List of islands of Hawaii


The following is a list of islands of Hawaii. The state of Hawaii, consisting of the Hawaiian Islands, has the fourth-longest ocean coastline of the 50 states at 750 miles. It is the only state that consists entirely of islands with 6,422.62 mi² of land. The Hawaiian Island archipelago extends some 1,500 miles from the southernmost island of Hawaiʻi to the northernmost Kure Atoll. Despite being within the boundaries of Hawaii, Midway Atoll, comprising several smaller islands, is not included as an island of Hawaii, because it is classified as a United States Minor Outlying Islands and is therefore administered by the federal government and not the state.
Hawaii is divided into five counties: Hawaiʻi, Honolulu, Kalawao, Kauaʻi, and Maui. Each island is included in the boundaries and under the administration of one of these counties. Honolulu County, despite being centralized, administers the outlying Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Kalawao and Maui, both occupying the island of Molokaʻi, are the only counties that share the same island. Hawaii is typically recognized by its eight main islands: Hawaiʻi, Maui, Kahoʻolawe, Lānaʻi, Molokaʻi, Oʻahu, Kauaʻi, and Niʻihau.
The state of Hawaii officially recognizes only 137 islands in the state which includes four islands of the Midway Atoll. An island in this sense may also include much smaller and typically uninhabited islets, rocks, coral reefs, and atolls. For that reason, this article lists 152 separate islands. Some of these are too small to appear on maps, and others, such as Maro Reef, only appear above the water's surface during times of low tide. Others, such as Shark and Skate islands, have completely eroded away.
The majority of the Hawaiian Islands are inhabited, with Niʻihau being the westernmost island with a population of around 130 natives, no one else is allowed on the island. All the islands west of Niʻihau—those categorized as the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands—are unpopulated and recently incorporated into the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument. The island of Oʻahu has 953,207 residents, and the island of Hawaiʻi is by far the largest island with an area of 4,028 mi² —62.7% of the state's land area. The islands were first settled as early as AD 300 by Polynesian long-distance navigators. British captain James Cook was the first European to land on the islands in January 1778. The islands, which were governed independently up until 1898 were then annexed by the United States as a territory from 1898–1959. On August 21, 1959, they were collectively admitted as the 50th state.
The islands are the exposed peaks of a great undersea mountain range known as the Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain, formed by volcanic activity over a hotspot in the Earth's mantle. The archipelago formed as the Pacific plate moved slowly northwestward over a hotspot in the mantle at about 32 miles per million years. The islands in the northwest of the archipelago are older and typically smaller, due to longer exposure to erosion. The age of the archipelago has been estimated using potassium-argon dating methods. It is estimated that the northwesternmost Kure Atoll is the oldest at approximately 28 million years, while the southeasternmost Hawaiʻi Island is approximately 400,000 years old and still subjected to ongoing volcanism—one of the most active hotspots on Earth.

Hawaiʻi County

centers on Hawaiʻi Island. With an area of 4,028 mi², it is larger than all of the other islands of Hawaii combined, encompassing approximately 62.7% of the entire state's land area. It is also the largest island in the United States. In modern times, Hawaiʻi is known commonly as the "Big Island" to reduce confusion between the island and the state itself. The island also contains the state's highest peak: Mauna Kea at 13,796 feet. Hawaiʻi County as a whole has 27 islands and a total population of 185,079.
IslandCoordinates
Arched Rock
Coconut Island
Hawaiʻi
Kalaemano
Kaluahee Rock
Kaopapa
Kauhuula
Kaula'ināiwi Island
Kawelohea
Keaoi Island
Kipu Rock
Kuhulu Rock
Laahana
Lepeamoa Rock
Mahikea Island
Mokuhonu
Mokuokahailani Rock
Mokupuku
Opihi Rock
Pa'akea
Paokalani Island
Pohakulua
Pulehua Island
Reeds Island
Wahinemakanui

Honolulu County

Known officially as the City and County of Honolulu, the county includes both the urban district of Honolulu and the rest of the island of Oʻahu, as well as several minor surrounding islands. The county also administers the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands with the exception of the federal governed Midway Atoll. The county's population in 2010 was 953,207, making it the 43rd most populated county in the United States. At 596.7 mi², the island of Oʻahu is the third largest island and also the most populated, accounting for approximately 70% of the entire state's population. The county as a whole has 63 islands, and 32 of those belong to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.
IslandCoordinates
Ahu O Laka Island
Banzai Rocks
Coconut Island
Coral Island
Ford Island
Kaohikaipu Island
Khewa Moku
Kūkaimanini Island
Kahakaʻaulana Island
Kapapa Island
Kekepa Island
Kukuihoʻolua
Laulaunui Island
Mōkōlea Rock
Mānana Island
Mokauea Island
Mokoliʻi
Mokuʻlai
Mokuaia Island
Mokuauia
Moku Moʻo
Moku Iki
Mokulua Islands
Moku Manu
Mokumanu Islands
Moku Nui
Mokuoeo Island
Oʻahu
Pōhaku Kulaʻilaʻi
Papaʻamoi Island
Popoia Island
Pulemoku
Sand Island
Wānanapaoa Islands

Northwestern Hawaii Islands

The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands are the small islands and atolls in the Hawaiian island chain located northwest of the larger islands of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. For administrative purposes, all of these islands are controlled by Honolulu County. The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands consist of nine main islands and innumerable islets, coral reefs, atolls, sandbar, and intermittent islands—some of which are officially named. All of these islands account for only 3.1075 mi² and have no permanent residents.
Midway Atoll, sometimes referred to as Midway Island, is a 2.4 mi² archipelago. For quite some time, it had a permanent population of naval personnel. It is one of the northwesternmost islands, located 161 miles east of the International Date Line. Kure Atoll is the only island west at 55 miles beyond Midway Atoll. It also observes a different time zone than the rest of the Hawaiian Islands. Because of its strong military history, Midway Atoll is classified as a Minor Outlying Island, an unorganized territory of the United States and is therefore not under the jurisdiction of Hawaii. Midway Atoll consists of four individual islands.
IslandCoordinates
Bare Island
Bird Island
Disappearing Island
Eastern Island
East Island
French Frigate Shoals
Gardner Pinnacles
Gin Island
Grass Island
Green Island
Hermes Atoll
Kittery Island
Kure Atoll
Laysan Island
La Perouse Pinnacle
Lisianski Island
Little Gin Island
Little North Island
Maro Reef
Midway Atoll
Mullet Island
Necker Island
Nihoa
North Island
Pearl Atoll
Round Island
Sand Island1
Sand Island2
Seal Island
Shark Island
Skate Island
Spit Island
Southeast Island
Tern Island
Trig Island
Whale Island
Shallow Islandn/a
Near Islandn/a
Ocean Islandn/a

Kalawao County

contains no individual islands of its own. With a census population of 90, the county is the country's smallest county in terms of population with 44 less residents than Loving County, Texas. At 13.21 mi², it is the smallest county by land area in the United States and is often omitted from certain maps. Kalawao County shares the island of Molokaʻi with Maui County and occupies only 5% of the island's 260 mi² and 1.2% of the island's 7,404 residents.
IslandCoordinates
Molokai
Mōkapu
Huelo
'Okala Island

Kauaʻi County

is the northwesternmost county in the state. It occupies the two main islands of Kauaʻi and Niʻihau. Kauai is fourth largest island in the Hawaiian archipelago at 562.3 mi². With a population of 58,303, it holds 99.7% of the county's population of 58,463. The remaining 160 residents reside on Niʻihau. Lehua and Kaʻula are the third and fourth largest islands, although they are very small and uninhabited. Kaʻula is the westernmost of the Hawaiian Islands not included in the Northwestern Hawaiian Island chain. The county as a whole has eight islands.
IslandCoordinates
Kaʻula
Kalanipuao Rock
Kauaʻi'
Kuakamoku Rock
Lehua
Mokuaeae
Niʻihau'
Puʻukole

Maui County

consists of four of the state's main islands: Maui, Kahoʻolawe, Lānaʻi, and Molokaʻi. With a land area of 1,159.20 mi², it had a population of 154,834 in 2000. The island of Maui has the most residents at 117,644. It is also the largest of the county's island with 727.2 mi² of land—the state's second largest island and the 17th largest in the country. At 44.6 mi², Kahoʻolawe is the state's largest island with no permanent inhabitants. Lānaʻi has a population of 3,193; Molokaʻi has a population of 7,404. Molokaʻi is the only island in Hawaii that is divided between two counties. With a population of 90, Kalawao County occupies a tiny 13.21 mi² portion on the northern shore of the island. Maui County contains 59 named islands.
IslandCoordinates
Āhole Rock
Ālau Island
Aawaiki
Aawanui
Aluea Rocks
Haukoʻi
Hulu Island
Kaelua
Kahʻlau
Kahoʻolawe'
Kalaepohaku
Kanahā Rock
Kaneapua
Moku o Kau
Kauwalu
Keʻpuka Rock
Kukuipalaoa
Lānaʻi'
Laupapa Rock
Mākālea Rock
Mākoholā Island
Mahinanui
Makoloaka Island
Maui
Mokeehia Island
Mokuʻula
Mokuhālua
Mokuhala
Mokuhoʻoniki
Mokuhuki
Mokulau
Mokumana
Mokumanu
Mokupala
Mokupapa1
Mokupapa2
Mokupapapa
Mokupipi
Molokaʻi
Molokini
Moku Naio
Namoku
Nanahoa
Pāʻāonuʻakea
Pai Island
Papaloa
Papanui o Kane
Pohaku Manamana
Pohaku Paea
Poopoo
Puāukiʻi Island
Puāukoaʻe
Puupehe
Twin Rocks
Waiʻāpae
Waiakapuhi