Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±

Kauaʻi Community Market

Top choice


One of the island's biggest and best farmers markets, in partnership with the Kauaʻi County Farm Bureau, brings a bonanza of locally grown, often organic fruits and vegetables, free-range eggs and local dairy cheeses, island-grown coffee and flowers, hand-harvested honey and sea salts, Hawaiian plate lunches and poi, and fresh smoothies, juices, popsicles and baked goods. Don't miss it!


Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby attractions

1. Kilohana Plantation

0.37 MILES

If you’re curious about how Kauaʻi’s powerful sugar barons lived, visit this historic plantation estate turned shopping complex, which also hosts a luau…

2. Kauaʻi Society of Artists

1.03 MILES

Island artists share gallery space at the mall and exhibit thoughtful works in oils, pencil, watercolor, sculpture materials, mixed media and photography…

3. ³¢¾±³ó³ÜÊ»±ð Lutheran Church

1.49 MILES

Hawaii’s oldest Lutheran church is a quaint clapboard house, with an incongruously slanted floor that resembles a ship’s deck and a balcony akin to a…

4. Huleʻia National Wildlife Refuge

1.6 MILES

On the north side of the Huleʻia River lies the 240-acre Huleʻia National Wildlife Refuge, a breeding ground for endemic waterfowl. The refuge is closed…

5. Grove Farm

1.73 MILES

Once ranked among Kauaʻi's most productive sugar companies, Grove Farm was acquired in 1864 by George Wilcox, the Hilo-born son of Protestant missionaries…

6. Kauaʻi Museum

1.83 MILES

The island’s largest museum is set in two buildings – one of which was built with lava rock in 1960. Come here for a quick grounding in Kauaʻi’s history…

7. Alekoko (Menehune) Fishpond Overlook

2.21 MILES

This roadside overlook offers an oft-photographed vista of the Huleʻia Valley, where the Huleʻia River winds beneath a ring of verdant peaks. The river is…