REVIEW · AIRPORT TRANSFERS & SHUTTLES
Honolulu Honeymoon Airport Lei Greeting
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Hawaii Flower Lei · Bookable on GetYourGuide
One of the easiest ways to start Hawaii right. This is a personalized airport lei greeting at Honolulu (HNL) that turns baggage claim into a small, meaningful ceremony. What I like most is the fresh lei handoff in a traditional style, and the way a dedicated greeter helps you avoid the first-stress rush after landing. One drawback to consider: it’s intentionally short and simple, so if you want a long welcome or a full tour of the airport area, this won’t be that.
Here’s the appeal. You line up at your arrival, collect bags, then your greeter meets you there with a welcome sign and the leis you selected for each person. It’s built for honeymooners and romantic trips, but honestly it also works if you just want a smoother arrival and a nice first memory on your phone.
Quick heads-up: transportation isn’t included. This experience handles the greeting moment; you’ll still need your own plan to get from the airport to your hotel or rental.
In This Review
- Key things you’ll notice at HNL baggage claim
- Where The Aloha Starts: meeting your greeter at Honolulu International
- Your Personalized Lei Moment: what the greeting actually feels like
- The Sign, the Spotting, and the 20-Minute Flow
- Price and value: is $78 for up to two worth it?
- Handling flight delays: what coordination looks like
- Photos and that honeymoon-ready first memory
- What’s not included: transportation off to your hotel
- Who this is best for (and who should think twice)
- Common hiccups and how to avoid them
- Should you book Honolulu Honeymoon Airport Lei Greeting?
- FAQ
- How long does the Honolulu airport lei greeting last?
- Where do we meet the greeter?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is transportation included from the airport?
- Is this experience wheelchair accessible?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key things you’ll notice at HNL baggage claim

- Personalized lei for each person: you choose a special lei, not a generic one-size option
- Greeter with a sign: it’s made for fast spotting, even if you’re jet-lagged
- Coordinated with your flight timing: helps reduce the worry if your plane is delayed
- Photo-ready moment: set up for a quick, natural picture using your own phone
- Short, focused service (20 minutes): smooth and efficient, not a long ceremony
- Private group experience: calmer than a big shared meet-up
Where The Aloha Starts: meeting your greeter at Honolulu International

At HNL, the hardest part of landing is often less about the flight and more about the first decisions: where to go, who to look for, and how to keep things moving while your bags come out. This greeting is designed to remove that friction.
The service is set to meet you on arrival at Honolulu International Airport, with the greeting centered at baggage claim. In plain terms: you come off the plane, follow the normal flow to the carousel area, and your greeter is there to find you and deliver the leis. You’re not hunting for a random booth. You’re not trying to interpret a confusing meeting point in the middle of a busy terminal.
Also, the greeter is listed as English-speaking. That matters more than it sounds, especially right after a flight when your brain is still buffering. One verified booking specifically notes that a representative reached out by text with directions after landing, which is exactly what you want if your flight doesn’t land on time.
Practical tip: keep your phone accessible at baggage claim. If anything goes off-schedule, the greeter coordination works best when you can quickly respond and move when asked.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Oahu.
Your Personalized Lei Moment: what the greeting actually feels like

This is not a stage show. It’s a friendly, traditional-style greeting delivered at the start of your Hawaii trip.
You approach the baggage carousel area, and then your greeter welcomes you with aloha and presents your selected lei(s). The experience is set up as a quick ceremony of arrival: handoff, warm welcome, and a moment you can photograph.
A few details stand out from real booking feedback:
- The leis are described as beautiful and with a strong, pleasant fragrance.
- People often mention the look and smell as the first “wow” of the trip, which is exactly what you want when you’re stepping into a new place.
- The greeter holds a sign, which helps the moment stay organized and not chaotic.
If you’re thinking about the cultural side: a lei is more than decoration. It’s a welcome. In a short airport setting, that meaning can get lost if you rush or treat it like a souvenir. The design here helps you do it respectfully because you’re met directly and guided through the moment instead of trying to figure it out while juggling bags and family members.
Practical tip: if you’re planning a romantic surprise, decide in advance whether the lei moment will be seen by both partners or only given to one. A couple of booking experiences suggest that the service is quick and visible, so perfect secrecy isn’t the main feature here.
The Sign, the Spotting, and the 20-Minute Flow

This experience is intentionally time-boxed. The duration is listed as 20 minutes, which is long enough for a warm welcome and photos, but short enough to keep airport logistics from becoming a second job.
So what does that 20 minutes look like in practice?
- You arrive and get to the baggage area.
- The greeter spots you, confirms your party, and presents the leis.
- There’s time for a couple photos using your own phone.
- The moment ends with you moving on to your next step—hotel, rental car, or whatever plan you chose.
A verified booking mentions a greeter offering to help with a baggage transport cart. That’s helpful in theory, and it may or may not feel necessary depending on the airport crowd and how far you have to go. The key point for your expectations: you’re paying for the greeting and lei presentation, not a long assistance service across the terminal.
One consideration from the feedback: a few people felt they spent very little time and that other companies seem to deliver their reps closer or more proactively. Translation for you: don’t build this into a “meet us at the gate and we’ll escort you” expectation. It’s a baggage-claim welcome.
Practical tip: plan to be at baggage claim promptly after landing. If you drift around while waiting for the greeter, you increase the chance the greeting moment gets shortened or delayed.
Price and value: is $78 for up to two worth it?
The price listed is $78 per group up to 2, for about 20 minutes. That sounds simple because it is simple. The real question isn’t the number—it’s what you’re buying.
You’re buying:
- A personalized lei moment (each person gets a selected lei)
- A dedicated greeter with a welcome sign
- A coordinated meet-up tied to your arrival and baggage area
- A built-in photo memory right as you land
If your priority is romance and a smooth first memory, the value can be strong. For honeymooners and anniversary travelers, that first emotional beat matters. This experience is basically a ready-made “welcome ritual” that doesn’t require you to navigate flower shops, language barriers, or airport logistics on arrival day.
If your priority is maximum interaction time, or if you’d rather buy leis on your own without the greeter part, it might feel overpriced. One booking called out that the interaction can feel brief and that the main added value was the lei and a photo moment. That’s fair. You should go into this knowing it’s not a guided tour or long meet-and-greet.
My rule of thumb: book this if you want the arrival to feel cared for. Skip it if you’d be just as happy picking up a lei later and using the time for something else.
Handling flight delays: what coordination looks like
Airports run on one schedule, planes run on another. This service is set up to coordinate with your flight arrival, which is why it can work well when timing gets messy.
One verified booking described worries about a delay, then received a message and a flexible setup, with the greeter waiting as described at baggage. Another booking notes receiving text-based directions after landing. That combination tells you the service tries to reduce the “where are they” stress.
Still, coordination has two sides. Your side is staying reachable and moving with the arrival flow. Their side is meeting you at baggage claim and managing the moment quickly.
Practical tips for peace of mind:
- Make sure your contact details are correct when you book.
- Keep a close eye on notifications after landing.
- Don’t walk too far from the baggage carousel area while waiting for the greeter to confirm you.
Photos and that honeymoon-ready first memory
A lot of airport arrivals are messy. People are hauling bags, checking phones, searching for signs. This experience is made to deliver a clean, memorable moment.
The greeter experience is set up for you to take photos right then, using your own phone. Multiple booking notes mention photo opportunities as part of the service, and one review specifically highlights receiving a greeting sign at baggage claim and taking photos during the lei handoff.
If you’re the type who wants a “we made it” shot, this is exactly the kind of moment you’ll be glad you captured. Also, since the leis are fresh and fragrant, your pictures won’t look like generic plastic souvenirs.
One caution: if your goal is strict surprise secrecy, remember this happens in a public terminal with visible signage. You’ll likely see the greeter and sign before any dramatic unveiling, because the greeting is the point.
What’s not included: transportation off to your hotel
The big missing piece is simple: transportation isn’t included. This isn’t a car service, and it isn’t a pickup-to-hotel transfer.
So you’ll want to have your arrival plan ready before you land:
- Decide how you’ll get from HNL to your lodging
- Know how you’ll handle your luggage once the greeting ends
- Budget time for airport-to-hotel travel, even if the welcome is smooth
This matters because the greeting is short. If your next step is unclear when you finish, you’ll feel that stress right after the nice moment.
A good approach is to treat the lei greeting as the start of your trip workflow: smile, photo, then immediately move to transportation.
Who this is best for (and who should think twice)

This experience is designed for people who want an easy, romantic arrival. It’s described as perfect for honeymooners, anniversary trips, or any romantic getaway, and the private group setup makes it feel calmer than shared meetups.
You’ll likely love it if:
- You’re arriving with someone you want to set a romantic tone for immediately
- You don’t want to hunt for leis while also managing jet lag and luggage
- You appreciate a simple ritual that feels local without requiring extra planning
It may not be the best fit if:
- You expected an extended escort or a longer on-the-ground experience
- You’re comfortable buying a lei yourself later and skipping the greeter part
- You’re hoping for a fully private, no-visible-surprises setup in the terminal
Also, one booking note mentioned that the service felt less special than expected beyond the lei and a brief interaction. That’s a reminder: the main attraction is the greeting itself, not a deeper airport tour.
Good news: because it’s wheelchair accessible (as listed) and offered as a private group, it can work for travelers who want a straightforward meet-and-welcome format.
Common hiccups and how to avoid them
Based on booking feedback, most issues are not about the lei or the greeting quality. They’re about expectations and timing.
Here are the two practical pitfalls to watch:
- Expectation mismatch: if you think this includes more than a lei greeting, you’ll feel shorted. The experience covers the welcome at baggage claim and a quick photo moment.
- Meeting confusion if you wander: if you drift around the gate area too long before heading to baggage claim, you can miss the clean meet-up window. Aim to be where you’re supposed to be.
If you want this to feel effortless, do two simple things:
- Plan to go directly to baggage claim on arrival.
- Keep your phone ready so any coordination message can be answered fast.
One last thought: one review complained about surprise being ruined and pointed at coordination problems when meeting didn’t happen as expected right away. You can’t control every airport variable, but you can control responsiveness and presence at the right place.
Should you book Honolulu Honeymoon Airport Lei Greeting?
I’d book it if your goal is a low-effort, high-feeling arrival. For two people, the price can make sense because you’re paying for convenience, coordination, and a personalized lei moment right when you land at HNL. If you’re tired, busy, or just don’t want to plan flowers on arrival day, this is a tidy solution.
I wouldn’t book it if you want more than a quick welcome, or if you’re the type who would rather handle leis and logistics independently. And if you’re planning something ultra-surprise-heavy, understand that a public meeting with a sign is part of how the service works.
Bottom line: this is a short, romantic, airport-friendly ritual. When that matches your trip style, it’s a surprisingly effective way to start Hawaii with less stress and more feeling.
FAQ
How long does the Honolulu airport lei greeting last?
The experience is listed as 20 minutes.
Where do we meet the greeter?
The meeting point is your arrival gate at Honolulu International Airport, and the lei greeting is delivered at baggage claim.
What’s included in the price?
The included item is the lei greeting at baggage claim.
Is transportation included from the airport?
No. Transportation is not included.
Is this experience wheelchair accessible?
Yes, it’s listed as wheelchair accessible.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. The experience offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






















