If your Hawaiʻi trip lands anywhere between late August 2026 and the end of January 2027, you have a window most visitors don’t think about: the Kona coffee harvest. The slopes above Kailua-Kona on the Big Island are one of the only places in the United States where coffee is grown commercially, and the harvest period turns what is otherwise a year-round tour into something more interesting. The trees are heavy with cherries. Pickers are in the rows. The wet mills and drying decks are running. Several farms let visitors walk through it all, sometimes with a basket strapped to their waist.
The Kona Coffee Belt is a strip roughly 30 miles long and a couple of miles wide, running from Holualoa in the north down through Kainaliu, Kealakekua, Captain Cook, and Hōnaunau in the south. It sits at roughly 600–2,500 feet elevation on the western slope of Hualālai and Mauna Loa, in a microclimate that gets sunny mornings, cloudy afternoons, and gentle volcanic-soil drainage. Those are the conditions that built Kona coffee’s reputation. The Kona Coffee Farmers Association documents the belt’s geography and lists more than 100 member farms; the ones below are the consistent visitor-facing operations during harvest season.
This piece is about timing the visit, not ranking farms. For a year-round “best of” tour list, see our best coffee farms in Hawaiʻi guide. The point of going during harvest is to see the work, not just the gift shop.
