REVIEW · EVENING EXPERIENCES
Honolulu Night Marchers Ghost Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Mysteries of Hawaii · Bookable on Viator
Downtown Honolulu at night has a way of feeling personal. This Honolulu Night Marchers Ghost Tour turns a normal walk into a guided night of Hawaiian mythology, local lore, and documented paranormal-style accounts.
I really like the way the experience is led by Native Hawaiian storyteller Master Storyteller Lopaka Kapanui, with tales that come from lived family tradition and respected cultural context. I also appreciate that the tour keeps things moving with a focused 1 hour 30 minutes timeline that works for an evening plan.
One possible drawback: you are walking in the dark, so you’ll want comfortable shoes and a bit of patience if you’re not into ghost-story pacing or heavy storytelling.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you go
- Why Downtown Honolulu Feels Different After Dark
- Your Guide Makes the Tour: Master Storyteller Lopaka Kapanui
- Night Marchers, Pakaka, and Why the Stories Connect to Real Ground
- Stop Focus: Downtown Honolulu Hauntings on Foot
- What You’ll Actually Learn (Beyond the Spooky Part)
- Practical Stuff: Shoes, Comfort, and How the Group Works
- Price and Value: Is $35 for 90 Minutes Worth It?
- Who Should Book This Tour, and Who Might Skip It
- Should You Book the Honolulu Night Marchers Ghost Tour?
- FAQ
- What is the price for the Honolulu Night Marchers Ghost Tour?
- How long is the tour?
- Where does the tour start, and where does it end?
- What time does the tour start?
- Who leads the tour?
- What is included in the ticket price?
- Is food or drink included?
- How big is the group?
- Is the tour offered in English, and do I need a mobile ticket?
- Is free cancellation available?
Key points to know before you go
- Native Hawaiian storytelling with Hawaiian mythology woven into the haunting accounts
- Master Storyteller Lopaka Kapanui leads the group, with an easy, talk-to-your-guide feel
- Downtown Honolulu night marcher paths are described through the areas and traces left behind
- Eyewitness-style accounts and documented haunting activity are part of the narrative
- Mobile ticket and a group size capped at 50 travelers keep it manageable
- Good weather matters, since this is a weather-dependent walking tour
Why Downtown Honolulu Feels Different After Dark

This tour starts in the heart of Honolulu, and it leans into the way cities change at night. When you’re on foot downtown around 7:00 pm, you’re not just looking at buildings—you’re hearing how locals connect places to night marcher paths and old sacred ground.
The timing matters. With about 90 minutes to cover the experience, you get enough time for story, mood, and a real sense of place without feeling stuck for hours. It’s also a nice alternative to the typical island schedule: less beach, more streets, more legends.
And yes, the vibe is spooky. But it’s not only jump-scare energy. The scariest moments here are the small details people describe—like shadows that seem wrong, objects that appear moved, and that hair-raising feeling you can’t explain away.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Oahu
Your Guide Makes the Tour: Master Storyteller Lopaka Kapanui

What makes this ghost tour work is the guide. Lopaka Kapanui is presented as a Master Storyteller, and the feel is less like a script read at you and more like careful storytelling with room for questions.
From what you’ll hear during the tour, Lopaka’s approach mixes mythology, local understanding, and human stories—some of them passed down through family. That matters because it keeps the night marcher theme grounded in Hawaiian perspectives instead of treating it like generic Halloween content.
The tone is also easy to follow. People describe him as warm, engaging, and great at holding attention while still sharing a lot of information. If you like a guide who can explain things clearly and answer questions, you’ll probably find this style a good match.
Night Marchers, Pakaka, and Why the Stories Connect to Real Ground
The headline theme is the night marchers, and the tour frames them through paths that once belonged to ancient Hawaiian life. You’ll hear that Downtown Honolulu isn’t just modern streets and buildings—there are traces of older spiritual routes and sacred sites beneath the city’s layers.
A key detail you’ll be talking about after is Pakaka, described as an ancient sacrificial heiau site. The tour connects many of the night marcher paths to locations where Pakaka once stood, tying the legend to real geography rather than leaving it as vague folklore.
That connection is why this tour feels different from other ghost walks. You’re not only chasing scares. You’re learning how the night marcher story is interpreted through land, memory, and cultural meaning—and how those ideas show up in haunting accounts today.
Stop Focus: Downtown Honolulu Hauntings on Foot
The entire experience is built around one main area: Downtown Honolulu. You meet at the King Kamehameha I Statue on S King St (447 S King St, Honolulu), and then the walk moves through the city’s storied pockets while the stories land at specific moments.
At the start of the tour, the theme is immediate: people who work in downtown buildings often describe strange happenings. Expect to hear accounts that range from moving shadows and items seeming shifted to encounters tied to night marchers. There’s also a recurring description of physical chills—less about theatrics, more about how the stories frame fear.
One of the more memorable elements is that the tour includes references to photos and video-style evidence shared during the walk. You might even hear how some images can look normal when taken, then later appear blurry or altered when reviewed. It’s the kind of detail that adds to the eerie mood without asking you to fully buy it on the spot.
Also, this is an evening walk, so bring the right mindset: you’re walking while listening, not stopping at a museum display.
What You’ll Actually Learn (Beyond the Spooky Part)

This isn’t a tour that only says, Something scary happened. It spends time on the why behind the stories, which is where the experience becomes more than entertainment.
You’ll get Hawaiian legends and cultural context, guided in a way that’s meant to respect the source. Instead of treating mythology like a costume, the tour frames it as living tradition—something locals can speak about with authority and care.
The tour also emphasizes documented accounts and eyewitness-style storytelling. That gives the night marcher theme a specific flavor: not just myths, but reports of hauntings tied to familiar downtown locations. If you like stories that mix supernatural ideas with human observation, you’ll probably be happy here.
The result: you leave with more than a checklist of ghost facts. You walk away thinking about how Honolulu’s modern streets carry layers of older meaning.
Practical Stuff: Shoes, Comfort, and How the Group Works
This is a walking tour, and the big practical tip is simple: wear comfy shoes. The reviews highlight that the host keeps things interactive, and people mention taking photos during the walk, plus enjoying group conversation.
Group size is limited to up to 50 travelers, which helps the experience stay organized and keeps the guide from feeling too stretched. Also, the tour is offered in English, and you’ll receive a mobile ticket confirmation at booking.
You can also count on it being fairly inclusive in terms of physical participation. One review mentioned using a sit-down walker and still being able to enjoy the tour, which suggests the pace can work for more people than a very fast paced walk.
A couple more useful notes:
- Service animals are allowed.
- It’s near public transportation.
Price and Value: Is $35 for 90 Minutes Worth It?
At $35 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes, this sits in the midrange for a guided ghost walk. The “worth it” question comes down to what you want out of the evening.
If you’re looking for pure scares, you might decide it’s pricey for the amount of walking time. But if you want a guide-led storytelling experience that blends Hawaiian mythology, local cultural framing, and haunting-style accounts, the value starts to make sense.
You’re also not paying for a faceless company product. The tour is described as Native Hawaiian owned and operated and run by Mysteries of Hawaii. That local connection usually matters to me because it changes the tone from entertainment-first to story-first.
Plus, it’s positioned as highly rated (nearly universal recommendation and a 4.8 rating across 26 reviews). That doesn’t guarantee your experience, but it does signal that most people feel the guide and the storytelling deliver.
Who Should Book This Tour, and Who Might Skip It
I’d recommend this tour to you if:
- You like ghost stories that come with cultural context, not just spooky effects.
- You enjoy guided walking tours where the guide can answer questions.
- You’re a couple, a group of friends, or a family that wants a night activity that’s more than a standard dinner plan.
It’s also a strong pick if you’re specifically curious about the night marchers theme and want it explained through local perspective.
You might skip it if:
- You only want light, casual history with minimal supernatural content.
- You dislike long storytelling segments or prefer fast pacing with lots of stops and photos.
- You feel uncomfortable with nighttime walking and being in the dark for most of the experience.
Should You Book the Honolulu Night Marchers Ghost Tour?
If you’re choosing between a generic ghost tour and one built around Hawaiian legend and local storytelling, I’d lean toward booking this. The big reason is the guide and the cultural framing: Master Storyteller Lopaka Kapanui brings the stories in a way that feels thoughtful and respectful, while still giving you plenty of chills and eerie moments.
Go for it if you want an evening that feels genuinely tied to Honolulu, not just to the idea of ghosts. Just be ready for a night walk, bring comfy shoes, and settle in for story time.
Also, note the tour requires good weather. If weather cancels it, you should expect a switch to a different date or a full refund.
FAQ
What is the price for the Honolulu Night Marchers Ghost Tour?
The tour costs $35.00 per person.
How long is the tour?
The tour runs for about 1 hour 30 minutes.
Where does the tour start, and where does it end?
It starts at the King Kamehameha I Statue at 447 S King St, Honolulu, HI 96813, and it ends back at the meeting point.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 7:00 pm.
Who leads the tour?
The tour is led by Master Storyteller Lopaka Kapanui.
What is included in the ticket price?
Included are admission, Hawaiian legends/history/culture elements, and the guided storytelling experience with documented accounts of hauntings and paranormal activity.
Is food or drink included?
No. Food and drink are not included.
How big is the group?
There is a maximum of 50 travelers.
Is the tour offered in English, and do I need a mobile ticket?
Yes, it is offered in English. You’ll have a mobile ticket.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes, you can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the start time. If canceled less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded. Weather cancellations offer a different date or a full refund.































