Restaurants in Maui
Where to Eat on Maui
When it comes to dining in Maui, all I can say is: Come hungry and bring a fat wallet. Dining has never been better on the Valley Isle, home to numerous enterprising and imaginative chefs. The farm-to-table concept has finally taken root on this bountiful island, where in past years up to 90% of the food had been imported. Today chefs and farmers collaborate on menus, filling plates with tender micro-greens and heirloom tomatoes picked that morning. Fishers reel in glistening opakapaka (pink snapper), and ranchers offer up flavorful cuts of Maui-grown beef.
A new crop of inspired chefs is taking these ripe ingredients to new heights. At Ka‘ana Kitchen, Chef Isaac Bancaco nearly outshines his celebrity neighbor, “Iron Chef” Masaharu Morimoto (who brought his high-octane Japanese fusion cuisine to Wailea). Both are outstanding; make time for each if you can swing it. On the other side of the island, at Chef Gerard Reversade continues to plate up perfect French cuisine at Gerard’s, while Jojo Vasquez adds exciting Filipino accents to the gourmet dishes at the Plantation House. Stellar dining experiences all, with prices to match. You don’t have to spend a fortune to eat well here—Maui does have a few budget eateries, noted below. Among the best is Tin Roof, by Top Chef star Sheldon Simeon. If you want to feast, there’s never been a better time to do so on Maui.
Of course, the impact on your wallet may be equally memorable. Luckily, you don’t have to spend a fortune to eat well here. Here are a few tips on saving money on food:
* Maui has a number of budget eateries, including Simeon’s Tin Roof and chef Les Tomita’s Da Kitchen, which specialize in expert versions of island comfort food. Both are reviewed below; also check the "Inexpensive" category for each region covered below.
* Choose lodging with self-catering kitchen facilities so you aren't spending all your money on dining out.
* You can get more for your money by visiting pricier restaurants at lunch, when menu items are generally cheaper, or at happy hour, when two “small plate” appetizers can equal the size of a dinner entree, at half the cost.
* Keep in mind that many restaurants serve portions equivalent to two meals on the mainland; pop that doggie bag of tasty leftovers in your fridge or minifridge for the next day's lunch or dinner.
* Food trucks, convenience stores, and even gas stations often have inexpensive, homemade fare very much worth sampling, including hearty plate lunches, musubi (burrito-sized sushi), and peanut butter mochi (pounded rice confectiona). For the lowdown on eating local, see "Plate Lunches & More: Local Foods," below.
PRACTICAL MATTERS: MAUI’S RESTAURANT SCENE
Dining on Maui tends to be casual—don’t wear your bathing suit, but an aloha shirt with nice shorts and shoes will do in most restaurants.
Hours
People eat early on Maui. Many local residents get up before the sun, and tend to eat dinner around 6 or 7pm. Visitors generally are jet-lagged and happy to go to dinner around sunset. Most restaurants on Maui close early and don’t take reservations after 8:30pm (unless noted). Some restaurants are now offering late-night happy hours, starting at 9 or 10pm, which allows kitchen staff and other night owls to dine out, too.
Prices, Taxes & Tipping
Prices in Maui are higher than you're probably used to paying at home. But remember, you are on an isolated island—it costs more to import food here, which makes meals more expensive. Budget a little extra for dining out.
Most price ranges listed in this chapter are just the cost of the entree; obviously, if you also order an appetizer, salad, or dessert, the bill will be higher.
Expect to see Hawaii’s general excise tax (4.25%) to be added to your bill. Tipping is the standard custom in Hawaii (just like the mainland United States), and you'll want to reward good service with a 15% to 20% tip, based on your total bill (minus the tax).
Reservations
Reservations are generally not necessary unless otherwise noted in the reviews below, but all bets are off during peak holiday periods, especially in winter. Make reservations for dinner in advance so you won’t have to wait for a seat. OpenTable.com allows online reservations for some 100 restaurants and luaus, so take advantage of that before you travel.
If you want to get a good seat at sunset, be sure to make reservations. Restaurants fill up for sunset, which varies from 5:30 to 6:30pm, depending on the time of year.
Ordering Fresh Fish
The Monterey Bay Aquarium website (www.montereybayaquarium.org) offers lots of information on sustainable fish choices, plus free downloadable pocket guides and smartphone apps. Click on “Save the Oceans” to get started.
Most restaurants on Maui are honest and want to give you the freshest of the daily catch, but some are not so honest. Be sure to ask your server:
* When was the fresh catch caught?
* Where was it caught? (If it was not caught in Hawaii waters, it is not fresh.)
* Has the fish ever been frozen? (Some restaurants think “fresh frozen” is the same thing as “fresh fish.” Do not eat at restaurants that think this way.)
PLATE LUNCHES & MORE: LOCAL FOOD
Hawaii has a classification of food seen nowhere else on the planet: “local food.” Its broad umbrella includes plate lunches and poke, shave ice and saimin, bento lunches and manapua—cultural hybrids all. Reflecting a polyglot population of many ethnicities, Hawaii’s idiosyncratic dining scene is eminently inclusive. Consider surfer chic: Barefoot in the sand, in a swimsuit, you chow down on a plate lunch ordered from a lunch wagon, consisting of a filling protein (teriyaki beef, shoyu chicken, garlic shrimp, etc.), “two scoops rice,” macaroni salad (often larded with tuna or potato), and a few leaves of green, typically julienned cabbage. It’s washed down with a soft drink, often a sugary, island-made juice blend, in a paper cup or straight out of the can. Like saimin—the local version of noodles in salty broth topped with egg, green onions, and char siu pork—the plate lunch is Hawaii’s comfort food.
But it was only a matter of time before the humble plate lunch became a culinary icon in Hawaii. These days, even the most chichi restaurant has a version of this modest island symbol (not at plate-lunch prices, of course), while vendors selling the real thing—carb-driven meals served from wagons—have queues that never end.
Other Hawaiian foods include those from before and after Western contact, such as laulau (pork, chicken, or fish steamed in ti leaves), kalua pork (pork cooked in a Polynesian underground oven known here as an imu), squid luau (actually octopus, cooked in coconut milk and taro tops), poke (cubed raw fish seasoned with onions, seaweed, sesame oil, soy sauce and the occasional sprinkling of roasted kukui nuts), haupia (creamy coconut pudding), and kulolo (steamed pudding of coconut, brown sugar, and taro).
Cooked, pounded, and moistened taro is the source of poi—an easily digestible, nourishing carbohydrate source for babies; a condiment to be mixed with any fish; and a repository of deep cultural associations for Native Hawaiians, who believe a stillborn ancestor became taro to feed those who came after him. You don’t have to like it (and if you have the runny luau version, thinned to keep costs down, you probably won’t), but it’s worth trying a dollop on lomi salmon (salted salmon with tomatoes and green onions) to understand its culinary appeal. Whatever you do, please don’t mock it publicly—locals already know most visitors aren’t fans. Plus, prices are often high, thanks to the shortage of cheap land, water, and labor for the intensive taro-growing process.
Japanese immigrants contributed a popular to-go meal available throughout Hawaii: the bento. This compact, boxed assortment of picnic fare usually consists of neatly arranged sections of rice, pickled vegetables, and fried chicken, beef, or pork. Increasingly, however, the bento is becoming more health-conscious, as in macrobiotic or vegetarian brown rice bentos (the same is true for today’s plate lunches). A derivative of the modest box lunch Japanese laborers brought to work in sugarcane and pineapple fields, bentos are dispensed everywhere, from department stores to corner delis and supermarkets.
Also from the plantations comes manapua, a steamed, doughy sphere filled with tasty fillings of sweetened pork or sweet beans—Hawaii’s version of the Chinese char siu bao. In the old days, the “manapua man” would make his rounds with bamboo containers balanced on a rod over his shoulders. Today you’ll find white or whole-wheat manapua containing chicken, vegetables, curry, and other savory fillings.
For dessert or a snack, the prevailing choice is shave ice, Hawaii’s version of a snow cone. Particularly on hot, humid days, long lines of shave-ice lovers gather for heaps of finely shaved ice—much fluffier than that in a mainland snow cone—topped with sweet tropical syrups. The fast-melting mounds, which require prompt, efficient consumption, are quite the ritual for sweet tooths. Aficionados order shave ice with ice cream and chewy rice mochi balls at the bottom and sweetened adzuki beans or coconut cream on top.
What the Heck Is a Pupu?
If you’re not old enough to remember the ‘60s craze for tiki bars and pupu platters, you might not know that pupu (pronounced poo-poo) means “appetizer.” Although it may sound unappetizing to English speakers (and believe me, locals have heard your jokes), Maui menus are big on pupu, which range from small bites to generous helpings.
Central Maui
Kahului and Wailuku have a few tasty finds. Minutes outside of the airport in a windy dirt lot across from Costco, you’ll find an array of food trucks dishing out everything from pork belly sandwiches to poke (seasoned raw fish).
Before or after a flight, be sure to budget time to swing by Home Maid Bakery ★★ (1005 Lower Main St., Wailuku; https://homemaidbakery.com; 📞 808/244-7015) for a mouthwatering welcome treat or omiyage (the Japanese tradition of giving specialty foods as gifts). Founded in 1960, the bakery offers a huge variety of delectable treats, including mochi (rice flour), doughnuts (Portuguese-style doughnut holes), manju (Japanese-inspired turnovers with sweet bean or fruit fillings) and ensemada (Filipino sweet rolls). Equally impressive in this quiet town are the bakery hours, 5am to 9pm daily.
Kahului
In addition to the restaurants below, diners seeking Hawaiian specialties will want to visit Poi by the Pound ★ (430 Kele St.; www.poibythepound.com; 📞 808/283-9381) for kalua pork (complemented by fresh poi), pork and butterfish laulau, squid luau, and spicy or shoyu poke ($8 to $24). It’s open Monday to Saturday 9am to 10pm, till 5pm Sunday. Ten minutes from the airport on Hwy. 31, Queen Kaahumanu Center (275 Kaahumanu Ave.; www.queenkaahumanucenter.com)—the structure that looks like a white Star Wars umbrella—has a very popular food court. Favorites include Ramen Ya for a steaming bowl of noodles, and HiTea, for bubble teas and smoothies. Outside of the food court, but still in the shopping center, are Koho’s Bar & Grill, dishing out burgers and plate lunches; and Starbucks. There’s also a branch of Maui Tacos. When you leave Kaahumanu Center, take a moment to gaze at the West Maui Mountains to your left from the parking lot.
Maui’s Best Ice Creams
Given the warm days and ready supply of tropical ingredients, it should be no surprise that locally made ice cream is a popular treat on Maui. What may surprise you is just how delicious, and varied, the offerings are.
* Roselani Tropics Ice Cream, Maui’s best made-from-scratch, old-fashioned ice cream that’s widely available, got its start in 1932, when Manuel Nobriga began making his rich, smooth ice cream at the Maui Soda & Ice Works plant in Wailuku. His granddaughter Cathy Nobriga Kim has expanded his ice cream line to 32 flavors, divided among seven labeled “gourmet” (16% butterfat), including chocolate macadamia nut, Hawaiian vanilla bean and Kona coffee varieties, and 25 labeled “premium” (12% butterfat), such as haupia (coconut pudding), banana mac crunch, and matcha green tea. Mix the haupia or vanilla with one of Roselani’s three tangy sherbets—guava, lilikoi (passionfruit), or orange—for a decadent Maui version of a Dreamsicle. You’ll spot it in local grocery stores and on many a restaurant and cafe menu (including at Ululani’s Shave Ice); for a list of outlets, visit http://roselani.com/locations/maui.
* Island Cream Co. (in the Lahaina Gateway Center, 305 Keawe St., Lahaina, www/islandcreamco.com; 📞 808/298-0916) offers a unique blend of ice cream and gelato, with a large daily rotating selection from more than 40 flavors. Sweet potato pie, Maui French toast, and haupia pineapple are among the unique varieties of “island cream,” as it’s called here, while sorbets come in another 20 or so flavors, including tropical specialties like strawberry guava, pineapple ginger, and blood orange. The selection of flavors for shave ice is dizzying, too: Try one over a scoop of ice cream with strawberry-mango puree, boba balls, and sweetened condensed milk “snowcap”—a fun concoction known as a Sploshy. Island Cream is open 11am to 9pm daily.
* Sampling the original wares of Coconut Glen’s (1200 Hana Hwy., Nahiku; http://coconutglens.com; 📞 808/248-4876) may require the most effort: It’s 37 miles east of Paia near mile marker 27.5 along the Road to Hana. But the vegan, organic ice cream ($7 a scoop, cash only) is a welcome reward after all the waits at one-lane bridges and road-hugging curves on the Hana Highway. The original coconut is delicious, but you can also ask for a sample of the handful of other daily flavors: banana rum raisin, lilikoi, and chili chocolate chipotle are some favorites. You’ll need to eat it in your car or stand under the trees at this tiny stand on a busy day.
* Unknown to many, Surfing Monkey Shave Ice (https://surfingmonkeyshaveice.com; two locations: 1881 S. Kihei Rd., Kihei, 📞 808/359-9282; and the Shops at Wailea, 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr., 📞 808/359-9282) serves five varieties of Coconut Glen’s ice cream, along with 10 Roselani flavors, for $6 a scoop ($8 double). Try them on their own or with a shave ice made with all-natural syrups. The Kihei stand is open 10:30am to 9pm daily, the Wailea shop 11am to 9pm daily. For more shave ice outlets carrying Coconut Glen’s and Roselani, see also Ululani’s Hawaiian Shave Ice.
WEST MAUI
The West and South Coasts of Maui are where most of the island’s visitors stay, so these oceanside communities offer a range of restaurants, from Maui’s bestknown chefs to small mom-and-pop cafes. You will find eateries with romantic atmosphere, breathtaking views, and yummy food. You will also find an increase in prices, especially inside resorts. Ocean-view restaurants often command a premium too; consider those more affordable spots with mountain views or terraces under the stars.
Ululani’s Hawaiian Shave Ice
David and Ululani Yamashiro are near-religious about shave ice. At their multiple shops around Maui (www.ululanishawaiianshaveice.com. 📞 808/877-3700), these shave-ice wizards take the uniquely Hawaiian dessert to new heights. It starts with the water: Pure, filtered water is frozen, shaved to feather lightness, and patted into shape. This mini snowdrift is then doused with your choice of syrup—any three flavors, from calamansi lime to lychee to red velvet cake. David makes his own gourmet syrups with local fruit purees and a dash of cane sugar. The passionfruit is perfectly tangy, the coconut is free of cloying artificial sweetness, and the electric green kiwi is studded with real seeds. Add a “snowcap” of sweetened condensed milk, and the resulting confection tastes like the fluffiest, most flavorful ice cream ever. Locals order theirs with chewy mochi morsels, sweet adzuki beans at the bottom, or tart li hing mui powder sprinkled on top. The Wailuku location also has manapua (steamed buns) and chow fun noodles; all are open daily. Kaanapali: In Hyatt Regency Maui, 200 Nohea Kai Dr., 10am–5:30pm; Lahaina: 790 Front St., 10:30am–9pm; Kihei: 61 S. Kihei Rd.,10:30am–6:30pm; Wailuku: In Safeway, 58 Maui Lani Pkwy, Ste. 5000, 10:30am–6pm; Kahului: 333 Dairy Rd., 10:30am–6pm; Paia: 115 Hana Hwy., 10:30am–8pm.
Eat Like a Local
Are you the type of visitor who feels you haven’t “experienced” a destination unless you’ve hit the restaurants where the local residents eat? Then sign up for Tour da Food ★★★ (www.tourdafood.com; 📞 808/242-8383). Pastry chef, cookbook author, and food writer/publicist Bonnie Friedman takes foodies off the tourist path to discover culinary treasures—from snack shacks to restaurants to markets and manufacturers— in either Wailuku or Upcountry Maui. Along the way she shares tidbits about the culture and the people creating the delicious food. Prices begin at $425 per couple, which includes transportation from Heritage Gardens Kepaniwai Park in Wailuku, lunch, snacks, dessert, a bag of goodies to take home, and Bonnie’s personal list of under-the-radar eating places. Tip: Book this tour early in your trip, so you have time to follow Bonnie’s terrific suggestions of places to eat on Maui.
Make time for Tiki
While the dining at Kaanapali Beach Hotel may not be dazzling, you’d be missing out on some of the best free entertainment on Maui if you skipped dinner at the hotel's casual outdoor Tiki Grill, open daily 11:30am to 8pm, or a tropical cocktail at the adjacent thatched-roof Tiki Bar, open daily 10am to 10pm. That’s because the large stage next to them hosts nightly music and hula from 6 to 9pm, often with brightly costumed groups of dancers from local halau (hula schools). Although the performances are first-rate, the vibe is relaxed, in authentic backyard Hawaiian style. The Hawaii Regional Cuisine at the more formal indoor-outdoor Tiki Terrace restaurant can be uneven, but its Sunday champagne brunch ($48 adults, $25 6–12) is popular with locals and visitors for the sheer vastness of its options; reservations are recommended. At dinner, the Native Hawaiian plate ($25 chicken, $26 fish) takes inspiration from the pre-Western contact diet that was low in fat and sodium; it’s a little bland and starchy, with grilled bananas, taro, sweet potatoes, and poi along with a steamed protein. Nevertheless, serving such fare in the employee cafeteria for many years now has had a positive impact on staff health.
Kapalua
Check for inexpensive plate lunches, pizza, burgers, burgers, and deli sandwiches at Honolua Store (http://honoluastore.com; 📞 808/668-9105), near the entrance to Kapalua Resort at 502 Office Road, Lahaina. The deli is open daily from 6am to 7pm, with breakfast items served from 6 to 10:30am (some till 5pm). Prices at the Burger Shack (http://burgershackkapalua.com; 📞 808/669-6200), on the west side of D.T. Fleming Beach, fall firmly in the moderate category, but its mouthwatering burgers (Maui Cattle Co. beef, slowroasted pork, seared mahi or black bean; $17–$24) and decadent shakes ($10– $12) can fuel an entire day at the beach. It’s open daily 11am to 4pm.
SOUTH MAUI
South Maui, like West Maui, is a popular visitor area, offering a range of restaurants. Some of Maui’s top chefs and dining experiences can be found here, as well as affordable delis and diners. Starting in Kihei, the prices are more reasonable than that in the affluent Wailea Resort.
Kihei/Maalaea
Kihei has two Maui Tacos: at Kamaole Beach Center, 2411 S. Kihei Rd. (📞 808/879-5005), and at Piilani Village Shopping Center, 247 Piikea Ave. (📞 808/875-9340)
Wailea
The Shops at Wailea (www.theshopsatwailea.com), with a sprawling location off 3750 Wailea Alanui Dr. between the Grand Wailea Resort and Wailea Beach Resort, offers 1 hour of free parking, or 4 hours with a validated $25 purchase. That’s more than enough to visit one of its several chain restaurants and cafes, such as Ruth’s Chris Steak House, Tommy Bahama, Honolulu Coffee Company, Cheeseburger Island Style, and Lappert’s Ice Cream. More memorable dining can be found in the open-air mall at Lineage ★★★ and Longhi’s ★ see below); for drinking and late-night noshing, pop into the Pint & Cork ★ (www.thepintandcork.com; 📞 808/727-2038), a kid-friendly tavern that serves sturdy pub grub and an impressive bevy of alcoholic beverages from 11am to 2am daily.
Haliimaile & Pukalani (on the Way to Upcountry Maui)
Away from the beaches, the Upcountry Maui area is generally a residential area that offers excellent dining opportunities. Here’s your chance to sample Maui’s top food without the resort areas’ marked-up prices. If you’re in a hurry going down or up the slopes of Haleakala, stop by Pukalani Superette ★, 15 Makawao Ave., Pukalani (http://pukalanisuperette.com; 📞 808/572-7616), a long-running family-owned grocery that also prepares hot and cold island-style fare daily, including chili chicken and chow fun noodles. Order from the deli counter or pick up a ready-to-go bento box; it’s open Monday to Saturday 5:30am to 9pm and Sunday 7am to 8pm.
Upcountry & East Maui
Note: You’ll find the restaurants in this section on the “Upcountry & East Maui” map.
- Vietnamese
A Saigon Cafe
It’s hard to say which is better at this beloved neighborhood restaurant—the delicious Vietnamese cuisine or the hilarious waiters who make wisecracks while taking your order. Whatever you order—the steamed opakapaka with ginger and garlic, one of a dozen soups, the catfish simmering…$$Wailuku & Waikapu - Plate Lunch/Beachside Grill
Aloha Mixed Plate
This veteran beachfront eatery offers a mix of its longtime favorites—fresh-made chow fun noodles, Korean kalbi ribs, and seared fresh-catch sandwiches—and newer, inventive dishes like a roasted beet salad with grilled pineapple, local greens, mascarpone, and ume (Chinese plum)…$Lahaina - Japanese/Fusion
Amasia
Chef Alan Wong, one of the state’s most beloved restaurateurs, ate his way through Singapore and South America before opening Amasia, his newest restaurant, at the opulent Grand Wailea. The result: a dizzying and decadent international experience. A river runs through the cool,…$$$Wailea - Pacific Rim
Banyan Tree
This gorgeous open-air dining room on the grounds of the Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua, was undergoing major renovations at press time, with plans for reopening with an all-new menu before 2020. In the interim, the culinary team was trying out new dishes and cocktails at its Hook & Knife…$$$Kapalua - Snack Shop/Cafe
Barefoot Café
Place your order for simple homespun fare at the window and eat at picnic tables facing picturesque Hana Bay. This cash-only cafe is the spot for an unpretentious East Maui breakfast: Choose from Benedicts, fried rice, eggs, and fresh baked goods. Although lunch and dinner (kalbi…$Hana - Mediterranean
Bistro Casanova
Hungry and marooned in Kahului? Head to this Mediterranean bistro only a mile from the airport for hearty salads, traditional Italian pastas, fresh fish, or a giant bowl of paella ($34, serving two). The casual but classy restaurant fills with business lunchers at noon. It’s more…$$Kahului - Crepes/Mediterranean/Indian
Cafe des Amis
This sweet, eclectic restaurant serves crepes, curries, and Mediterranean platters that are fresh, tasty, and easy on the wallet. Savory crepes like the bacon, brie, and avocado combo come with organic local greens and a dollop of sour cream; sweet fillings include Maui cane sugar…$Paia - Steak/Seafood
Cafe O’Lei At the Plantation
Over the years, chefs Michael and Dana Pastula have opened multiple Cafe O’Lei restaurants across Maui. Every one has been a winner, and this one is nicest of all. The open, airy dining room is inviting, with hardwood floors, tables separated by sheer curtains, a big circular bar in…$$Kihei/Maalaea - French/Italian
Capische?
One of Maui’s most romantic restaurants is hidden away up on a hill, in the dramatic lobby of the Hotel Wailea. Capische is an intimate, sensual destination, whether you dine in the torch-lit garden surrounded by fresh herbs, or up on the lanai soaking in the sunset. Chef/owner Brian…$$$Wailea - Italian
Casanova Italian Restaurant & Deli
This upcountry institution serves wonderful Italian fare at a sit-down restaurant and an attached cozy deli. The deli serves simple breakfasts (omelets with fresh mozzarella, and buttermilk muffins and bagels loaded with lox and capers) and terrific sandwiches for lunch. Try the New…$$Makawao - American
Castaway Café
Hidden away in the Aston Maui Kaanapali Villas, this little cafe sits right on Kahekili Beach—privy to perfect views and salty breezes. Chef Lyndon Honda and the Cohn Restaurant group breathed new life into this local favorite, long famous for its Saturday-night prime rib special,…$Kaanapali - American
Charley’s Restaurant
Named for Charley P. Woofer, a spotted Great Dane, this North Shore institution serves food and music to the masses. The downtown Paia hangout does double duty as a power-breakfast fuel station for windsurfers and an after-dark saloon with live music and DJs. It’s a decent place to…$$Paia - Gourmet Deli/Cafe
Choice Health Bar
This health-conscious juice bar and cafe is where the beautiful people in Lahaina come to fuel up. After a taxing morning of standup paddling past sea turtles, re-energize here with a smoothie, coldpressed juice, or one of a half-dozen açai bowls, like the “green buzz,” featuring…$Lahaina - American/Deli
CJ’s Deli & Diner
Need a break from resort prices? Head to this happening eatery just off of Honoapiilani Highway in Kaanapali, where most entrees are under $12. The atmosphere is colorful and slightly chaotic, with a huge billboard menu that spans the back wall, shelves stuffed with souvenirs and…$Kaanapali - Eclectic
Colleen’s at the Cannery
This go-to spot for Haiku residents serves an excellent breakfast, lunch, and dinner in a casual yet classy setting. Slide into a booth beside world-famous surfers, yoga teachers, and inspirational speakers: Maui’s local celebrities. Wake up with an omelet stuffed with portobello…$$Haiku - American
Cow Pig Bun
The anonymous entryway through the black glass building at the Maui Tech Park should tip you off: This is something different for Maui. For starters, it’s open long after most island residents have knocked off for the day. This hole-in-the-wall hosts late-night “knife fights,” during…$$Kihei - Local/Island Cuisine
Da Kitchen
For a fast infusion of island style, head straight from the airport to this cafe in a strip mall, the more polished sit-down version of its original Kihei food counter. Executive chef and co-owner Les Tomita has won an avid local following for enormous portions of island favorites…$$Kahului - American/Korean
Dazoo
This kitchen turns out delicious, inventive dishes that span multiple cultures: The Kula corn gnocchi hails from Italy via upcountry Maui, while the primavera pasta took a side trip through Asia, collecting a sultry sake and miso sauce along the way. The best bites are Korean…$$Paia - Organic Health Food
Down to Earth
Stop in here for a vegetarian snack or bag full of local organic produce. During mango season, this large, full-service natural-foods store carries as many as three different locally grown varieties of the fruit—worth their weight in gold. The deli includes creative salads, lasagna,…$Kahului - Pacific Rim
Duke's Beach House
There are few more beautiful places to enjoy breakfast than here, facing Kahekili Beach. This restaurant mimics an open-air plantation home, decorated with memorabilia chronicling the life of world-famous Hawaiian surfer, Duke Kahanamoku. It’s part of the TS Restaurants family, which…$$North Kaanapali Beach - Pacific Rim
Duke’s Beach House
There are few more beautiful places to enjoy breakfast than here, facing Kahekili Beach (also known as North Kaanapali Beach). This restaurant mimics an open-air plantation home, decorated with memorabilia chronicling the life of world-famous Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanamoku. It’s…$$Kaanapali - Italian
Fabiani’s
At the top of Wailea, this little bistro serves the most affordable breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the neighborhood. Come here early in your stay because you’ll want to return. The Italian-born chef turns out tasty pastas and pizzas for literally half the price of spots down the…$$Wailea - Italian
Ferraro’s Bar e Ristorante
The stunning location—overlooking Wailea Beach with an unobstructed view of the West Maui Mountains—sets the stage for a romantic (if pricey) repast, whether you dine beneath sun-splashed umbrellas by day or the starry sky at night. For lunch, indulge your inner celebrity: Sip a…$$$Wailea - Pizza
Flatbread & Company
This family-friendly Paia outpost embraces a locavore philosophy. The hand-colored menus highlight the best Maui farmers have to offer, particularly where the inventive daily carne and veggie specials are concerned. You can watch the chefs hand-toss organic dough, dress it with…$$Pai'a - American
Fleetwood’s on Front Street
Note: This business was destroyed by the wildfires of August 2023. Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Mick Fleetwood ventured into the restaurant business with commendable results. His snazzy eatery occupies the top two floors of a lovingly restored three-story building on Front Street.…$$Lahaina - Pacific Rim
Fond
An acronym for "Feeding Our Neighborhood Daily," Fond is also a French term referring to a base made from the delicious bits of food that stick to the bottom of a pan. Both the name and the menu reflect chef-resteranteur Jojo Vasquez's fondness for his diverse community, and his…$$Napili - Mexican
Frida’s Mexican Beach House
Mark Ellman, longtime Maui restaurateur who also founded Maui Tacos, runs three restaurants in a row on the beautiful seashore fronting Mala Wharf. Frida’s features Mexican-inspired cuisine served on bright pottery in a breezy dining room accented with pretty tiles and wrought-iron…$$Lahaina - Hawaii Regional Cuisine/American
Gannon’s
HAWAII REGIONAL CUISINE/AMERICAN[em]This clubhouse on the Wailea Gold golf course has spectacular views in every direction, as well as the gourmet-style comfort food of award-winning chef Bev Gannon—the culinary force behind Haliimaile General Store. For lunch, linger over the Haiku…$$$Wailea - French
Gerard’s
Chef Gerard Reversade has called Hawaii home for nearly 4 decades, but his accent remains firmly French. His charming residence-turned-restaurant beneath the Plantation Inn in Lahaina is equally authentic. Chilled cucumber soup transcends simplicity with goat cheese and fresh dill.…$$$Lahaina - Coffeehouse/American
Grandma’s Coffee House
Alfred Franco’s grandmother started growing and roasting coffee in remote and charming Keokea back in 1918, when she was 16 years old. Five generations later, this family-run cafe is still fueled by homegrown Haleakala beans and frequented by local paniolo (cowboys). Line up at the…$Kula - Hawaiian Regional
Hali‘imaile General Store
Chef Bev Gannon, one of the 12 original pioneering Hawai’i Regional Cuisine chefs, brought her gourmet comfort food to this renovated plantation store in rural Maui in 1988. It was a gamble then; now it's one of the island's most beloved restaurants. Menu items reflect island cuisine…$$Hali'imaile - American
Hana Ranch Restaurant
Dining options are slim in Hana after 3pm, so you might find yourself hungry with nowhere else to eat. Owned and operated by Travaasa Hana, the Hana Ranch Restaurant is the informal, in-town alternative to the hotel’s dining room for lunch or dinner, serving casual fare (burgers,…$$Hana - Pizza/Seafood
Honu
Snag an oceanfront table where the gentle tide nearly tickles your toes and spy on the green sea turtles for whom restaurateur Mark Ellman named his restaurant, the second in a trio that includes Mala Ocean Tavern and Frida’s. Honu’s diverse menu is guaranteed to please everyone in…$$Lahaina - Hawaiian Regional
Huihui
Opened in 2021, this outstanding beachfront restaurant honors the celestial navigation and other wayfinding skills of Polynesian voyagers in its nautical-and constellation-themed décor and in the innovative, locally sourced menu of Chef Tom Muromoto. Seafood, venison poke and…Lahaina - Comfort Food
Hula Grill
Skip the main dining room and dig your toes in the sand at the Barefoot Bar on the beach, where you can nosh on fresh burgers, fish, pizza, and salad.$$Ka‘anapali - Plate Lunch/BBQ
Huli Huli Chicken at Koki
This roadside shack just past Koki Beach might be the best place to eat in Hana—but it’s not really a restaurant and we can’t vouch that it will be open when you arrive; the chicken typically runs out before the end of the day. Huli huli chicken is a mouthwatering Hawaiian version of…$Hana - Hawaii Regional Cuisine
Humble Market Kitchin
For once, the ocean views live up to the food, and not the other way around. With Humble Market Kitchin, celebrity chef Roy Yamaguchi pays tribute to summers spent volunteering in his grandfather’s general store. Opened in late 2016 as part of the Wailea Beach Resort’s $100-million…$$$Wailea - Sushi/Pacific Rim
Japengo
The open-air dining room hanging over the Hyatt pool is divided into multiple private nooks, evoking the feel of a Japanese teahouse—one that also happens to witness spectacular sunsets. Superb Japaneseinfluenced entrees and inspired sushi, sashimi, and hand rolls deservedly keep…$$$Kaanapali - Filipino/Plate Lunch
Joey’s Kitchen
Joey Macadangdang ran the kitchen at Roy’s for many years, winning award after award for his inventive gourmet cuisine. Now he’s got two restaurants of his own: an ultra-casual spot in the Whalers Village food court and this slightly fancier eatery in Napili, where Joey and his wife…$$Honokowai, Kahana & Napili - Healthy Deli
Joy’s Place
Nourish yourself with nutritious, delicious meals at this small cafe, where the emphasis is on healthful living. For breakfast, rev your engine with an açai bowl or a still-warm spelt muffin. Soups are made daily, and sandwiches are huge, with thick slices of nitrate-free turkey…$Kihei/Maalaea - Hawaii Regional Cuisine
Ka'ana Kitchen
You can hardly tell where the dining room ends and the kitchen begins in this bright, open restaurant. Sit ringside where you can watch Executive Chef Isaac Bancaco (or one of his talented team members) in action. Start off with a hand-mixed cocktail and the grilled octopus: fat…$$$Wailea - Hawaii Regional
Ka‘ana Kitchen
You can hardly tell where the dining room ends and the kitchen begins in this bright, open restaurant. Sit ringside where you can watch Chef Isaac Bancaco in action. Start off with a hand-mixed cocktail and the grilled octopus: fat chunks of tender meat tossed with frisée,…$$$Wailea Kauiki
For years, the signature restaurant at Hana’s sole resort languished under ineffectual kitchen management. That has changed with the arrival of Derek Watanabe, formerly the chef de cuisine for Alan Wong’s Pineapple Room. Watanabe’s menu showcases Hana-grown ingredients: The earthy…$$$Hana- Steak/Seafood
Kimo’s
Founded in 1977, Kimo’s has a loyal following that keeps it from falling into the faceless morass of waterfront restaurants serving surf and turf with great sunset views. Part of the TS Restaurants chain, it’s a formula that works—not only because of its oceanfront patio Lanai Bar…$$Lahaina - Hawaii Regional
Ko
Executive Chef Tylun Pang pays tribute to Maui’s plantation heritage by incorporating the cuisines of the sugarcane fields’ labor force—Hawaiian, Filipino, Portuguese, Korean, Puerto Rican, Chinese, and Japanese—into gourmet dishes with elegant presentations. The “ahi on the rock”…$$$Wailea - Deli
Kuau Store
Decorated with vintage maps of Maui, this is one of my favorite spots on the North Shore for breakfast or lunch to go. The handsome convenience store and deli offers gourmet breakfast paninis, smoothies with all kinds of extras, fresh juices, kombucha on tap, shoyu chicken plate…$Road to Hana - Hawaii Regional/American
Kula Bistro
Longtime high-end caterer Luciano Zanon, who grew up working a family-owned trattoria in Venice, returned to his roots with wife Chantal by opening this casual bistro in 2012. If you can pull your eyes away from the dessert and pastry case, at breakfast you’ll find expertly executed…$$Kula - Hawaii Regional/American
Kula Lodge
The lodge’s restaurant is best at breakfast, when the prices are lower and the views through the picture windows have an eye-popping intensity. The million-dollar vista spans the flanks of Haleakala, all of Central Maui, the emerald-green West Maui Mountains, and the Pacific Ocean on…$$Kula - American
Kula Sandalwoods Cafe
Chef Eleanor Loui Worth, a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, makes hollandaise sauce every morning from fresh upcountry egg yolks, sweet butter, and Meyer lemons, which her family grows in the yard above the cafe. This is Kula cuisine, with produce from the backyard and…$Kula - Bakery/French/Pizza
La Provence
Hidden away up in Kula is a family-owned French bakery that’s worth driving across the island for. It’s also worth overlooking the service, which can be slow and inconsistent. Every item stashed in the bakery case is exquisite. Arrive well before noon or risk watching the last almond…$$Kula - American/International
Lahaina Coolers
Currently closed due to wildfire impact.The huge marlin hanging above the bar and persimmon-colored walls set a cheery tone at this casual indoor/outdoor restaurant. On Sunday, breakfast is served until 1pm. The huevos rancheros come in a sizzling cast-iron skillet heaped with kalua…$$Lahaina - Seafood
Lahaina Fish Co.
The open-air dining room is literally over the water, with flickering torches after sunset and a relatively affordable seafood-focused menu—especially at lunch, when you can dine oceanside on burgers with Maui Cattle Co. beef, turkey, shrimp, or taro/lentil, or fresh seafood—perhaps…$$Lahaina - New American
Lahaina Grill
Currently closed due to wildfire impact.This classy restaurant has been collecting accolades for its perfectly executed island cuisine, gracious service, and great wine list since 1990. The striking decor—splashy artwork by local painter Jan Kasprzycki, pressed-tin ceilings, and warm…$$$Lahaina - Steak/Seafood
Leilani’s on the Beach
Another outpost of the T S Restaurants empire, Leilani’s showcases sustainable seafood and local produce, sourcing from some 40 Maui farms. Try the taro hummus with Kumu Farms crudités and taro chips or the ahi poke with avocado for starters, and for a main, the lemongrass…$$Kaanapali - Sandwiches/Bakery
Leoda’s Kitchen and Pie Shop
As you approach the counter, you’ll see why the line stretches to the door: a glass case full of banana and coconut pies slathered in fresh whipped cream. The savory pies are just okay. But the sweet pies—especially the macadamia nut chocolate praline—are intergalactic. For…$Lahaina - Modern Island
Lineage
Top Chef fan favorite and Hilo native Sheldon Simeon has a long history on the Maui culinary scene, but he didn't have a restaurant of his own until he opened the humble but playful, lunch-only Tin Roof in Kahului in 2016. In late 2018, he expanded his reach, geographically and…$$$Wailea - Italian/Seafood
Longhi’s
Breakfast, lunch, and the bar are the enduring attractions of this breezy restaurant in the Shops at Wailea. The largely Italian-driven dinner menu—eggplant Parmigiana, seafood linguine, ahi au poivre—isn’t disappointing, just rather pricey, although it does come with divine cheesy…$$$Wailea - American/International
Mala Ocean Tavern
Brighter and classier than “tavern” suggests, this tiny restaurant overlooking Mala Wharf in Lahaina is perfect. The oceanfront seating lets diners peer down on sea turtles foraging in the surf. The bartenders know their business, and the multicultural menu offers health-conscious…$$Lahaina - Hawaii Regional Cuisine/Seafood
Mala Wailea
This Wailea resort restaurant doesn’t have the chic intimacy of its cousin, Mala Ocean Tavern in Lahaina but it’s still a delicious destination with a nearly identical menu. Beloved chef and restaurateur Mark Ellman knows how to craft locally sourced dishes that are both…$$$Wailea - Seafood
Mama’s Fish House
Overlooking idyllic Kuau Cove on Maui’s North Shore, this island institution is the realization of a South Pacific fantasy. Though pricey, a meal at Mama’s is a complete experience. Recapture the grace of early Hawaii when feasts lasted for days beneath the swaying palms. Wander…$$$Road to Hana - Italian
Marco’s Grill & Deli
Located just outside the airport, Marco’s offers decent Italian fare in an upscale diner with black-and-white booths and white linens on the tables. Portions tend to be huge, and everything is made in house, from the meatballs, sausages, and burgers to the sauces and salad dressing.…$$Kahului - Global/Mediterranean
Market Fresh Bistro
At this off-the-beaten-path bistro, Chef Justin Pardo steadfastly adheres to the locavore ethic: Nearly everything he serves is grown within a few miles of the kitchen. Because of this, the menu changes daily. Salads are exceptional here, with slivered rainbow radishes, heirloom…$$Makawao - Pizza
Marlow
Longtime elite Maui chef Jeff Scheer and wife Kaili began making sourdough pizza in their outdoor oven during the pandemic and now serve their large, Neapolitan-style pies with artisanal toppings (hand-stretched mozzarella, Kaua‘i prawns, local pork and veggies among them) in a…$Pukalani - Italian/Seafood
Matteo’s Osteria
Although Wailea is hardly lacking in Italian eateries, it’d be a shame to miss this gracious restaurant and wine bar, nearly hidden in a small shopping strip just below the Residence Inn. Some 30 wines, mostly from Italy and Northern California, are available by the glass, while the…$$Wailea - Brewpub
Maui Brewing Co.
Maui’s uber-popular microbrewery has expanded to Oahu, but the home is where the heart is. The Kahana brewpub offers beer flights at the bar and excellent pub fare—much of it beer-battered, and some of it unique to Hawaii, like fried ulu (breadfruit) wedges or kalua pork flatbread.…$$Honokowai, Kahana & Napili - Cafe
Maui Sunrise Café
For a bargain lunch or breakfast, follow the surfers to this hole-in-the-wall located just off Front Street. (The address says Front St., but it’s really off of Market, across from the library.) The kitchen turns out tasty breakfast burritos, a lox Benedict with home-fried potatoes,…$Lahaina - Sandwiches
Maui Swiss Café
This cafe boldly announces itself with flamingo-pink fringed umbrellas over its sidewalk seating. Inside is a selection of crepes, sandwiches, and ice creams, along with 12 Internet stations—perfect for printing out your flight’s boarding pass. The affordable and tasty crepes all…$Lahaina - Mexican
Maui Tacos
Many years ago, Mark Ellman launched this restaurant chain, dedicated to Mexican food with “Mauitude.” Now it has locations as far away as Minnesota. Ellman has since moved on, but his successors’ relatively healthful take on fast food will satisfy a hungry belly. Menu choices…$Honokowai, Kahana & Napili - Pacific Rim
Merriman’s Maui
James Beard award–winning chef Peter Merriman, who helped launch the Hawaii Regional Cuisine movement in the 1990s, has namesake restaurants on Oahu, the Big Island, and Kauai, but none in such a picturesque location as this, the end of a rocky point with views of Lanai and Molokai.…$$$Kapalua - Hawaii Regional Cuisine/Filipino
Migrant
Chef Sheldon Simeon won the nation’s heart when he appeared on "Top Chef: Seattle" wearing a red wool cap and an indefatigable smile. He didn’t win that contest, but he’s won just about every other accolade—including, most recently, the title of Best New Chef in the Pacific/Northwest…$$Wailea - Southwestern
Milagros Food Company
Milagros has gained a following with its great home-style cooking, upbeat atmosphere, and highly touted margaritas. Sit outdoors and watch the parade of Willie Nelson look-alikes ambling by as you tuck into the ahi creation of the evening. The kitchen turns out Tex-Mex dishes with…$$Paia Mill House
Awe-inspiring views of the West Maui Mountains, lush lakeside gardens, and sugarmill-machinery-turned-sculptures create the scenic backdrop for the signature restaurant of Maui Tropical Plantation, already a destination-worthy attraction for its ziplines, train ride, and boutique…$$Wailuku & WaikapuMoku Roots
Note: This business was impacted by the wildfires of August 2023.It may be in a shopping center, but this cheery restaurant with shaded outdoor seating is a popular destination for vegans, vegetarians and fans of local farmers. Taro burgers, coconut noodles and quinoa salads are…$Lahaina- American/Local Cuisine
Monkeypod Kitchen
Celebrated chef Peter Merriman’s more casual outpostspotlights local, organic produce, pasture-raised beef, and sustainably caught fish—all of which translate here to better-tasting food. Pull up a seat at the lively bar here and enjoy saimin (soup with locally made noodles), bulgogi…$$Wailea - Indian
Monsoon India
If there’s one thing Maui could use more of, it’s Indian flavors. Thank goodness for Monsoon India, a humble restaurant at the north edge of Kihei. The chicken korma here is creamy and fragrant, the chana masala spicy and satisfying. Even the simple dal curry is delightful. With…$$Kihei/Maalaea - Japanese/Peruvian
Morimoto Maui
Iron Chef Masaharu Morimoto’s poolside, oceanview restaurant is sedate and spare, directing all of the attention to the culinary fireworks. The immaculate kitchen houses a space-age freezer full of fish bought at auction, and a rice polisher that ensures that every grain is perfect.…$$$Wailea - American
Nalu’s South Shore Grill
Casual, noisy, and a lot of fun, this restaurant fills an important niche in Kihei. Order at the counter from a wide range of menu items—everything from chicken and waffles to a commendable Cubano sandwich. It’s a great place to bring the family or big groups. Extra touches show that…$Kihei/Maalaea - Seafood
Nick’s Fishmarket Maui
It’s hard to beat the fantasy setting on the south Maui shoreline: Here’s the place to bring your sweetie to enjoy the moon rise and the sweet smell of the stephanotis growing on the terrace. Fans love this classic seafood restaurant, which sticks to the tried and true, with just a…$$$Wailea - Sushi
Nuka
Sushi chef Hiro Takanashi smiles from behind the bar as he turns out beautiful specialty rolls loaded with sprouts, pea shoots, avocado, and glistening red tuna. The garden-fresh ingredients served at this compact sushi restaurant reflect its rural Haiku address, but the stylish…$$Haiku - Thai
Nutcharee’s Authentic Thai Food
Thank goodness for this hole-in-the-forest Thai restaurant! Hana has few dining options, and even fewer that are both health-conscious and affordable. In fact, this semi-permanent tent across from the ballpark might be the only one. Snag a seat at one of the colorful picnic tables…$Hana - Cafe/Ice Cream
Ono Gelato Company
Who doesn’t want to hang out on a picnic bench perched over the Lahaina surf while eating creamy gelato? This classy creamery uses locally sourced lilikoi (Hawaiian passion fruit), mango, and coffee to craft rich and flavorful scoops of gelato and sorbets. The coffee bar opens for…$Lahaina. - Pacific Rim
Pacific’O
Note: This business was destroyed by the wildfires of August 2023.You can’t get any closer to the ocean than these tables overlooking the beach at 505 Front Street. Start with flash-fried oysters and wakame seaweed salad or lobster ravioli. Move on to saffron beet risotto studded…$$$Lahaina - Cafe
Paia Bay Coffee & Bar
Tucked behind the San Lorenzo swimsuit shop, this garden coffee shop is Paia’s bestkept secret. Pop in for an expertly brewed espresso and a fresh-baked croissant or slice of banana bread and you’ll see locals networking in shady corners over cappuccinos. The menu is a bit more…$Paia - Seafood
Paia Fish Market
Note: This business was destroyed in the wildfires of August 2023.At the corner of Baldwin Avenue and Hana Highway in Paia, this busy fish market, founded in 1989, must maintain its own fleet of fishing boats. How else to explain how the cooks can dish out filet after giant fresh…$Paia - American
Peggy Sue’s
This 1950s-style diner has oodles of charm and is a swell place to spring for the best chocolate malt on the island. You’ll also find sodas, shakes, floats, egg creams, milkshakes, and Roselani gourmet ice cream. Oldfashioned soda-shop stools, an ELVIS PRESLEY BOULEVARD sign, and…$Kihei/Maalaea - Italian/Mediterranean
Penne Pasta Café
This casual, indoor-outdoor spot on a side street features delicious Southern Italian and Mediterranean cuisine. It's a sit-down meal at takeout prices: Order at the counter, and the pasta, flatbreads, sandwiches, or salads (try the Niçoise) will be brought to your table. The penne…$Lahaina - Pizza
Pi Artisan Pizza
Perhaps the best reason to visit the Outlets of Maui shopping center is this gourmet pizzeria, which prides itself on fast service and fresh, local ingredients as well as its 800-degree kiawe (mesquite) wood-burning oven. The seared ahi tataki with fresh arugula and miso wasabi aioli…$$Lahaina - Greek/Mediterranean
Pita Paradise
For fresh, flavorful Greek food cooked to order and served with creamy tzatziki sauce and rice pilaf, head to this oasis in Wailea. Owner Johnny Arabatzis, Jr., catches his own fish, which he prepares with dill scallionaise and roasted red peppers. The lamb in the gyros is free-range…$$Wailea - Italian/Mediterranean
Pizza Paradiso Mediterranean Grill
The pledge on the wall at this Honokowai hot spot—to use organic, local ingredients wherever possible and treat employees like family—gives a hint to the quality of food here. The large-ish menu includes gourmet and gluten-free pizzas with terrific toppings (barbecue chicken, smoked…$Honokowai, Kahana & Napili - Pacific Rim
Plantation House Restaurant
Although Chef Jojo Vasquez left in 2018 to helm the kitchen at Maui Brewing Co., the former chef’s multicultural approach still applies at this dramatic destination for breakfast, lunch, or dinner, sitting amid lush golf greens with panoramic ocean views. Kona kampachi and Kauai…$$Kapalua - Hawaiian/Plate Lunch
Poi by the Pound
When in Hawaii, do as the Hawaiians and eat poi—steamed taro root pounded with water and slightly fermented. A small bowl of this traditional staple starch comes with the Hawaiian feast; mix it with the salty kalua pork or lomi salmon and enjoy. Otherwise order my favorite dishes:…$Kahului - Japanese/Local
Restaurant Matsu
Customers have come from Hana (more than 50 miles away) just for Matsu’s California rolls, while regulars line up for the cold saimin (julienned cucumber, egg, Chinese-style sweet pork, and red ginger on noodles) and the bento plates (various assemblages of chicken, teriyaki beef,…$Kahului - Hawaii Regional Cuisine
Roy’s
Roy Yamaguchi, the James Beard award–winning chef and one of the pioneers of Hawaii Regional Cuisine, has largely divested himself from Roy’s restaurants outside of Hawaii to focus on his home-state holdings. On Maui that would be this dining room next to the Kaanapali Golf Course…$$$Kaanapali - Italian
Sala Pepe
The dinner-only menu at this small Italian bistro changes to reflect what’s in season, but the quality stays consistent. The married owners (husband Michele is from Milan, wife Qiana is from Brooklyn) put a ton of love into their handcut pastas and pizza pies. Don’t be surprised to…$$Lahaina - Noodles/Plate Lunch
Sam Sato’s
Hidden away in Wailuku’s industrial area, this humble, family-owned eatery dates back to 1933. It’s one of Maui’s last ma-and-pa eateries, and everything on the menu is under $10. Sit at the cafeteria-like counter and strike up a conversation with your neighbor. Try your dry mein (al…$Wailuku & Waikapu - Mexican
Sangrita Grill & Cantina
This classy cantina pays homage to Mexico’s simple but gourmet cuisine. Mother Clucker flautas come with crema fresca and sweet roasted jalapeno sauce. The rotisserie chicken is so scrumptious you might just take an extra home with you, along with a tub of spicy jicama slaw. The bar…$$Kaanapali - Pacific Rim/Sushi
Sansei Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar
With chef-owner D.K. Kodama’s creative take on sushi rolls (mango and crab salad handrolls with Thai chili sauce and panko-crusted ahi sashimi rolls among them), Sansei’s scores high with adventurous diners. But expertly sliced sashimi platters and straightforward gobo rolls will…$$Kapalua - Pacific Rim
Sea House Restaurant
A bit dated, this oceanfront restaurant at the Napili Kai Beach Resort is a throwback to earlier days, but the view here can’t be beat. Breakfast is lovely under the umbrellas outside, overlooking serene Napili Bay. The oven-baked Crater pancake is a special treat, made with custard…$$$Honokowai, Kahana & Napili - Breakfast
Slappy Cakes
The concept for this family favorite is certainly fun—make your own pancakes on tabletop griddles—but the food is actually pretty good, too, with everything made from scratch, minimal processed foods, and biscuits baked in house. While kids will enjoy choosing which batter to use…$Honokowai, Kahana & Napili - Steak/Seafood
Son’z Steakhouse
Descend a palatial staircase for dinner at Son’z, where tables overlook a lagoon with white and black swans gliding by. This is classy digs for a steakhouse; imagine Ruth’s Chris with extra flavor and a fairytale atmosphere. Chef Geno Sarmiento knows how to prepare protein; his filet…$$$Kaanapali - Asian Fusion/New American
Spago
At Wolfgang Puck’s restaurant off the posh lobby of the Four Seasons, dishes are flavorful but light—not burdened by heavy sauces. If the chef tried to remove the ahi sesame-miso cones from the menu, fans would probably riot. This appetizer is perfection: bright red spicy ahi spooned…$$$Wailea - Noodles/Fusion
Star Noodle
This hip noodle house at the top of Lahaina’s industrial park offers a deceivingly simple menu of noodles and share plates. The hapa ramen, with its smoky pork and spicy miso broth, is guaranteed to be unlike any you’ve had before. Each dish is a gourmet twist on a local favorite;…$Lahaina - Bakery
T. Komoda Store and Bakery
The coveted cream puffs (filled with vanilla or mocha cream) are just one of the temptations at this century-old family bakery. Stick donuts encrusted with macadamia nuts, Chantilly cakes, guava malasadas, fruit pies, and butter rolls keep loyal customers coming back. Old-timers know…$Makawao - Italian
Taverna
Longtime Kapalua Chris Kaiwi (a former managing partner of Plantation House and Pineapple Grill) and his Italian-Swiss chef Roger Stettler pride themselves on “urban drinks and Italian eats,” and Taverna delivers on both. Order one of the housemade pastas—tagliatelle with stewed…$$Kapalua - Polynesian
The Feast at Lele
Even those who think they’ve seen all the luaus they need have been won over by the Feast at Lele, while first-timers—especially couples looking for a romantic evening—will definitely be wowed. The Feast at Lele (the ancient name for Lahaina) stands out from other luaus as the…$$$Lahaina - American/Pacific Rim
The Preserve Kitchen + Bar
Hana’s only fine-dining restaurant has always struggled to assert itself, but the new chef, Bella Toland, seems up to the challenge. Half-French, half-Filipina, Toland worked for Wolfgang in Las Vegas and Wailea before finding this bewitching spot with its luxurious lanai overlooking…$$$Hana - Pacific Rim/Southwestern
Three’s Bar & Grill
In 2009, culinary-school and surfing buddies Travis Morrin, Cody Christopher, and Jaron Blosser figured a catering company would allow them time to catch waves in between kitchen duties. But demand for their varied cuisines—Southwestern, Pacific Rim, and Hawaiian—soon prompted them…$Kihei/Maalaea - Filipino/Plate Lunch
Tin Roof
Celebrity chef Sheldon Simeon won the hearts of Top Chef fans not just once, but twice, and Maui residents couldn’t adore him more. After launching Star Noodle into fame, he and his wife, Janice, opened their own business—a humble to-go spot at the very back of an industrial strip…$Kahului - Cafe/Juice Bar
Wow Wow Hawaiian Lemonade
The cashiers at this permanent lemonade stand are a testament to their product: sweet, wholesome, and helpful. Choose from an array of fresh-squeezed lime- and lemonades made with local honey, strawberry, lilikoi, watermelon, dragonfruit, mint, and basil. Purchase a custom Mason jar…$Kihei/Maalaea
