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The Area

Area Guide: Hawaiian Acres & Puna

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The Short Version

Hawaiian Acres is one of the big agricultural subdivisions carved out of Puna rainforest in the late 1950s — roughly 8 square miles of one-to-three acre lots on a grid of numbered roads, between Kurtistown and Mountain View on the Hilo side of the Big Island. Elevation runs 800 to 1,500 feet, which buys you cooler nights than the coast and more rain than almost anywhere in the country.

Subdivision road through the rainforest

Weather, Honestly

It rains. A lot — 100 to 140 inches a year depending on your exact spot. Mornings are usually clear, afternoons build clouds, evenings rain. Everything grows: your orchard, your garden, and yes, the jungle trying to reclaim your driveway. People who need constant sunshine live in Kona and pay Kona prices. People who like green live here.

The Towns You'll Actually Use

  • Kurtistown (5–10 min) — post office, gas, the feed store, our office
  • Kea'au (15 min) — supermarket, hardware, schools, urgent care
  • Pahoa (25 min) — the funky one; farmers market, restaurants, characters
  • Hilo (25–35 min) — the real town: Target, Costco (yes, Costco), hospital, airport, university

Roads & the Association

The county maintains the perimeter roads; everything inside the grid is community-maintained through the Hawaiian Acres Community Association's voluntary road fund. Translation: main roads (8, 3, D) get regular grading, side roads depend on how many neighbors chip in. It's imperfect and it mostly works, like most things in Puna.

Who Lives Here

Papaya and tropical-flower farmers who've been here forty years. Retirees stretching a pension further than the mainland allows. Remote workers on Starlink (which changed everything out here, frankly). Homesteaders, artists, and a respectable number of people who just wanted the neighbors far enough away. It's live-and-let-live to a degree that surprises mainlanders — the unofficial subdivision motto is "I didn't see anything."

The Practical Off-Grid Rundown

ThingHow It Works Here
WaterRoof catchment + tank; county spigots in town for backup
PowerSolar + batteries for most; HELCO on some perimeter roads
InternetStarlink (excellent), fixed wireless, or cellular
SewerIndividual septic or approved cesspool conversion
TrashCounty transfer station in Kea'au — free, and a social scene
Property taxAg rates — commonly $150–400/yr on vacant lots
The area guide question we get most: "Is it safe?" Puna has the same honest answer as anywhere rural — property crime on unattended lots exists (don't leave a generator sitting out), violent crime is rare, and your dogs and your neighbors are your security system. Get to know both.