Hawaii Travel Made Easy Podcast—Hawaii travel tips, Things to do in Hawaii, Hawaii vacation planning

The Slow Maui Trip I Needed — 2026 Trip Report

Marcie Cheung Episode 92

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0:00 | 12:14

Four Slow Days in Maui (Feb 2026): Hyatt Regency Kaanapali, Flytographer, and One Main Thing a Day

Marcie shares what a real Maui trip looks like for her and her 12-year-old in February 2026 after five workdays on Oahu: a slow four-day itinerary with one main activity per day, good food, and lots of pool time. After a frustrating Thrifty rental car upsell at OGG, she recommends booking through Discount Hawaii Car Rental. They stay at the Hyatt Regency Maui on points, do a Flytographer session in Wailea, eat at Coconuts Fish Cafe, Sweet Hula, and Cafe O’Lei at the Plantation, and visit Maui Ocean Center and Iao Valley State Park (timed entry required). Highlights include a cabana day and Drums of the Pacific luau in the rain, whale watching from the hotel, and handling a late-night red-eye departure.

00:00 Safety Pins at Dawn
00:18 Slow Maui Trip Plan
00:47 Rental Car Reality Check
02:08 Hyatt Check In Day
03:22 Flytographer Morning
04:31 Aquarium and Pool Time
05:38 Cabana Day and Luau
07:29 Red Eye Day Four
08:29 Upcountry and Iao Valley
09:38 Airport Run and Wrap Up
10:02 Expert Takeaways
10:33 Resources and Farewell

Resources:

About Your Host: Marcie Cheung is a Certified Hawaii Destination Expert who has visited Hawaii 40+ times and spent 20+ years as a professional hula dancer. Through Hawaii Travel with Kids, she helps families plan authentic, affordable Hawaii vacations that respect local culture while creating unforgettable memories.

Learn more at hawaiitravelwithkids.com

Connect: @hawaiitravelwithkids on Instagram | Book a Consultation

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It was 6:00 AM I was standing in a long drugstore in Kihei, in full hair and makeup, buying safety pins because the dress I ordered for my professional photo shoot had no adjustable tie in the bust like I thought it did. This is a glamorous life of a Hawaii travel expert. Hi, I'm Marcie. Welcome back to Hawaii. Travel made easy. People ask me constantly after 40 plus trips to Hawaii. After 20 years of doing this, what do you actually do when you go? What does your trip actually look like? So here it is, February, 2026, my 12-year-old and me four days in Maui, right after five back to back work days on Oahu. This was not a pack it all in trip. It was one main thing per day. Good food. A lot of pool time, and it was one of the better Maui trips I've had in years. Which tells you something, we'll get to why, but let's start with the rental car situation. We flew in from Oahu and landed at OGG around 9 45 in the morning. Begged a little tram to the rental car facility, the usual. I was already a little nervous about thrifty before I even got to the counter because earlier that same week on Oahu, they had rented me a car with expired plates and then tried to convince me it wasn't a problem. So my confidence in them was not high. Sure enough, the agent told me the car reserved, didn't have trunk space, and I needed to upgrade. I said, we were two people with minimal bags. Can I just have the smallest car you have? She put us in something, four levels above what I booked and charged me more for it. I'm done with thrifty. If you're renting a car on Maui, and you almost certainly need one because there's no reliable public transportation between areas. I book through Discount Hawaii Car Rental. They're a broker, so you actually get to compare multiple companies in one place instead of just going straight through one rental car company's website. I use them for this trip too. I just made the mistake of picking Thrifty because it was the cheapest option. Won't be doing that again. A few extra dollars at booking is a lot less painful than standing at a counter getting upsold at 10:00 AM after a flight. My link is at Hawaii Travel with kids.com on the Hawaii resources tab. After that, we drove to Haiku to pick up a Haku lei. I had ordered for the photo shoot the next morning, then stopped at Coconuts Fish Cafe in Kihei for lunch. Best fish tacos on Maui. In my opinion, my son was in a burger mood, so he went next door to Peggy Sue's and came back with a burger fries and an Oreo milkshake, and was extremely pleased with himself. We checked into the Hyatt Regency Maui in Kaanapali around 1:00 PM I booked this stay on points, which meant the resort fee was waived. That's real money at this property. The room wasn't ready until 4:00 PM so we wandered the resort and found Waikomo Shave Ice. I've been following Waikomo since they were a tiny stand on Kauai. So seeing how much they've grown was really cool. We got shave ice sat down, and the room was actually ready before we finished eating. We settled in, spent about 30 minutes troubleshooting. The wifi hotel staff fixed it via text in about two minutes, which impressed me. And then I went to the resort shops for snacks and drinks after five full workdays on Oahu. That was the entire plan for the evening. We did in-room dining. I got fish and chips. My son ordered a soft pretzel listed at$22, which made me pause. And then it arrived and it was the size of a small dog. He ate the whole thing fine. The next morning I set my alarm for 5:00 AM because we had a 7:00 AM photo shoot in Wailea hair, makeup. And that's when I realized the dress had no adjustable tie. So we made a pit stop at Long's Drugstore for safety pins at 6:00 AM. I had booked a Flytographer session with a photographer named Nicole. This was my third Flytographer shoot on Maui, and I keep going back because the photos are actually usable. The photographers know the light, they know the locations, and the turnaround is fast. Mine came back the next day, which I still find kind of amazing. My son is 12 and not exactly excited about photo shoots, so I made him a deal before we left. He didn't have to be in all of them. By the end of the hour, he told me it wasn't so bad and admitted he liked climbing on the rocks. That's high praise. If a family photo shoot in Hawaii has been floating around your head, first time Flytographer clients, save$20 through my link. That's at Hawaii. Travel with kids.com under the Hawaii resources tab. After the shoot, we stopped at Sweet Hula. An acai Bowl food truck in South Maui Gardens. I'd read really good things and it delivered. You can build your own bowl from a really extensive topping list. Both of us were happy. Then we drove to the Maui Ocean Center in Maalaea. It had been years since my last visit and I was surprised how much I enjoyed going back. There was a big school field trip the same day, so it was busier than I expected, but it just made the place feel alive. The sea turtles are up close. There are baby sharks and there is the walkthrough tunnel where you're surrounded by sharks and manta rays and tropical fish on all sides. It's one of those things that's hard to explain until you're standing in it. Also new. Since my last visit, there's an aulani shave ice inside the aquarium now. We spent roughly a third of our time there waiting in that line. They make shave ice in batches, so it moves slowly, but it's still worth it. Then we grabbed snacks at Safeway on the way back to the resort and spent the rest of the afternoon at the pool. I read my Kindle, which is a Hawaii trip, non-negotiable for me. My son went down the water slide enough times that he eventually lost his glasses in the pool, so he spent about 30 minutes underwater searching for them, found them, and he was done after that. And I didn't argue at all when I suggested snacks for dinner in early bedtime. I was asleep by 7:00 PM Day three was a day my son had been counting down to since we booked. I started the morning walking the resort for content, grabbed an ice chai from Honolulu Coffee Company in the lobby, and then we headed to our cabana at 9:00 AM number 13, right next to the pool. The Hyatt comped the Cabana lunch at Umalu and our luau tickets as part of my press day. And I want to be transparent about that. That said, if you're paying out of pocket, a cabana day here is really a cabana day. Here is a really nice way to spend a Maui afternoon without going anywhere. My son found pool friends in about 10 minutes, never asked their names. They played together for three hours. I ordered poke nachos in a virgin pina colada from Umalu, sat in the shade reading while my photographer photos loaded in my inbox. And honestly, it was one of those afternoons where you just can't believe that this is your job. We went up around 2:00 PM to get ready for the luau and then it rained. I'm from Seattle, so rain itself doesn't bother me, but I showed up to the drums of the Pacific Luau in a sundress. They handed out plastic ponchos and kukui nut lays. My son got POG juice. I got a my tie and we took our VIP seats. The pre-show was music and hula. The buffet food was honestly better than a lot of luaus I've been to, but eating outside in steady rain is a real challenge, and I gave up after about 10 minutes. The show was really fabulous. Dancing from Hawaii, Samoa, Tahiti, New Zealand, and Tonga. I think they condensed it because of the weather and we were done by seven instead of eight. I didn't mind at this point. I went straight upstairs and dried off with a hair dryer. I have a full drums of the Pacific Review coming soon. I'll link it in the show notes when it's live and if you're comparing Maui Luau right now and not sure which one is right for your family, that's exactly the kind of thing I work through in my Hawaii Travel consultations. Luau selection sounds like a small decision until you're looking at$200 per person and wondering if you picked the right one. A lot of families don't. Okay. Day four started weird. Our flight home was an 11:30 PM red eye. I booked it that way on purpose to save about a thousand dollars. Hawaii airfare in February, 2026 was rough. At one point I was looking at$2,200 per person round trip. The red eye was the only sane option, but it meant we had an entire day to fill before we could leave on top of that, TSA precheck and Global Entry had been paused by the government. Starting that morning, I was already stressed about a late night flight, and now I was doing the mental math on security wait times. Turns out they were both running fine when we actually got there, but I spent most of the morning not knowing that the Hyatt gave us a late checkout at noon, which helped a lot. I walked the property for content and stopped completely when I spotted humpback whales right off the coast in front of the hotel. Humpback season runs roughly November through May with peak season, January through March. So February is a great time to see them watching them from the shoreline on your last morning there. It makes it hard to leave. We had lunch at Cafe O'Lei at the Plantation at Maui Tropical Plantation. I booked online at 11:00 AM and got a 1230 reservation. No problem. One of my favorite restaurants on Maui, I had the sauteed Mahi Mahi, which is one of those meals I plan around every trip. If you go book ahead, walk-in, waits can get long. Then we drove through Makawao Town, mostly closed since it was Sunday. Hiked part of the Makawao Forest Reserve before turning back and drove out towards Ulupalakua Ranch, mostly for the upcountry scenery, even on a cloudy day. Those views are something we stopped at the Maui Pineapple Store in Haliimaile. They sell airport ready Maui Gold Pineapple packaged so it clears TSA and it's some of the best pineapple in Hawaii. It's worth it. Then Iao Valley State Park. You need a timed entry reservation to visit. Walk-ups are not guaranteed entry. So book ahead through Hawaii's DLNR State Park site. I booked it the same day. It's a quick stop, but one of my favorite places on all of Maui. The Iao Needle, the green cliffs, the stream. Beautiful and free once you pay the$5 per person Hawaii transportation fee at the time of the booking. After that we had hours left and nothing to do with them. Walmart for airplane snacks and drawing supplies for my son. Food land for spam. musubi Costco gas before turning in the rental car. Then the airport three and a half hours early because everything else in town was closed. Alaska Airlines wasn't even open for check-in. When we got there, we stood in line pre-check and clear. Both ran fine and we made it home. So what does the expert actually do in Hawaii? She books a slow trip. She eats fish tacos and does one thing a day and reads her kindle by the pool. She watches her kid lose his glasses in a water slide and find them again. She stands on the shoreline watching whales and doesn't wanna leave. Most families I work with are trying to squeeze everything in and they end up exhausted before the trip is even over. One main activity, a good meal, actual downtime. That's what people remember. You don't have to see all of Maui in four days. You will be back. I, a couple of quick things before I let you go. The rental car situation, skip Thrifty Discount, Hawaii Car Rental is where I send people and I'll be spending a little more to book with Vis dollar or anywhere that's not thrifty. That link along with Flytographer and everything else I mentioned is at Hawaii Travel with kids.com. In the Hawaii Resources tab, that's where I keep all the resources I actually use and trust. If you're still early in planning and want somewhere to start, my free seven day Maui email course, walks through the basics without the overwhelm. If you want everything in one place, neighborhoods, hotels, logistics, the Maui Family Travel Guide is over there too. Both are available on my website if you're deciding between Maui and Oahu and not sure which one is right for your family. Episode 87 is the one to listen to. That's the most common question I get, and the answer usually surprises people for where to stay. Once you've picked Maui, episode 71 covers the best areas. And if you're starting from scratch, episode 47 is a step-by-step planning episode. Go there first. If you're past the point of frameworks and you just want someone to look at your actual trip and tell you what to fix before you book anything, that's what my consultations are for. An hour is 49 an hour,$149. Most people tell me they saved at least that much by the end of the call. You can book at Hawaii Travel with kids.com/hawaii-travel-consultant. Thanks for listening to Hawaii Travel Made Easy. If this episode helped you, passing it along to someone who's planning a Hawaii trip is the best thing you can do, and I'll see you next week. I.