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Hawaii Car Rentals

Hawaii Rental Car Cost Calculator

The real all-in number — base rate, the insurance trap, Hawaii-only fees, and live gas prices. Updated daily.

We may link to trusted Hawaiʻi resources at no extra cost to you.

Live: Hawaiʻi gas prices from AAA, updated May 26, 2026. State average $5.668/gal regular.

The teaser rate you see at booking is rarely what you pay at pickup. Hawaiʻi tacks on a state $5/day rental surcharge, a vehicle license recovery fee, an airport concession fee, and (at HNL only) a customer facility charge. Then there’s insurance — a counter upsell that can double a base rate if you say yes to everything.

This calculator pulls live AAA gas prices for your island and shows the all-in number with each insurance choice spelled out. Use it to skip the counter sticker shock.

Where & when
Pickup island
Travel month

Peak = highest rates   Low = best deals

Trip length
Rental days

Most agencies cap weekly rates around 5–7 days. Longer rentals usually average down to a similar daily rate.

Vehicle class

Daily rates update with your island and month. Mileage shown is what we use to estimate gas.

Insurance choice

The single biggest variable in a Hawaiʻi rental total. Pick what matches your real-world coverage — don’t guess.

Before you decline at the counter, call your auto insurer and your credit card’s benefits line. Ask: does my policy cover rental cars in Hawaiʻi? and is the card’s rental coverage primary or secondary? Get it in writing.

Add-ons
Driving distance

Or set a custom miles/day:
Estimated total
$0
With vs. without insurance
Your pick
$0
If you decline
$0

Compare real rates on Discount Hawaii Car Rental No prepayment, no cancellation charges »

Estimates only. Real quotes vary by booking window, agency, and demand. Use this to set expectations and test scenarios — then book through Discount Hawaii Car Rental to compare actual rates.

The Hawaiʻi rental car insurance trap, in plain English

Insurance is where Hawaiʻi rental quotes go sideways. The base rate looks fine in your search results — say $80/day. Then at the counter, the agent walks through three or four coverage options at $25 to $65 a day each, and a 7-day rental quietly turns into $1,400 instead of $700. Most visitors say yes because they’re tired and unsure.

Here’s what the three main pieces actually do.

LDW (Loss Damage Waiver)

Covers damage to the rental car. Typically $25–$35/day. Many travel credit cards (Chase Sapphire Preferred, Reserve, Ink Business; AmEx Platinum and Gold; Capital One Venture X) include this as a primary or secondary benefit when you pay for the rental with the card and decline the counter LDW. Call your card’s benefits line and confirm — primary coverage is much better than secondary because you don’t have to file with your personal auto insurer first.

SLI (Supplemental Liability Insurance)

Covers damage you cause to other people’s vehicles or to other people. Typically $14–$20/day. Your personal auto liability policy almost always extends to rental cars in the US — Hawaiʻi included — so SLI is usually a duplicate. Verify with your insurer before you decline. If you’re carrying minimum state liability limits ($25k/$50k or similar), one bad accident in Hawaiʻi could exceed those limits, and SLI’s $1M umbrella starts to look reasonable.

PAI (Personal Accident Insurance) and PEC (Personal Effects Coverage)

Almost always skip both. PAI duplicates your health insurance and your travel insurance medical coverage. PEC duplicates your homeowners or renters policy’s off-premises coverage. Together they add $5–$10/day for benefits you’ve already paid for.

Third-party rental insurance (Allianz, Bonzah, RentalCover)

The middle path. $9–$13/day for LDW-equivalent damage coverage you buy online before your trip — totally separate from the rental company. If something happens, the third party pays the agency directly and you’re reimbursed. Cheapest peace-of-mind option if your credit card doesn’t carry primary coverage and you’d rather not rely on a claim post-trip.

Hawaiʻi-only fees that aren’t obvious in the quote

  • State $5/day rental surcharge — fixed, statewide, charged on every rental day. Goes to the Hawaiʻi Tourism Special Fund.
  • Vehicle license recovery fee — agencies pass through their cost of registering the rental fleet. Roughly $5/day.
  • Airport concession recovery fee — about 11.11% of your base rate, added when you pick up at HNL, OGG, KOA, ITO, or LIH. Skip it by picking up off-airport (some agencies have shuttle pickups outside the airport perimeter on Oʻahu and Maui).
  • Customer facility charge — $4.50/day, HNL only. Funds the consolidated rental car facility.
  • General Excise Tax — 4.712% on Oʻahu, 4.166% on neighbor islands. Applies to base rate + insurance.

A few rules of thumb

  • Book 30 days out. Hawaiʻi rates spike in the last 14 days before pickup, especially on Maui and Kauaʻi. Booking earlier is cheaper.
  • Costco Travel and AAA discounts often beat the sticker rate by 15–25%. Worth a price check.
  • Skip the gas pre-pay. Hawaiʻi has plenty of stations. Filling the tank yourself before return saves $20–$40 every time.
  • If you’re renting more than 7 days, monthly rates from local independents (especially on the Big Island and Kauaʻi) can undercut the airport brands by 30%+.
  • 4WD on the Big Island — the road above Mauna Kea’s Visitor Information Station requires 4WD low range, and most major rental contracts prohibit it. Harper Car & Truck Rental in Hilo and Kona is the longstanding exception with vehicles that allow summit driving.