Where to See Turtles in Maui: Best Spots and What to Know
Maui is one of the best places in Hawaii to encounter Hawaiian green sea turtles, called honu, in the wild. But knowing where to see turtles in Maui before you arrive makes the difference between a quick glimpse and a real encounter.
You have two main options: shore viewing or getting in the water. Both can work, depending on your comfort level and what kind of experience you want. This guide covers the top spots of where to see turtles in Maui and explains why a boat tour to Turtle Cove consistently delivers the best results.
What Are the Hawaiian Green Sea Turtles You'll See in Maui?
Honu are Hawaiian green sea turtles, and they're the species you'll most likely encounter here. Adults can reach four to five feet long and weigh over 300 pounds. Despite their size, they're calm, unhurried animals that feed on algae and seagrass along the reef.
They're protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act as a threatened species. That means federal law requires you to stay at least ten feet from any turtle, in the water or on land. No touching, no chasing, no blocking their path to the surface to breathe.
The rarer hawksbill turtle, called honu'ea, also lives in Maui's waters, but sightings are far less common. When people talk about seeing turtles in Maui, they almost always mean honu.
The Top Shore Spots of Where to See Turtles in Maui
If you'd rather stay dry, or you want to see turtles resting on the beach, three spots consistently deliver.
Ho'okipa Beach, on Maui's north shore near Paia, is the most reliable land-based turtle viewing spot on the island. Turtles haul out onto the sand here in the afternoon, typically between 3 and 5 PM, near the lifeguard tower at the east end of the beach. Park at the lower lot near the beach itself, not the upper lot. Walk past the lifeguard tower toward the rock wall.
Maluaka Beach in Makena sits at the shore entry point for the area known as Turtle Town. The water here is calm and clear, with sandy bottom and seagrass beds that turtles graze on regularly. This is also one of the more accessible spots for shore snorkeling if conditions cooperate.
Olowalu Reef, sometimes called Turtle Reef, runs along the south side near Lahaina along the Honoapiilani Highway. The reef comes close to shore, the water stays shallow, and turtles feed on algae-covered rock here with some regularity. It's a low-effort entry for snorkelers of all levels.
At all three spots, keep the ten-foot rule. The turtles won't always move away from you, but that doesn't mean you can close the gap.
Why Turtle Town Is the Best Place to See Turtles in Maui
If you want to see honu in the water rather than on the sand, Turtle Town is the answer.
Turtle Town is the reef zone off Maluaka Beach along Maui's south Makena coast, roughly between Nahuna Point and Black Sand Beach. The underwater terrain here consists of lava formations, coral gardens, and cleaning stations where turtles gather to have algae removed from their shells by surgeonfish. It's an active, living ecosystem and honu return to it year-round.
What makes Turtle Town different from a shore spot is the proximity. You're in the water alongside the turtles, not watching from a distance. The lava structures create pockets of calm, shallow depth that make it manageable for most swimmers. And the cleaning station behavior means turtles often stay in one area long enough for a real look.
How a Boat Tour Gets You Closer to the Turtles Than Shore Access
Shore access to Turtle Town exists, but it comes with trade-offs. Rocky entry points, variable current, and the challenge of navigating to the right part of the reef without local knowledge mean many visitors miss the best spots entirely.
A boat tour eliminates that uncertainty.
At
Maui Reef Adventures, we run our Turtle Cove snorkel tour aboard Reef Explorer, our custom-built super raft. Because of Reef Explorer's size and design, we reach parts of Turtle Town that large catamarans simply can't access. That means you're in a private cove, away from the crowds that gather at the more exposed shore entry points.
You show up. We handle gear, transportation, crew guidance, food, and beverages. You focus on the water.
Rules for Seeing Turtles in Maui the Right Way
Whether you're at Ho'okipa, Maluaka Beach, or in the water at Turtle Town, the rules are the same.
Stay ten feet away at all times. Don't touch, chase, or crowd a turtle, especially near the surface where they need to breathe. Don't feed them. Don't use flash photography close to their faces.
On our tours, the crew covers all of this before guests enter the water. We've seen what happens when people don't follow the guidelines, and it's not worth the risk to the animals or the legal exposure to you as a visitor.
Maui Reef Adventures treats responsible wildlife interaction as a non-negotiable part of every trip we run.
If you want to understand what the full experience looks like before you book, read what our small group snorkel experience looks like from guests who've been out with us.
Book a Tour with Maui Reef Adventures and See the Turtles Up Close
Shore spots are worth visiting, especially Ho'okipa in the afternoon and Maluaka in the morning. But if you want the most reliable, closest, and least crowded encounter with honu in Maui, a guided boat tour to Turtle Cove is your best option.
So, wondering where to see turtles in Maui? The honest answer is that a boat tour gets you there better than almost any other approach.
We run small group tours that include a Turtle Cove stop, all snorkel gear, breakfast, lunch, and an experienced crew that knows these waters.
Ready to get in the water with the honu? Book your Maui turtle snorkel tour today and hold your spot before peak season fills up.












