91-3633 Kauluakoko Street · Unit 91-3633 Kauluakoko St Unit 405

Property details·Ewa Beach, Honolulu County, Hawaii·1-9-1-017-138-0049

3Beds
3Baths
1,675Sq ft
2019Built

Location

Address

91-3633 Kauluakoko Street

Unit 91-3633 Kauluakoko St Unit 405

Ewa Beach, HI 96706

Honolulu County

Parcel ID

1-9-1-017-138-0049

Coordinates

21.359895, -158.047035

Building details

Bedrooms
3
Bathrooms
3
Square feet
1,675
Stories
1
Year built
2019

Land & lot

Neighborhood
F992
Zoning
A-2 APARTMENT
Land use code
1004

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$2,703.4
Market value$853,300
Assessed value$853,300
Building value$576,900
Land value$276,400

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Honolulu County 2026 Insights

Honolulu County: Paradise Priced Beyond Reach

There's a paradox at the heart of Honolulu County's housing market. Residents here earn 39% more than the average American household — yet they face one of the most punishing affordability gaps in the entire country. A median home costs roughly 8.4 times the median household income, more than double the national benchmark of 4x. This is not a market that rewards the middle class. It's a market that tests them.

The reason, of course, is the ocean. Oahu is 597 square miles of finite land surrounded by the Pacific, and nearly a million people call it home. Supply cannot expand the way it can in Phoenix or Charlotte. Every zoning decision, every permitted multi-family development, every teardown-and-rebuild happens within an island boundary that has no give. Land scarcity here isn't a metaphor — it's geography.

The Rent Crisis No One is Surprised By

The median rent of $2,054 would strain budgets in most American cities. In Honolulu, it's outright crushing. A staggering 53.9% of renters are cost-burdened — spending more than 30% of their income on housing — and more than one in four (26.9%) face severe rent burden, meaning housing consumes over half their paycheck. These aren't fringe statistics. They describe a majority of the county's 40% renter population, which includes service workers, hotel staff, retail employees, and the vast support infrastructure that keeps one of America's premier tourism destinations running.

The 9.5% vacancy rate offers a superficially encouraging number until you realize that much of that slack is absorbed by short-term vacation rentals and second homes. Honolulu has been fighting Airbnb-style conversions for years, and the tension between housing residents and housing tourists remains one of the defining political battles on the island.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$873,0002.7x the national median of $320,000
Rent Burden Rate53.9%vs 30% threshold — majority of renters are cost-burdened
Price Per Sq Ft$688at 1,173 avg sq ft, space is a premium luxury
YoY Price Change+3.6%steady appreciation despite affordability headwinds

A Military and Tourism Economy, Aging in Place

Honolulu's economic identity is shaped by two dominant forces: the U.S. military, with major installations at Pearl Harbor, Hickam, and Schofield Barracks, and tourism, which funnels tens of millions of visitors through Waikiki and the North Shore annually. The county's 8.7% veteran population is well above the national average, reflecting that military pipeline. Many service members who rotate through Oahu simply never leave.

The population skews notably older — median age 39.4, with nearly one in five residents (19.1%) aged 65 or older. This reflects both the aging of long-time residents who bought homes decades ago (and are locked into equity they couldn't replicate today) and retirees drawn by climate and lifestyle. Child poverty at 11.1% — higher than the overall poverty rate of 9.1% — hints at intergenerational stress: families with children are being priced out while older homeowners who got in early hold the wealth.

Despite a high-income surface, the Gini Index of 0.441 reveals significant inequality lurking beneath. The 13.2% of residents with limited English proficiency, the 10% on SNAP benefits, and a labor force participation rate of just 59.5% paint a portrait of a two-tiered economy: the asset-wealthy and the service-dependent, with surprisingly little in between.


FAQs

What makes Honolulu County unique in the housing market? Honolulu County combines some of the nation's highest incomes with some of its most extreme affordability stress — because island geography creates a permanent supply ceiling that income growth alone cannot overcome. The result is a market where even six-figure earners struggle to buy, renters are routinely cost-burdened, and generational wealth tied to pre-1990s homeownership is the primary path to financial stability for many families.

Is Honolulu real estate still appreciating? Yes — prices rose 3.6% year-over-year, a more moderate pace than the pandemic-era surge but still positive. With only 2,577 sales recorded in the past 12 months across a county of over a million people, transaction volume is thin, which can amplify price movements in either direction. The $303,000–$1.6 million spread from the 10th to 90th price percentile reflects a wide range from entry-level condos in outlying towns like Ewa Beach to luxury estates on the windward coast.

Why is the vacancy rate high if housing is so scarce? A 9.5% vacancy rate in Honolulu doesn't signal slack in the market — it reflects a structural distortion. A meaningful share of vacant units are second homes, seasonal properties, or short-term rentals held off the long-term market. This is precisely why Hawaii has moved aggressively to regulate short-term rental platforms, attempting to convert tourist inventory back into resident housing without fully resolving the underlying supply constraint.

Local market context

Ewa Beach has 21,601 properties in our comprehensive database.

Properties in Ewa Beach average $856,459, reflecting a competitive market.

At $586/sq ft, property values here are significantly above national averages.

Ewa Beach prices closely align with the Honolulu County average.

MetricEwa BeachHonolulu Countyvs County
Average Price$856,459$889,775-4%
Avg Sq Ft1,4621,559-6%
Price/Sq Ft$586$571+3%
Properties21,601304,992-93%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Ewa Beach, HI Real Estate

What is the average home price in Ewa Beach, HI?

The average home price in Ewa Beach, HI is $856,459, based on analysis of 21,601 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Ewa Beach, HI?

Our database includes 21,601 properties in Ewa Beach, HI, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Ewa Beach, HI?

The average price per square foot in Ewa Beach, HI is $586. This is calculated from an average home price of $856,459 and average size of 1,462 square feet.

What is the average home size in Ewa Beach, HI?

Homes in Ewa Beach, HI average 1,462 square feet, with an average price of $856,459.

How does Ewa Beach, HI compare to other cities in Honolulu County?

Ewa Beach, HI is one of many cities in Honolulu County, HI with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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