cavern stays dry no matter what the rainforest is doing — a handy weather-proof or midday option. Small admission; verify on site.
Waiʻānapanapa Black-Sand BeachNear Hāna
Waiʻānapanapa Black-Sand Beach
The headline stop — a striking black-sand beach framed by lava tubes, sea caves and blowholes. Non-residents need an advance online reservation for both entry and parking (no walk-ins); on a guided tour the operator handles or routes around it.
Hāna TownMM 51
Hāna Town
The quiet village at the “end” of the highway — a calm bay, a slower rhythm, a handful of shops and food trucks. After the winding drive out, Hāna is the exhale. Many day tours turn around here.
Wailua FallsMM 45 (past Hāna)
Wailua Falls
One of the most photogenic roadside waterfalls on the whole route, dropping right beside the road about 8 miles past Hāna as the highway continues toward Kīpahulu. No hike required — pull over, and there it is.
Pīpīwai Trail & Waimoku FallsKīpahulu
Pīpīwai Trail & Waimoku Falls
The grand finale in Haleakalā National Park's Kīpahulu district: a ~4-mile round-trip trail through a surreal bamboo forest to the base of the 400-foot Waimoku Falls. Day-use only (~9am–5pm); park entrance fee applies.

Book a Guided Road to Hana Tour →

You can't comfortably do every stop on this map in a day — and the driver never gets to enjoy the view. A guided Road to Hana tour hits the best stops in order with a local driver, breakfast and a picnic lunch, and handles the timed Waiʻānapanapa reservation for you.

Check Availability & Book

Planning the day in more detail? See the full Road to Hana stops in order with mile markers, what to expect on a guided Road to Hana tour hour by hour, the best time to go for the fullest waterfalls, or weigh up whether to drive it yourself or take a tour. Ready to ride the road the easy way? Book a guided Road to Hana tour.

Road to Hana Map & Stops — FAQ

How to use the map, which stops matter most, and how the day actually runs.