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Hawaii County — the Big Island — is the largest county by land area in the United States, a place where active lava flows meet luxury vacation rentals and subsistence farmers live down the road from oceanfront estates listed north of a million dollars. That geographic and economic extremity is baked into every number in this dataset, and it makes the Big Island one of the most analytically fascinating — and genuinely difficult — housing markets in the country.
Start with the spread that tells the whole story: the 10th percentile home price sits at $133,100, while the 90th sits at $1.8 million. That is a 13-fold gap within a single county. The lower end reflects the raw, off-grid lots in Puna — the lava-prone district where 2018's Kilauea eruption destroyed over 700 homes and fundamentally repriced land risk. The upper end reflects Kohala Coast resort communities, where second-home buyers from the mainland and abroad have historically treated oceanfront property as a trophy asset immune to ordinary market logic.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Avg vs. Median Home Price | $866K avg / $546K median | $320K gap signals extreme luxury skew |
| Vacancy Rate | 18.7% | Nearly 1-in-5 units sits empty — mostly vacation homes |
| Rent Burden | 43.9% | Severely above the 30% healthy threshold |
| YoY Price Change | -2.6% | Correction underway after pandemic-era surge |
An 18.7% vacancy rate would, in most American counties, signal a depressed market with too much supply. On the Big Island, it signals the opposite problem: a housing stock colonized by short-term rentals and seasonal second homes. With roughly 89,000 total housing units serving a population of just over 200,000, the math suggests adequate supply — until you realize that thousands of those units are effectively locked out of the long-term rental market. The result is a median rent of $1,411 that consumes a punishing 43.9% of typical household income, with nearly a quarter of renters in severe burden. Meanwhile, the homeownership rate of 73.1% — well above the national norm — tells you that those who got in early or inherited land are holding on tight.
A 57% labor force participation rate and 6.2% unemployment are the fingerprints of a tourism-dependent economy that never fully recovered from the pandemic's collapse of visitor arrivals. The Big Island attracts fewer tourists than Maui or Oahu, and its economy is correspondingly thinner: agriculture (coffee, macadamia, papaya), small government, healthcare, and hospitality. With nearly a quarter of residents over 65 and a child poverty rate of 18.5%, the generational math is stark — retirees who own, young families who struggle.
The -2.6% year-over-year price decline is notable. After pandemic-era demand from remote workers drove prices to historic highs, rising interest rates have begun unwinding some of that froth. Whether this is a healthy correction or the beginning of a deeper reset depends largely on whether mainland buyers — who drove so much of the speculation — continue retreating.
What makes Hawaii County's real estate market unique? No other U.S. county combines active volcanic risk, a 13-fold price spread between its cheapest and most expensive homes, and a vacancy rate driven almost entirely by vacation ownership rather than economic distress. The Big Island's market is simultaneously underserved for local renters and oversupplied with speculative and seasonal inventory — a contradiction that makes conventional affordability tools nearly useless here.
Why are rents so high on the Big Island if so many homes are vacant? Those vacant units are overwhelmingly short-term vacation rentals or second homes kept off the long-term market entirely. Airbnb and VRBO listings in Kona, Waikoloa, and Hilo have absorbed inventory that would otherwise serve working residents. Hawaii County has debated — and partially enacted — short-term rental restrictions, but enforcement remains inconsistent across a county larger than Connecticut.
Is now a good time to buy in Hawaii County? The -2.6% year-over-year price decline suggests buyers have more negotiating room than at any point since 2019. However, with a price-to-income ratio still more than double the national benchmark and mortgage rates elevated, monthly carrying costs remain steep. Buyers willing to take on lava-zone risk (particularly in lower Puna) will find the deepest discounts — though insurance availability in those areas has become its own crisis.
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