Markets by region
Farmers markets on Oahu
Oahu hosts Hawaii's densest farmers-market circuit. The Saturday morning at Kapiolani Community College — KCC — is the flagship on the Diamond Head side of Honolulu. The Hawaii Farm Bureau also runs satellite markets on weekday mornings (Mililani Sunday, Pearlridge Wednesday, Kailua Thursday) and Honolulu hosts night markets and food-truck rallies in Kakaako, Ward, and Pearlridge throughout the week.
Farmers markets (11)

KCC Saturday Farmers Market
7:30-11 AM
KCC is part breakfast stop, part produce market. The hot-food and bakery lines pull most of the early attention, while the farm tables toward the back keep it grounded as a real weekly shop.
69 vendors listed

Mililani Sunday Farmers Market
8-11 AM
Mililani Sunday feels like a true neighborhood farmers market: white tents in a high-school lot, Central Oʻahu families doing a produce-and-breakfast lap, and Hawaii Farm Bureau's local-only stall mix keeping it rooted in everyday shopping instead of sightseeing.
29 vendors listed

Honolulu Wednesday Farmers Market
4-7 PM
Blaisdell Wednesday is the most midweek-errand version of a farmers market — set in the arena lot between Ward and Kapiʻolani, with people stopping after work for dinner, greens, flowers and pantry restocks. It feels more pau hana than weekend outing.
21 vendors listed

Kailua Thursday Farmers Market
4-7 PM
Kailua Thursday has the clean, easy rhythm of a town-center market: a quick loop through an open parking lot, Windward regulars grabbing dinner or produce on the way home, and the same Hawaii Farm Bureau local-only mix that keeps it practical. It reads as a Thursday reset, not a tourist attraction.
27 vendors listed

North Shore Country Market (Haleiwa)
1-6 PM
North Shore Country Market feels exactly like Haleʻiwa should — church lawn across from Matsumoto, light surf-town foot traffic, local crafts next to produce, and a crowd that blends town visitors with North Shore regulars. It's smaller and looser than the big Oʻahu farmers markets, with more hangout energy.
1 vendor listed

Makana Market at Ka Makana Aliʻi
4-8 PM
Curated outdoor market at Ka Makana Aliʻi featuring local food, produce, makers, and small businesses on Wednesday evenings.
1 vendor listed

Makana Market at Ka Makana Aliʻi
11 AM-3 PM
Sunday Makana Market at Ka Makana Aliʻi, with local produce, food vendors, makers, and community pop-up vendors.

Pearlridge Farmers Market
8 AM-12 PM
Farmers market in Aiea. Vendors include produce, prepared food, local products, flowers, value-added foods.

Aloha Stadium Swap Meet & Marketplace
8 AM-3 PM
Swap meet / marketplace in Halawa / Honolulu. Also open Sunday. Vendors include crafts, souvenirs, apparel, prepared food, local products.

Kakaʻako Farmers Market
8 AM-12 PM
Farmers market in Honolulu. Vendors include produce, prepared food, local products, flowers, crafts, coffee, value-added foods.
6 vendors listed

FarmLovers Kailua Farmers Market
8 AM-12 PM
Farmers market in Kailua. Vendors include produce, prepared food, local products, flowers, value-added foods.
1 vendor listed
Night markets (8)

Bayview Night Market
4-8 PM
Bayview Night Market lands closer to a Windward hangout than a formal market — food and craft vendors set around Bayview Golf Park, with Jolene's by the Bay and live music pushing it into after-work territory. The crowd reads like families, friend groups, and Kāneʻohe regulars.
3 vendors listed

Kapilina Night Market
4-7:30 PM
Kapilina's night market feels the most neighborhood-coded of the Oʻahu night markets — set by Pilikai Beach Park beside Kapilina Beach Homes, with food trucks, live music, and a crowd that looks like residents who walked over with kids in tow. It plays more like a community gathering with vendors than a destination event.

Village Night Market at Pearlridge
5-9 PM
Village Night Market at Pearlridge is busy Saturday-night mall-lot energy — out in the lot fronting TJ Maxx, with fairy lights, live music, trucks and pop-ups, and a crowd that skews families, teens, and Central Oʻahu regulars. It feels snacky, social, and a little louder than the weekday markets.
3 vendors listed

First Friday at Capitol Modern
5-9 PM
First Friday at Capitol Modern feels like the calmer, art-forward edge of downtown's larger First Friday sprawl — courtyard music, museum galleries, and food vendors on South Hotel Street before people drift farther into Chinatown. The crowd is mixed on purpose: families early, arts people all night, and plenty of downtown regulars in between.
1 vendor listed

Ko'olau Night Market at Windward Mall
5-9 PM
Koʻolau Night Market feels like Windward Mall using its outer lot the way the neighborhood actually wants it used — food trucks, craft booths, live entertainment, and a friendly Windward-side crowd that treats it like an easy Friday plan. It's more community night than shopping-center event.
1 vendor listed

Taste of Aloha Night Market
4-8 PM
Taste of Aloha has a downtown lawn-party feel — open-air, food-and-maker heavy, and more curated than chaotic, set on the Waterfront Plaza lawn with the old Restaurant Row footprint still hanging around the edges. The crowd skews young, local, and food-curious, but it's easy for visitors to drop into too.

Kaiwi'ula Night Market
4:30-8 PM
Monthly Wednesday-evening market on the grounds of the Bishop Museum in Kalihi. Native Hawaiian makers and food vendors front and center.

Night Market at Pearl at Kalauao
5-9 PM
Pearl at Kalauao's night market is the polished venue-style version of a night market — lots of room, a big vendor count, and enough food, music, and shopping to turn a Wednesday into an actual outing. The crowd feels family-heavy and neighborhood-based, not touristy.
Food truck rallies (3)

Ono Grindz & Makeke at Wai Kai
4-8 PM
Ono Grindz & Mākeke at Wai Kai is a West Side sunset market first and a shopping run second — food vendors and makers spread across the lawn with the lagoon and wave pool in the background. The whole thing is built for hanging out, especially with kids, rather than grabbing one thing and leaving.
8 vendors listed

What the Truck?! at Waikele
4-8 PM
What the Truck?! at Waikele is a straight-up truck rally: more asphalt than ambiance, but that's part of the appeal when the lineup is big and the food is the point. People come to eat, compare plates, and make a night of it with the family without driving into town.
59 vendors listed

Eat the Street
4-9 PM
Eat the Street still reads like Oʻahu's benchmark truck rally: big lot, big turnout, theme-night energy, and a crowd that shows up ready to eat more than once. It's louder and more event-like than a farmers market, but more democratic than most food festivals.
43 vendors listed