
The Ritz-Carlton O'ahu, Turtle Bay
Kahuku USA North America
When you book The Ritz-Carlton O'ahu, Turtle Bay in Kahuku, USA through our Marriott Stars partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Personalized amenity
- Complimentary breakfast daily for two guests per room
- USD100 resort credit (once per stay)
- Early check-in and late check-out (when available)
- Complimentary upgrade (if available at check-in)
- In-person VIP warm welcome
Location
Ritz-Carlton brings its service-centered philosophy to O'ahu's North Shore, where the brand's preference-tracking precision meets the unhurried rhythm of Hawaii's most storied coastline. The property anchors a remote stretch of coastline far from Waikiki's crowds, where the Pacific swells that draw winter surf competitions give way to placid summer waters ideal for paddling and snorkeling.
Kawela is less a town than a feeling: roadside shrimp trucks, two-lane blacktop winding past sugarcane fields, the scent of plumeria carried on trade winds. Turtle Bay Beach lies steps from the property, a crescent of sand where green sea turtles surface in the shallows. A short walk west brings you to Turtle Beach, quieter still, edged by black rock tide pools. The landscape here is raw and undeveloped, the kind of North Shore Hawaii that existed before resorts arrived.
Daniel K. Inouye International Airport sits 44 kilometers south in Honolulu. The drive traces O'ahu's windward coast, passing roadside fruit stands and glimpses of turquoise bays before cutting inland through pineapple country and emerging at Turtle Bay's palm-fringed entrance.
Kulima Golf Course stretches along coastal bluffs one kilometer from the property, its fairways threading between ironwood groves and ocean views. The surf culture that defines this coast peaks in winter, when the legendary breaks at Pipeline and Waimea Bay draw spectators to north-facing shores. Waimea Falls, 9.5 kilometers west, plunges into a swimming basin surrounded by botanical gardens showcasing native Hawaiian flora. Pupukea-Paumalu Forest Reserve protects upland rainforest 6.7 kilometers inland, its trails winding through guava thickets and offering ridge-top views across the island's northern plains.
Book a tee time at Kulima in late afternoon, when the light turns golden and humpback whales breach offshore during winter months. Hukilau Marketplace, nearly 11 kilometers south in Laie, gathers food trucks and craft vendors under open-air pavilions, serving garlic shrimp and poke bowls that taste best eaten at picnic tables facing the mountains. Haleiwa Boat Harbor, 16.6 kilometers west, remains the North Shore's nautical hub, where charter boats depart for diving excursions and sunset sails.
Winter arrives with rain and surf, December's 71 millimeters of precipitation accompanying swells that transform the North Shore into a theatre for big-wave surfing. Daytime temperatures hover in the mid-20s, cool enough for hiking inland reserves without the humidity that defines summer. The light takes on a crystalline quality after passing storms, sharpening the contrast between green ridges and cobalt water.
Spring and summer dry out progressively, May through September seeing less than 30 millimeters of rain monthly as temperatures climb toward 28°C. The ocean flattens into a turquoise mirror ideal for stand-up paddling and kayaking. Trade winds blow steadily, rustling ironwood needles and keeping the heat from feeling oppressive.
Autumn straddles both moods: October's warmth lingers while November's rains begin, signaling the return of winter swells and the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing season that transforms sleepy beaches into global sporting stages.
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