Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park
Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park is a National Park administered by the National Park Service in HI. Within its boundary you'll find 8 cataloged hiking routes covering roughly 42.70 mi of maintained tread — enough variety to fill a long weekend with day hikes or anchor a week-long trip without ever repeating a route. Trail Compass treats this unit as a hiking destination first, focusing on what you actually need on the ground rather than rehashing the same encyclopedia entry that appears on every other website.
The park service describes the area this way: "Two of the most active volcanoes on Earth — Kīlauea and Mauna Loa — and a living cultural landscape sacred to Native Hawaiians." That overview captures the landscape, but it understates the day-to-day tempo of a visit: parking lots fill earlier than you expect, shuttle-bus systems run on rigid schedules, and the most photogenic light at marquee viewpoints lasts a narrow window in the morning and again at golden hour. Plan around those rhythms and the experience improves dramatically.
Climatically the region sits in a tropical band, which shapes everything from the trail-running season to the species you'll see along the way. The best month-long window for hiking generally runs from December through April. Trade-wind season delivers steady breezes and lower rainfall on leeward trails. Windward routes can be slick year-round; bring traction-soled footwear regardless of date. Visitors arriving outside that window should still find rewarding routes, but the calculus shifts toward lower-elevation paths, shorter daylight, and a higher chance of road or campground closures.
Wildlife in the area includes nene goose, green sea turtle, humpback whale, pueo owl, happy-face spider, Hawaiian monk seal among many other species. Treat every encounter as a privilege rather than an entitlement: keep your distance, never feed wild animals (it almost always ends badly for the animal), and store all food and scented items in vehicle trunks or approved containers when you're not actively eating. Photographers should use a long lens rather than approaching for a closer frame — the iconic shot from twenty feet away is worth less than the long-lens compression from a respectful distance.
Entrance, camping, and lodging logistics vary considerably across the system. Most units charge a per-vehicle entrance fee that is waived for holders of the America the Beautiful interagency pass — a strong value if you plan to visit four or more federal sites in a year. Frontcountry campgrounds typically open reservations on Recreation.gov six months in advance and frequently sell out within minutes for peak weekends; backcountry permits operate on a separate lottery or walk-up system that varies by park. Build your itinerary around those reservation windows rather than trying to retrofit them after booking flights.
If you have only one day inside the park, prioritize a single substantial trail that reaches a defining viewpoint rather than trying to chain several short walks together. If you have three days, build a sequence that climbs in difficulty: start with a moderate route to acclimate, follow with the marquee strenuous day, and close with a low-mileage interpretive trail to give your legs a break before the drive home. The trail directory below is grouped roughly by effort to support exactly that kind of planning.
Trails inside Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park
The directory below covers every trail we have catalogued in this unit, sorted by effort. Click into any guide for a full hiker-first writeup.
Devastation Trail
Paved walk through a forest destroyed by the 1959 Kīlauea Iki eruption.
Devastation Trail to Pu'u Pua'i
Walk to a viewpoint of the 1959 cinder cone.
Pu'u Loa Petroglyphs
Boardwalk to one of the largest concentrations of Hawaiian petroglyphs.
Crater Rim Trail (West Section)
Caldera-edge walk past steam vents and overlooks of Halema'uma'u.
Halema'uma'u Trail
Descend through native rainforest to the floor of Kīlauea caldera.
Kīlauea Iki Trail
Walk across a still-steaming 1959 lava lake floor.
Mauna Loa Summit Trail
High-altitude approach (above 11,000 ft) to the summit cabin of the world's largest active volcano.
Napau Crater Trail
Long walk to a former lava-lake crater (currently in flux due to recent eruptions).