Hawaii Travel Made Easy Podcast—Hawaii travel tips, Things to do in Hawaii, Hawaii vacation planning

What First-Time Hawaii Travelers Always Overestimate

Marcie Cheung Episode 120

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0:00 | 8:20

Planning vs. Vacation You: How to Pace a Hawaii Trip

Marcie from Hawaii Travel Made Easy explains how first-time visitors often overestimate what they’ll do in Hawaii and end up wanting a slower trip than the one they planned. Using client examples, she warns that hour-by-hour itineraries, long drives, and stacking organized activities can lead families to crave pool and beach downtime instead. She notes that winding roads, scenic stops, kids’ hunger or carsickness, and the temptation to linger at the beach make outings take longer than expected. She recommends front-loading bigger activities, building in flex time, planning lighter afternoons, and scheduling recovery days to avoid mid-trip burnout. She also suggests limiting dinner reservations, expecting spontaneous food stops, and not trying to visit a different beach daily since families often return to a favorite. She promotes consultations and itinerary audits on her website.

00:00 Overplanned Trip Reality
00:50 Hawaii Self vs Planner
01:12 Driving Takes Longer
02:07 Too Many Activities
03:04 Early Mornings Myth
04:00 Midtrip Energy Wall
05:02 Dinner Plans Fall Apart
05:52 Beach Hopping vs Favorites
06:42 Leave Breathing Room
07:24 Consultations and Wrap Up

About Your Host: Marcie Cheung is a Certified Hawaii Destination Expert who has visited Hawaii 40+ times and spent 20+ years as a professional hula dancer. Through Hawaii Travel with Kids, she helps families plan authentic, affordable Hawaii vacations that respect local culture while creating unforgettable memories.

Learn more at hawaiitravelwithkids.com

Connect: @hawaiitravelwithkids on Instagram | Book a Consultation

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I want to tell you about a client of mine. She came to me with an itinerary that was scheduled pretty much hour by hour, every morning, every afternoon, every evening. I looked at it and thought, "Okay." I gently told her that in my experience, this pace tends to catch up with people. She said, "No, this is how we travel. We like to stay busy." Totally valid. I respected it. We did the consultation. We made it work. Then I got an email from her after the trip. By day three, her husband and kids were begging to just hang out at the pool. They were completely done, done sitting in a hot car, done stopping at every single viewpoint. They just wanted to float in the water and not go anywhere. And I think about that email a lot because it happens so often. The trip people plan and the trip they actually want once they get there are sometimes two very different things Welcome back to Hawaii Travel Made Easy. I'm Marcie, and today I wanna talk to you about something that catches a lot of first-timers off guard. Not logistics, not crowds, not which island to pick. This is more about the psychology of a Hawaii trip, specifically all the things people overestimate about themselves before they go because the planning version of you and the on vacation version of you are not always the same person. So let's start with driving. My kids get carsick, which means we make a lot of stops on any given road trip in Hawaii And they are also just always hungry, which means we make even more stops on top of that. A trip to see a waterfall will typically include stopping for malasadas on the way there and shave ice or an acai bowl on the way back, sometimes both. That one outing can eat half a day, and we're genuinely not mad about it, but it's something I would never have predicted when I was sitting at home planning the trip. Even without carsick kids factored in, Hawaii does this to people. The roads are winding. The scenery makes you just wanna pull over constantly. You round a bend, and there's a monk seal on the beach just doing your thing, and you're stopping, end of discussion. First-time visitors look at the map and think they can cover a lot of ground each day, and they can technically. It just takes longer than it looks, and honestly, that's kinda the point. So if your itinerary has you moving between multiple areas of the island in one day, I would take another look at that before you go. The same thing happens with organized activities. You're booking a Hawaii trip. You're excited. There are no shortage of incredible things to sign up for: snorkel tours, helicopter rides, luaus, farm tours, kayaking, zip lines, and you wanna do it all. I get it. But what happens when you actually get there is the beach is right there. The pool is right there. Getting your family dressed and loaded into a van to go somewhere structured starts to feel like a lot more than it sounded like when you booked it. I had a client who stacked activity after activity before her trip. She was so excited, and I tried gently to slow her down. After the trip, she told me she booked too much. Her family canceled a farm tour and a boat trip because they just wanted to be at the beach. They didn't wanna move, and she was not upset about it. She said those ended up being the favorite days of the whole trip What I usually tell people is to front-load the bigger activities in the first half of the trip and leave the back half more open. By then, you'll have a much better read on what you actually feel like doing, which is often a lot less than what you imagined when you were booking from your couch in February. Another thing I want to mention is how early you'll be waking up. West Coast travelers especially get caught by this one. The logic makes total sense. Hawaii is two or three hours behind, so if my body's on Pacific time, I'll naturally wake up early and get a jump on the day, beat the crowds, catch the sunrise, use those bonus hours. But here's what actually happens. You're on vacation. You're staying up later than you do at home. You're sitting on the lanai watching the stars because the sky looks like that, and you can. And then 6:00 AM shows up, and it's just not happening. I had a client who made this exact plan, a West Coast family fully convinced the time difference would carry them through the whole trip. They did great the first couple of days. Then the activities and the late evenings caught up with them, and they couldn't rally. They shifted their start times, leaned into slow mornings, and said it ended up being one of the best parts of the trip. Hawaii is good at this. It pulls you into its pace whether you planned for it or not. The problem is when you have non-refundable early tours booked every morning, and your body has other ideas. Build in some flex time, especially in the second half People also overestimate how much energy they'll have. That wall I just described, it's real, and it hits families harder than people expect. I've been taking my own kids to Hawaii since they were babies across four islands, more trips than I can count. And even my kids, who know Hawaii well at this point, hit a point mid-trip where they just cannot do a full excursion. The tank is empty. So what I've landed on is planning morning activities only, and then seeing where the day goes. If it turned into a long day, the next day is a pool day or a beach day with nothing on the calendar. That one slower day is what actually gives you the energy for another good day after that. Skip it and push through, and everyone gets tired and short with each other, and suddenly you're a family having an argument in a parking lot on the road to Hana, which trust me, is a terrible place to have an argument. If you want help thinking through how to actually build that rhythm into your trip before you go, episode 75 is the one, how to plan a Hawaii family trip without the overwhelm. It gets into the structure of a well-paced Hawaii itinerary in a lot more detail. All right, people also overestimate dinner reservations every night. So this is the one that surprises people, dinner reservations. A lot of first-time visitors book a nice restaurant for almost every night of the trip, and I understand why. Hawaii has incredible food, and you want to experience it. But what tends to happen is that the evening goes somewhere no one expected Some days you'll stop at two or three food trucks back to back because you cannot help yourself, and dinner has basically already happened by 4:00 PM. Some days you'll have such a late big lunch that nobody's actually hungry at 7:00. And some days you're still in the pool, and there's just no version of reality where everyone is getting showered and out the door in time. Those are the nights when having nothing booked is a gift. You grab poke from the grocery store, you eat on the lanai, the sun goes down. That is a great Hawaii night. Book one or two special dinners, leave the rest open, and you will not regret it. All right, the last thing people regret, the last thing people overestimate, beaches. A lot of people come in with a list and plan to work through it. Different beach every day, see everything, don't miss anything. And I understand that too, but what almost always happens is you find a beach that works for your family early in the trip, and you just keep going back to it. For us, that usually means somewhere with good restrooms and showers and calm water, or one of those small beaches that hardly anyone knows about. Once you find it, you know where to park, you know your spot, you know what time it fills up. My family has favorite beaches on every island that we return to trip after trip. There is something really good about a place that already feels like yours. It also means your kids can actually settle in and relax instead of spending the first hour figuring out a new beach every day. A list of beaches to hit is fun to make, but don't be surprised if you end up at the same one four days in a row and love every minute of it. So here's what I noticed across all of these. People plan Hawaii trips around the most optimistic version of themselves. The one who wakes up at six AM feeling great, stays on the move all day, makes every dinner reservation, and hits a different beach every morning. And then they land and meet their Hawaii self. One who wants to float in the ocean, eat malasadas, and not be anywhere in particular The trips that go best are the ones that left room for that person to show up. The most useful thing you can do before your trip is have someone look at your plans and ask the uncomfortable questions before you get there. Are you sure you want to drive that far on day three? Where's your plan? What's your plan if someone wakes up not feeling that activity? Where's the breathing room in here? That's exactly what I do in consultations. You bring me your trip and we build something that accounts for your actual family, the tired version, the hungry version, the we just want to sit by the pool version. I have 60 and 90-minute Hawaii travel consultations available at hawaiitravelwithkids.com under Hawaii Travel Consultant. And if you already have an itinerary and want a second set of eyes on it, I do Hawaii itinerary audits for $50, written feedback with specific notes within two business days. You can submit yours at hawaiitravelwithkids.com under Hawaii Itinerary Review. For everything else, my favorite resources, trusted vendors, all of it in one place, head to hawaiitravelwithkids.com under the Hawaii Resources tab. Thanks for listening. If this episode makes you go back and delete a few things off your itinerary, my work here is done. I'll see you next week. Aloha.