View of Kahului from upcountry Maui

10 Best Restaurants in Kahului

John C. Derrick

Founder & certified Hawai'i travel expert with 20+ years of experience in Hawai'i tourism.

Most visitors blow through Kahului on the way to Ka’anapali or Wailea. That’s a mistake. Maui’s commercial center isn’t pretty — strip malls, big box stores, light industrial zones — but it has the island’s deepest concentration of affordable, everyday restaurants. The kind of places locals actually eat at. No ocean views, no tiki torches. Just food that’s worth the stop.

Here are 10 Kahului restaurants I keep going back to.

1. Tante's Island Cuisine

Tucked inside the Maui Seaside Hotel, Tante’s is easy to miss. The hotel itself doesn’t scream destination dining. But Tante’s pulls off a menu of island-style dishes — loco moco, kalbi ribs, fresh fish plates — with a consistency that keeps regulars coming back. Breakfast here is solid. The portions are generous and the prices are reasonable for Maui. If you’re staying near the airport and need a real meal before heading out, this is the move.

2. Brigit & Bernard's Garden Cafe

German food in the middle of Maui. Brigit & Bernard’s sits at 335 Hoohana St in a garden setting that feels completely disconnected from the industrial surroundings. Schnitzel, bratwurst, spaetzle, strudel — all made from scratch. Guy Fieri featured them on Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, and the attention was deserved. This place has been quietly doing its thing for years. The outdoor seating under the trees is the best part. It’s a strange, wonderful little restaurant.

3. Bistro Casanova

Bistro Casanova at 33 Lono Ave is the closest thing Kahului has to a date-night restaurant. Mediterranean and Italian-leaning menu with a wood-fired pizza oven. The pizzas are good. The pastas are good. The wine list is better than you’d expect for a town that mostly caters to plate lunch crowds. It’s not cheap by Kahului standards, but it’s still half the price of comparable food in Wailea.

4. Tiki Tiki Thai Cuisine

At 395 Dairy Rd, Tiki Tiki Thai does straightforward Thai food and does it well. Pad thai, green curry, papaya salad, tom kha — the standards, executed with fresh ingredients and actual spice levels when you ask for them. It’s a small spot. Lunch gets crowded fast. The curries are the strongest part of the menu. If you’re coming from the airport and craving something with heat, Tiki Tiki delivers.

5. Marco's Grill & Deli

Marco’s at 444 Hana Hwy has been around for over 30 years, and it still draws a loyal crowd. Italian-American food with a local twist — think chicken parm alongside saimin and loco moco. The portions are huge. The garlic bread is a staple. It’s open early for breakfast and runs through dinner, which makes it one of the more flexible options in town. Nothing fancy, nothing trying to be. Just a diner that knows its audience and feeds them well.

6. Kahului Ale House

Sports bar meets eclectic menu at 355 E Kamehameha Ave. Kahului Ale House has burgers, fish tacos, poke bowls, pasta, and a solid beer selection on tap. It’s the kind of place that tries to do a lot and somehow pulls most of it off. Good spot for watching a game. Good spot for a group that can’t agree on what to eat. The vibe is casual, the TVs are plentiful, and the happy hour is worth timing your visit around.

7. Restaurant Matsu

Restaurant Matsu at 161 Alamaha St is one of the best deals in Kahului. Affordable Japanese food — tempura, fried noodles, katsu, udon — in a no-frills setting. Family-run, family-priced. The tempura is light and crispy, and the combination plates let you try a few things without spending much. This is the kind of restaurant that tourists almost never find because it doesn’t market itself. It doesn’t need to. Locals keep it full.

8. Zippy's

Zippy’s is a Hawaii institution. Founded in 1966 on King Street in Honolulu, the chain has been a staple of island life for decades. The Kahului location at 15 Ho’okele St brings that same formula to Maui — plate lunches, chili (the famous Zippy’s chili), fried chicken, and a bakery case stocked with apple napples and dobash cake. It’s fast, it’s predictable, and it hits a very specific craving. If you’ve never tried Zippy’s, this is your chance. If you already know, you don’t need convincing.

9. Jack's Inn

Jack’s Inn at 312 Alamaha St is cash only and closes after lunch. That tells you everything about what kind of place this is. Local breakfast and lunch spot. Omelets, pancakes, loco moco in the morning. Plate lunches and burgers midday. The prices are shockingly low for Maui. The crowd is almost entirely local. If you want to eat where working Kahului eats — not where the guidebooks send you — Jack’s Inn is it. Bring cash.

10. Tight Tacos

Tight Tacos at 349 Hanakai St B is a hole-in-the-wall taco spot that punches well above its weight. Small menu, small space, big flavors. The tacos are loaded, the salsas are made in-house, and the whole operation has the energy of a place that cares more about the food than the decor. It’s the kind of spot you walk past twice before you find the entrance. Worth the search.

A Note on Hours

Restaurant hours in Kahului shift. Some of these places have adjusted schedules since the Lahaina wildfire in August 2023 — staffing changes, supply chain disruptions, altered demand patterns. Always verify hours directly before showing up, especially for smaller spots like Jack’s Inn and Tight Tacos. Check Google Maps or Yelp for current listings — both are generally up to date for Kahului. Calling ahead is the safest bet for the smallest spots.

Updated 03-25-2026 by John C. Derrick.

Getting Around Kahului

Kahului’s restaurants are spread across strip malls and side streets that aren’t walkable from most resort areas. You’ll need a rental car to hit these spots. Discount Hawaii Car Rental compares rates across the major agencies and often beats booking directly with the brands.

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