Items | Discover the Secrets of Chain of Craters Road
Discover the Secrets of Chain of Craters Road
(2) Reviews
Hawaii
About
New Tour starting 2026! Give us 2.5 hours, and we will make you lava detectives! Learn about past eruption events, lava formations, and how they happened. This tour starts with a 1-mile hike from the edge of a pit crater to the lava tube. From there, we drive to the end of Chain of Craters Road as you have formations explained and narrated.
Learn more and see things you would never find on your own! Give us 3 hours, and you will learn much more about volcanoes, Hawaii's landscape, native plants, wildlife, and Hawaiian culture. We cannot show you the whole Park in only 3 hours, but we give you several stops to enrich your understanding and immerse your senses.
After your tour with us, all t...
Highlights
2 hours and 30 minutes
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 hours and 30 minutes
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Private transportation
Bottled water
Air-conditioned vehicle
Entrance to the National Park is $30/per car, it is good for 7 days.
Meeting Points
Departure
Kīlauea Iki Trailhead
Kilauea Iki Trailhead in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. Once you pass the Ranger Stations at the entrance, head towards the signs that say lava tube.
Return
Important Information
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Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
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Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
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If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
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This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
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Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
Become our Lokal Curator
Are you ready to turn your hobbies into a business?
New Tour starting 2026! Give us 2.5 hours, and we will make you lava detectives! Learn about past eruption events, lava formations, and how they happened. This tour starts with a 1-mile hike from the edge of a pit crater to the lava tube. From there, we drive to the end of Chain of Craters Road as you have formations explained and narrated.
Learn more and see things you would never find on your own! Give us 3 hours, and you will learn much more about volcanoes, Hawaii's landscape, native plants, wildlife, and Hawaiian culture. We cannot show you the whole Park in only 3 hours, but we give you several stops to enrich your understanding and immerse your senses.
After your tour with us, all t...
Highlights
2 hours and 30 minutes
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 hours and 30 minutes
Offered in English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Private transportation
Bottled water
Air-conditioned vehicle
Entrance to the National Park is $30/per car, it is good for 7 days.
Meeting Points
Departure
Kīlauea Iki Trailhead
Kilauea Iki Trailhead in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. Once you pass the Ranger Stations at the entrance, head towards the signs that say lava tube.
Return
Itinerary
1
Kilauea Iki Trail
We are meeting at the Kilauea Iki Trailhead and will only hike half a mile on the trail to the lava tube. The total hike is just over one mile.
Name Meaning: Kīlauea Iki means “little Kīlauea” in Hawaiian — it’s a smaller crater right next to the main Kīlauea summit caldera.
Size: The crater is about a mile long, 3,000 feet wide, and the floor lies ~400 feet below the rim — big enough to house an entire lava lake!
The Legendary 1959 Eruption
Spectacular Lava Fountains: In 1959, Kīlauea Iki became one of the most dramatic eruptive sites of the 20th century, with lava fountains shooting up to 1,900 feet (580 m) into the sky.
Lava Lake Formation: Over several weeks of eruptions, molten lava filled the crater to form a deep lake — about 400 feet thick — one of the most studied lava lakes in history.
10 minutes
2
Nahuku - Thurston Lava Tube
We walk along the edge of Kilauea Iki Crater to a 500-year-old lava tube in a temperate rainforest.
It’s a real lava tunnel formed when molten lava once flowed beneath the surface during a volcanic eruption. Once the liquid lava drained away, it left behind a hollow tube you can walk through.
The lava that carved out Nāhuku was over 2,000 °F (1,093 °C) while it flowed — crazy hot!
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This lava tube is about 500 years old, geologically quite recent.
The tunnel you walk through is roughly 600 feet long and in some places the ceiling soars 20 feet high or more.
Rainforest Entrance
The trail to get into the tube winds through a lush native rainforest, alive with native birdsong and big ferns.
You’re literally going from jungle into the heart of what used to be a river of fire!
30 minutes
3
Luamanu Crater
A July 1974 eruption partially filled in this crater as it oozed from vents nearby.
4
Puhimau Crater
This area has a crater, but the most unusual feature of this area is the large thermal area that has killed trees and grass. The thermal area started around 1939, and it continues to slowly engulf the forest around it. We will have to wait and see what the future hold.
5
Mauna Ulu
Mauna Ulu means “growing mountain” in Hawaiian — and the name is literal. It formed as a brand-new volcanic shield during a long-lasting eruption on Kīlauea’s East Rift Zone.
It isn’t a single cone, but a broad lava shield, built layer by layer as lava repeatedly spilled out and spread gently across the land.
A Historic Long-Lasting Eruption
Eruption dates: 1969–1974 — nearly five years, making it one of the longest eruptions of Kīlauea in modern history.
Over that time, Mauna Ulu erupted almost continuously, fundamentally reshaping the landscape along Chain of Craters Road.
6
Holei Sea Arch
Natural Sea Arch: Hōlei Sea Arch is a huge natural rock bridge formed by the relentless power of the Pacific Ocean eroding ancient lava cliffs. Waves slowly hollowed out softer and fractured parts of the basalt until an arch remained.
Size: The arch reaches roughly 90 feet (27 m) high — taller than a 7-story building!
Erosion at Work: The arch was carved from a lava flow that’s about 550 years old. Ocean waves pounded at cracks and weak spots between hard and soft lava layers — a process called differential erosion — gradually sculpting the arch you see today.
15 minutes
7
Pauahi Crater
Pauahi comes from the Hawaiian words “pau” (finished/done) and “ahi” (fire), meaning “destroyed by fire” — a fitting name for a crater shaped by volcanic fire.
It’s a large volcanic pit crater — a deep, steep-sided depression formed mostly by the collapse of the surface as magma moves underground, rather than by explosive bombardment.
Pauahi is quite big: roughly 1,600–2,000 feet (about 500–610 m) long, up to about 300–500 feet (90–150 m) deep, and about 300 feet (90 m) wide.
Eruptive History
Pauahi has had multiple volcanic events in recent (geologic) history, making it more than just a static hole in the ground:
May 1973: A fissure opened and erupted briefly on the crater floor.
November 1973: A longer eruption (about 31 days) created lava flows and dramatic features on the crater floor.
November 1979: The most recent eruption was brief (one day) and left the lava surface you see today.