Skip to content

King Kamehameha Day 2026 · June 8–14

King Kamehameha Day
in Hawaiʻi.

The first state holiday signed into law in the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi. June 11 honors Kamehameha I, who unified the islands in 1810. Today: lei draping at the statue downtown, the Floral Parade through Waikīkī, and hoʻolauleʻa from Hilo to Kauaʻi.

The three traditions

What King Kamehameha Day looks like

Thursday June 11

Lei Draping Ceremony

Hundreds of feet of lei are raised by crane and draped on the gold-leafed statue of Kamehameha I in front of Aliʻiōlani Hale downtown. Hawaiian chant, hula, and pule. Free, open to the public.

Saturday June 13

Floral Parade

Pāʻū riders, marching bands, and floral floats from ʻIolani Palace through Waikīkī to Kapiʻolani Park. Each island represented by a pāʻū princess on horseback in her island's color and flower. Hawaiʻi's longest-running parade.

Saturday June 13

Hoʻolauleʻa at Kapiʻolani Park

Parade ends, party begins. Live Hawaiian music, hula hālau, lāʻau lapaʻau demonstrations, ʻono local kine food. Pack a mat — it runs into the evening.

Featured this week

On the calendar

60 events on Oahu this week

Monday, June 8

1 event

Tuesday, June 9

9 events

Wednesday, June 10

7 events

Thursday, June 11

State Holiday11 events

Friday, June 12

21 events

Saturday, June 13

Parade Day10 events

Sunday, June 14

1 event

The history

Why this one matters.

King Kamehameha Day was proclaimed by Kamehameha V on December 22, 1871 — the first national holiday of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi. It survived the overthrow, survived annexation, survived statehood. It is one of only two state holidays in the United States that honors a monarch, and the only one not connected to a colonial power.

On the Big Island, Kamehameha's birthplace, the original statue stands in Kapaʻau, North Kohala. The downtown Honolulu statue is the most famous, but it is actually the second cast — the first was lost at sea and later recovered. Three statues exist today: Kohala, Honolulu, and one in the U.S. Capitol.

Stay in the loop

Never Miss a Thing

Get the best upcoming events across Hawaii delivered to your inbox. No spam, just good vibes.