Regional overview

Maunakea (also written Mauna Kea) is the highest summit of Hawaiʻi Island and, measured from its base on the seafloor, the tallest mountain on Earth. The summit stands at about 4,205 m and lies in a culturally sensitive landscape governed by the Maunakea Stewardship framework and the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo’s Center for Maunakea Stewardship. Walking on the mountain divides cleanly into three altitude zones: an alpine summit and crater-edge zone above the Visitor Information Station that is short on distance but heavy on altitude, cold, wind and cultural sensitivity; an acclimatisation belt around the Visitor Information Station itself at roughly 2,800 m; and the Saddle Road forest belt below, where the dominant ecology is ʻōhiʻa-koa highland forest, lava-flow kīpuka and a rich native bird community.

Access is fundamental. The Mauna Kea Access Road is a paved climb from the Daniel K. Inouye Highway (Saddle Road, Hwy 200) to the Visitor Information Station at about 2,804 m, and continues as an unpaved upper road to the summit telescopes. Above the Visitor Information Station, four-wheel drive with low range is required and conditions can change quickly; the official guidance is to stop at the Visitor Information Station, allow time to acclimatise, and only continue above 4,000 m in safe weather. Maunakea Stewardship publishes current closures, weather, and cultural-protocol notices that should be checked before any high walk. The summit area is sacred ground in Hawaiian tradition; visitors are asked to stay on designated routes and to avoid summit cairns and other features that have ceremonial significance.

The five-route selection below mixes the classic Humuʻula Trail summit ascent and the short Lake Waiau out-and-back at the top of the mountain with a Visitor Information Station acclimatisation walk and two forest-belt routes on the Saddle Road side. The two Saddle Road routes — the Puʻu ʻŌʻō / Powerline Loop and the Kaulana Manu Nature Trail — share trail networks with the longer Puʻu ʻŌʻō Trail and Kaulana Manu walks covered in the companion Hāmākua and Waipiʻo highlands entry; this article treats them as Maunakea-side variants rather than Hāmākua-coast walks. For the south side of the island see the Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park summit and crater catalogue where it exists.

Selection rationale

The five entries cover the practical day-walking range of Maunakea: a strenuous high-altitude summit ascent, a short alpine objective above 4,000 m, a sub-3,000 m acclimatisation viewpoint at the Visitor Information Station, a Saddle Road forest loop on rough ʻaʻā lava, and a 1 km birding nature trail. The Humuʻula Trail is the only walking ascent of Maunakea that does not require driving the upper access road and is the defining mountain day in the region. The Lake Waiau short walk is included because the lake is one of Maunakea’s most distinctive cultural and ecological features — a small high-altitude lake on a volcanic summit — and because it can be done as a brief out-and-back from the upper road on a day when full summit weather is marginal. The Puʻu Kalepeamoa / Sunset Hill walk is the most accessible Visitor Information Station-area acclimatisation hike and the canonical short Maunakea viewpoint for visitors who should not or do not want to go higher. The Puʻu ʻŌʻō / Powerline Loop and the Kaulana Manu Nature Trail are the two forest-belt entries; both sit on the wetter Saddle Road side of the mountain and complement the summit and acclimatisation entries with native-forest and bird habitat.

Verification stance for this catalogue: official Maunakea Stewardship and Visitor Information Station pages remain the primary source for safety, cultural protocol and access rules, but they do not publish standardised route geometry, distance, ascent, or estimated walking time for individual trails. Where statistics are given below they are taken from AllTrails route records as a secondary source and are noted as partially verified. No official downloadable GPX or KML files were located for any of the five routes in this pass.

Summary table

# Hike Country Route type Distance Gain Max elevation Difficulty
1 Humuʻula Trail to Maunakea summit USA Out-and-back 21.1 km 1,498 m 4,211 m Strenuous
2 Lake Waiau from Mauna Kea Access Road USA Out-and-back 2.3 km 127 m 4,009 m Moderate at altitude
3 Puʻu Kalepeamoa / Sunset Hill from the Visitor Information Station USA Out-and-back 1.6 km 47 m 2,842 m Easy
4 Puʻu ʻŌʻō and Powerline Loop USA Loop 14.3 km 323 m 1,802 m Moderate
5 Kaulana Manu Nature Trail USA Out-and-back 1.0 km 14 m 1,714 m Easy

1. Humuʻula Trail to Maunakea summit

Humuʻula Trail climbing cinder slopes toward the Maunakea summit area
The Humuʻula Trail crossing cinder and lava terrain on its way to the Maunakea summit area. Photo: Robert Linsdell, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA
Sub-regionMaunakea summit area, Hawaiʻi Island
StartOnizuka Center for International Astronomy Visitor Information Station, c. 2,804 m
FinishSame as start
Route typeOut-and-back
Distance21.1 km
Elevation gain1,498 m
Elevation loss1,498 m on the return
Maximum elevation4,211 m near the summit area
Estimated time9–10 hours
DifficultyStrenuous — long high-altitude day with cinder and lava footing
Best seasonStable-weather windows only; storms, snow, ice, cold and high wind are possible at the summit at any time of year
Public transportNo regular public transport verified; private vehicle to the Visitor Information Station via Mauna Kea Access Road
Verification statusPartially verified — distance, gain and time from AllTrails; cultural and safety guidance from Maunakea Stewardship

Itinerary

Begin at the Visitor Information Station at about 2,804 m, where Maunakea Stewardship asks visitors to acclimatise for at least 30 minutes before continuing higher. The Humuʻula Trail leaves the upper edge of the Visitor Information Station area and climbs the south-east flank of the mountain through a long sequence of cinder cones, lava flows, and alpine desert with no shade and no water. The route gains roughly 1,500 m over 10.5 km, rejoining the upper summit road for the final approach to the summit area. The standard objective is the 4,211 m summit-area high point near the cluster of observatories rather than the absolute high point itself, which is considered sacred and is normally avoided on cultural-protocol grounds. The return is on the same path; build a generous time buffer because descending altitude on tired legs is the most common reason summit-day parties finish in the dark.

Why it is essential

The Humuʻula Trail is the only legitimate walking ascent of Maunakea — a 4,000 m volcanic summit that is also one of the most culturally significant places in Hawaiian tradition. It is the defining mountain day of Hawaiʻi Island. Doing it on foot rather than driving the upper road is a different category of visit, with time on the cinder slopes and altitude exposure that the road simply does not give.

Equipment

  • High-altitude hiking kit: warm insulated layer, full wind / rain shell, hat and gloves
  • Sturdy boots for cinder and lava footing
  • Strong sun protection — eyewear, hat, high-SPF sunscreen and lip balm
  • 3–4 L of water and substantial food; there is no water on the route
  • Navigation: map / GPS and headlamp with spare batteries
  • Personal locator beacon or satellite messenger recommended
  • A buffer day for altitude acclimatisation before attempting the summit

Hazards and notes

Altitude sickness, hypothermia, storms, snow, high wind and remoteness are the principal hazards. Maunakea Stewardship advises against ascending above the Visitor Information Station within 24 hours of scuba diving or a flight; do not bring children under 16 above the Visitor Information Station; and check the daily summit weather and road status before committing to the climb. The summit area is sacred ground in Hawaiian tradition; stay on the designated trail, do not build or alter cairns, and follow current cultural-protocol guidance from Maunakea Stewardship.

Source URL Format / access Reuse status
Maunakea Stewardship — Visitor Information Station hilo.hawaii.edu Official visitor / access page UH Maunakea Stewardship terms; no GPX published
Maunakea Stewardship — Visitor Information hilo.hawaii.edu Official safety / weather guidance UH Maunakea Stewardship terms
AllTrails — Humuʻula Trail to Mauna Kea Summit alltrails.com Secondary route record AllTrails terms; partial verification source for distance / gain / time

Further reading

2. Lake Waiau from Mauna Kea Access Road

Lake Waiau in its high cinder-cone basin near the Maunakea summit area
Lake Waiau in its high cinder-cone basin — a culturally significant feature above 4,000 m. Photo: Thomas Tunsch, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA
Sub-regionMaunakea alpine zone, Hawaiʻi Island
StartUpper Mauna Kea Access Road pull-off above the Visitor Information Station
FinishSame as start
Route typeOut-and-back
Distance2.3 km
Elevation gain127 m
Elevation loss127 m on the return
Maximum elevation4,009 m at the lake basin
Estimated time1–1.5 hours
DifficultyModerate at altitude; the walk is short but starts above 4,000 m on loose volcanic terrain
Best seasonStable-weather windows only; the upper access road and the lake basin can be snowed in or closed
Public transportNone verified; four-wheel drive with low range is required to reach the upper trailhead
Verification statusPartially verified — distance, gain and time from AllTrails

Itinerary

From the signed upper Mauna Kea Access Road pull-off above the Visitor Information Station, follow the short marked route across loose cinder and basalt blocks to Lake Waiau, a small body of water in a high cinder-cone basin at about 4,009 m. The walk is brief on the map but the altitude and the loose surface make it a slow trip; allow the full hour even for the shorter side of the time range, and longer if Maunakea is the first 4,000 m altitude of the trip. Return on the same path. The lake and its margins are culturally significant and ecologically fragile — there is no acceptable route off the marked path and no acceptable reason to enter the lake or to collect water, rock or sediment.

Why it is essential

Lake Waiau is one of the most distinctive features of Maunakea: a small high-altitude lake in a culturally sacred basin on a volcanic summit. It is also the realistic backup objective on a marginal weather day when the full Humuʻula summit ascent is not safe; reaching 4,000 m on foot in under 90 minutes from the road is otherwise rare in the United States.

Equipment

  • Warm layer, wind shell and a hat for the basin
  • Sturdy walking shoes or low boots; the surface is loose
  • Sun protection — the basin has no shade
  • 1 L of water and an altitude-tolerant snack
  • A four-wheel drive vehicle with low range for the upper access road; the road conditions notice on the official Maunakea Stewardship page should be checked the morning of the walk

Hazards and notes

The walk is above 4,000 m and altitude symptoms can appear within minutes of arrival at the trailhead — descend if dizziness, severe headache or nausea develops. Stay on durable surfaces and out of the lake itself. Maunakea Stewardship cultural-protocol guidance applies in full to the Lake Waiau area.

Source URL Format / access Reuse status
Maunakea Stewardship — Visitor Information hilo.hawaii.edu Official safety / weather page UH Maunakea Stewardship terms; no GPX published
AllTrails — Lake Waiau from Mauna Kea Access Road alltrails.com Secondary route record AllTrails terms; partial verification source

Further reading

3. Puʻu Kalepeamoa / Sunset Hill from the Visitor Information Station

Maunakea Visitor Information Station with the surrounding cinder cones, the start point for the short Puʻu Kalepeamoa walk
The Maunakea Visitor Information Station at about 2,804 m, with the cinder-cone country that the short Puʻu Kalepeamoa walk crosses. Photo: Robert Linsdell, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA
Sub-regionMaunakea Visitor Information Station area, Hawaiʻi Island
StartMaunakea Visitor Information Station, c. 2,804 m
FinishSame as start
Route typeOut-and-back
Distance1.6 km
Elevation gain47 m
Elevation loss47 m on the return
Maximum elevation2,842 m at the Puʻu Kalepeamoa cone top
Estimated time30–60 minutes
DifficultyEasy on a short cinder-cone climb; exposed and windy
Best seasonYear-round in safe weather; expect cold and wind even on warm days at sea level
Public transportNo regular public transport verified; private vehicle to the Visitor Information Station
Verification statusPartially verified — distance, gain and time from AllTrails

Itinerary

From the Visitor Information Station parking area, follow the signed short cinder-cone walk often labelled Sunset Hill on visitor maps, leading to the top of Puʻu Kalepeamoa at about 2,842 m. The walk gains 47 m on a clearly defined cinder path and gives a sweeping view across the upper Saddle, Mauna Loa, and the upper telescopes on Maunakea. Return on the same path. The Visitor Information Station’s stargazing programmes are often run from this same area.

Why it is essential

Puʻu Kalepeamoa is the canonical short Maunakea walk for visitors who cannot or should not go above 4,000 m. It is the cleanest way to feel the mountain’s altitude, light and air without a four-wheel drive or a strenuous day, and it is the standard recommended acclimatisation walk on the way up to the summit.

Equipment

  • Warm layer and a wind shell — the cone top is exposed
  • Walking shoes with grip
  • Sun protection
  • Water (0.5–1 L)
  • A light hat or buff for cold sunset wind

Hazards and notes

The walk is short but at altitude and is exposed to weather; cold rain, hail and high wind are all possible on the cone in any season. Park only in marked spaces at the Visitor Information Station, follow current Maunakea Stewardship guidance, and treat the area as a working scientific and cultural site rather than a roadside lookout.

Source URL Format / access Reuse status
Maunakea Stewardship — Visitor Information Station hilo.hawaii.edu Official visitor / access page UH Maunakea Stewardship terms; no GPX published
AllTrails — Mauna Kea Visitor Center Sunset Hill Trail alltrails.com Secondary route record AllTrails terms; partial verification source

Further reading

4. Puʻu ʻŌʻō and Powerline Loop

ʻŌmaʻo bird on the Puʻu ʻŌʻō Trail through the Kīpuka ʻĀinahou section, Upper Waiākea Forest Reserve
An ʻŌmaʻo (Hawaiian thrush) on the Puʻu ʻŌʻō Trail in the Kīpuka ʻĀinahou section of the Upper Waiākea Forest Reserve. Photo: Alan Schmierer, CC0 / public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryUSA
Sub-regionUpper Waiākea Forest Reserve, Saddle Road side of Maunakea
StartPuʻu ʻŌʻō / Powerline trailhead pull-off on Saddle Road (Hwy 200)
FinishSame as start
Route typeLoop
Distance14.3 km
Elevation gain323 m
Elevation loss323 m on the return
Maximum elevation1,802 m on the upper Powerline section
Estimated time4–4.5 hours
DifficultyModerate; rough ʻaʻā lava sections make the practical pace slower than the distance suggests
Best seasonYear-round in manageable rain and mud conditions; the forest is wetter than the summit zone
Public transportNo regular public transport verified
Verification statusPartially verified — distance, gain and time from AllTrails

Itinerary

From the Saddle Road pull-off, follow the Puʻu ʻŌʻō Trail east through a sequence of native-forest kīpuka surrounded by old lava flows, then turn south onto the Powerline service track and complete the loop back to the road. The route crosses rough ʻaʻā lava in several places and threads through standing ʻōhiʻa-koa forest, with strong native bird presence — ʻŌmaʻo, ʻIʻiwi, ʻApapane and ʻAmakihi are all regularly recorded in the kīpuka. The longer Puʻu ʻŌʻō Trail out-and-back used in the Hāmākua and Waipiʻo highlands entry shares the same trailhead; this loop is the shorter, road-supported alternative.

Why it is essential

This loop is the representative forested Saddle Road walk on the Maunakea flank, and the only entry in this article that mixes native-forest kīpuka with rough lava-flow walking on a single day. It complements the high-altitude summit zone with a low-elevation native-ecology day at very different temperatures and weather.

Equipment

  • Waterproof boots and gaiters; the lava breaks ankle bones if you misstep
  • Full rain shell and a warm layer
  • Water (2 L) and a snack
  • Map / GPS — the loop crosses several intersections without strong signage
  • Footwear cleaning before and after the walk to reduce Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death spread

Hazards and notes

The name Puʻu ʻŌʻō is shared with the Kīlauea-area eruptive cone in Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park; this is a different feature in the Upper Waiākea Forest Reserve. Mud, low cloud and rain are routine. Follow current state Division of Forestry and Wildlife guidance on Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death and avoid moving ʻōhiʻa wood or seeds.

Source URL Format / access Reuse status
AllTrails — Puʻu ʻŌʻō Short Loop alltrails.com Secondary route record AllTrails terms; partial verification source
Hawaiʻi DLNR — Division of Forestry and Wildlife dlnr.hawaii.gov State forestry context State website terms

Further reading

5. Kaulana Manu Nature Trail

Snapshot

CountryUSA
Sub-regionUpper Waiākea Forest Reserve, Saddle Road side of Maunakea
StartKaulana Manu trailhead pull-off on Saddle Road (Hwy 200)
FinishSame as start
Route typeOut-and-back
Distance1.0 km
Elevation gain14 m
Elevation loss14 m on the return
Maximum elevation1,714 m
Estimated time~30 minutes
DifficultyEasy on a signed nature trail
Best seasonYear-round; best in calm weather for birding
Public transportNo regular public transport verified
Verification statusPartially verified — distance, gain and time from AllTrails

Itinerary

Walk the short interpretive nature trail at Kaulana Manu, a roadside birding stop on Saddle Road. The loop crosses native ʻōhiʻa-koa highland forest with interpretive signs naming the dominant native plants and birds; a quiet 30 minutes will typically pick up ʻApapane and ʻAmakihi calls and visual contact with native passerines in the canopy. The walk is also covered in the Hāmākua and Waipiʻo highlands entry as the easiest of the Saddle Road birding stops.

Why it is essential

Kaulana Manu is the most accessible native-forest birding walk anywhere on Maunakea’s flanks: 30 minutes, paved roadside parking, and a credible chance of native bird contact without leaving the trail. It is the canonical short ecological complement to the summit and Lake Waiau objectives at the other end of the article.

Equipment

  • Closed shoes — wet forest after rain
  • Light rain layer
  • Binoculars are useful but not required
  • Water (0.5 L)
  • Clean footwear and gear before and after the walk to reduce Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death spread

Hazards and notes

The trail is short but the highland forest is wet, cool, and weather-prone; do not expect roadside-park facilities or signage beyond the interpretive panels. Be quiet, stay on the path, and do not play recorded bird calls — the forest is sensitive habitat for native species under disease and predation pressure.

Source URL Format / access Reuse status
AllTrails — Kaulana Manu Nature Trail alltrails.com Secondary route record AllTrails terms; partial verification source

Further reading

Further reading

Source URL
Maunakea Stewardship — Visitor Information Station hilo.hawaii.edu
Maunakea Stewardship — Visitor Information hilo.hawaii.edu
University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo — Center for Maunakea Stewardship hilo.hawaii.edu
Hawaiʻi DLNR — Division of Forestry and Wildlife dlnr.hawaii.gov
Hawaiʻi DLNR — Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death dlnr.hawaii.gov
Wikipedia — Mauna Kea en.wikipedia.org
Wikipedia — Lake Waiau en.wikipedia.org
Wikimedia Commons — Category:Mauna Kea commons.wikimedia.org
AllTrails — Mauna Kea area trails alltrails.com