pronounced nah-nah-KOO-lee
Wide west-side community park — summer calm, full facilities, less crowded than Pōkaʻi.
NWS forecast for this exact lat/lon — forecasts can change, re-check before you go.
We hand-author beach details from on-the-ground sources. The city dataset (Ulehawa Beach Park) is an official inventory that can lag reality. Worth a cross-check on arrival.
We list lifeguards here. City inventory may be stale — verify with posted tower hours on arrival.
Drinking-water flags vary across datasets and the fountains themselves can be out of service. Refill bottles before you leave home if it matters.
We list a play area here; the city dataset doesn't flag a formal playground. The play space may be informal (sand toys, climbable rocks, etc.).
89-269 Farrington Hwy, Waiʻanae, HI 96792
Nānākuli Beach Park is a wide community beach with grass, playground, and a decent sand strip. Summer water is calm enough for kids to swim and wade. Winter brings west-coast surf — same caveat as Māʻili. Very local atmosphere; busy on weekends with family gatherings.
Combination of playground, grass, and water in one park makes this a good half-day base. Bring all your own food; west-side dining is limited. Local-community feel — be respectful of family gatherings.
Lifeguarded. Same west-coast surf caveat as Māʻili — check the flag.
This beach sits in the Tsunami Evacuation Zone per Hawai‘i Statewide GIS. If sirens sound or shaking is felt, move inland and uphill immediately. Hawai‘i Emergency Management →
Free parking, plenty of spaces.
Public restrooms.
Good — mature trees in the park area.
Summer morning. Sunset is the move year-round.
Accessibility: Mostly flat park area; easy access to sand.
The west side's family beach — breakwater-protected bay, calm year-round, away from the south-shore crowd.
Long west-side beach with shifting conditions — calm summer, lively winter, full park facilities.
ʻEwa-side local beach with shallow reef-flat water — kid-friendly but rocky entry in places.