REVIEW · OAHU
Honolulu Honeymoon Airport Lei Greeting
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Hawaii Flower Lei · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Aloha hits different when it comes with your name. This Honolulu honeymoon airport lei greeting turns the first minutes after landing into a calm, romantic welcome with a fresh lei and a greeter waiting at the right spot. I especially love the customized welcome sign and the chance to pick a special lei for each person. One thing to keep in mind: it’s a short stop, so if you’re hoping for more than a greeting, a couple photos, and a lei, you may feel the time is tight.
You’ll meet your greeter right at Honolulu International Airport (HNL), at your arrival gate/baggage area, and they handle the face-to-face part so you can focus on getting your trip started. The vibe is simple and very “first day in Hawaii”: warm aloha, traditional presentation, and a smooth handoff to the next step of your journey.
The experience is designed for couples and romantic trips, and it’s priced per group (up to 2 people). It’s also private and wheelchair accessible, which matters if you want a calm, one-on-one-style arrival instead of navigating the airport crowd.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you book
- First Steps at HNL: The Lei Greeting at Baggage Claim in 20 Minutes
- What Makes the Lei Moment Special: Choice, Presentation, and the Sign
- Flight Delays and Arrival Confusion: The Reality at HNL
- Price and Value: What $78 Gets You (and What It Doesn’t)
- Comfortable, Private, and Wheelchair Accessible
- How to Make This Feel Like a Special Arrival (Not Just Another Stop)
- Who This Airport Lei Greeting Is Best For
- Should You Book the Honolulu Honeymoon Airport Lei Greeting?
- FAQ
- Where does the greeting take place?
- How long does the Honolulu airport lei greeting last?
- What is included in the price?
- Is transportation included?
- How much does it cost?
- Is there a private group option?
- What language does the greeter speak?
- Is it wheelchair accessible?
- What are the cancellation terms?
Key points to know before you book
- Personalized welcome sign right at the moment you’re most stressed
- Fresh lei greeting with a choice for each person
- Greeter coordinated with your flight arrival to reduce the wait
- 20 minutes total, so it’s fast, not a long tour
- No transportation included, meaning you’ll handle your ride after the lei moment
First Steps at HNL: The Lei Greeting at Baggage Claim in 20 Minutes

This is an airport-welcome experience, not a tour. That’s good news if what you want is a meaningful start without adding more logistics to your arrival day. The whole interaction is built around one main moment: when you reach baggage claim after you land.
Here’s how it typically plays out. As you move through arrivals, you’ll come up on the baggage carousel. Your greeter is there with a warm greeting and a sign meant for your group. Then you select your leis in advance (or at least choose a style that fits the experience), and the greeter presents them in a traditional Hawaiian way.
From there, you can take photos right away. The experience is explicitly set up for capturing the moment on your own phone, which is smart: it avoids the awkward “wait while someone figures out their camera” problem. In plain terms, this is about getting your island trip started with fewer moving parts and more “this is really happening” feeling.
The time window is about 20 minutes, which means the welcome is designed to be efficient. If your baggage takes a long time, the greeter is still trying to make the meeting smooth—but the clock is always going to be based on the total experience duration.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Oahu.
What Makes the Lei Moment Special: Choice, Presentation, and the Sign

The biggest quality jump here is how clearly the greeting is tailored to your group. You’re not just handed any lei and waved off. You’re meant to choose a special lei for each person, and that small detail is what turns it from a novelty into a real memory.
The greeter also brings a personalized welcome sign, which sounds simple but is actually the whole point in an airport. It’s the visual confirmation that you’ve found the right person at the right time, especially when airports can be chaotic and signage is easy to miss.
In reviews, people talk about leis that smell incredible and look beautiful. That matters more than you might expect. A lei is not just decoration. It’s an immediate sensory moment—fragrance, color, and the feel of something Hawaiian before you even leave the terminal. One honeymoon-focused highlight involved a greeter named Glenn, who went above and beyond for a son and bride, and that personal attention is exactly what this experience is trying to deliver.
One small caution: in a couple of less-favorable experiences, the issue wasn’t the lei itself so much as the overall length and how “surprise” expectations played out. If you’re the kind of couple who wants a longer, more staged arrival moment, treat this as a quick, meaningful greeting rather than a full cinematic welcome.
Flight Delays and Arrival Confusion: The Reality at HNL

Airports run on chaos. Flights run late. Bags can arrive out of sync. So the question isn’t whether delays happen; it’s whether the greeting can handle them.
The good sign here is that the provider coordinates with flight arrival time. You should plan for this in a practical way: when your flight lands, the greeter should adjust so they’re meeting you at the moment you actually arrive at baggage claim.
There are also examples where the greeter sent a message with directions ahead of time, and another where flight delay concerns were handled by communication about tracking flight details. That’s the difference between a greeting that feels like support and a greeting that feels like another thing you have to solve.
Still, I’ll be honest about the risk. One review complained about being hard to find at first and said the company tried to correct timing issues during an early or confusion situation. That’s the downside of any airport pickup: if your plan doesn’t match the real movement of your arrival, you can feel like you’ve lost control of the surprise. The fix is simple: when you get arrival instructions, use them immediately. Don’t wait for the “baggage will probably be here soon” feeling. Go look, confirm, and get the welcome rolling.
Price and Value: What $78 Gets You (and What It Doesn’t)

Let’s talk value, because $78 can feel either very reasonable or a bit steep depending on what you want from your arrival.
This is priced at $78 per group up to 2 for an experience lasting about 20 minutes. That means you’re paying for a dedicated person to meet you, manage the greeting flow, and bring the lei moment to you at the correct place. You’re also paying for reduced stress. In Hawaii, on day one, stress is expensive in energy and mood.
So here’s the value math I’d use:
- If you hate hunting for staff in a busy airport, the price buys you clarity and calm.
- If you love the idea of a romantic first act—fresh lei, a welcome sign, quick photos—the price buys emotion and convenience.
- If you’re expecting a long interaction, a guided story about Hawaiian traditions, or an extended stop, you might judge it as overpriced because it’s intentionally short.
One critical review essentially said the greeter had very limited time and suggested there was no real added value beyond a short chat and offering something you could already find nearby. That’s a fair perspective if your expectations were more like an experience, not an airport welcome.
My advice: treat it as a “start-the-trip ritual,” not a sightseeing product. If you want your money to go into a full half-day activity later, that can make sense. If you want the arrival day to feel personal and effortless, this price often lands right.
Comfortable, Private, and Wheelchair Accessible
This greeting is private—meaning it’s not a shared group shuffle with dozens of people. That’s a big deal at an airport, where waiting around is already uncomfortable. A private setup gives you the feeling that it’s truly about you two, which is exactly what honeymooners tend to want.
It’s also wheelchair accessible, which is important at HNL where you’re moving through different zones and surfaces quickly after a flight. Since this is at baggage claim, you’ll still be dealing with normal airport terrain, but having an accessible-friendly greeter setup helps reduce extra friction.
Language is English, so you’ll have clear communication without needing to guess. The greeter is described as an English host/greeter, so you won’t be stuck decoding directions.
One more practical note: transportation is not included. So you’re still responsible for getting from HNL to your hotel, rental car, or whatever you’ve booked next. That’s not a flaw; it’s just how the experience is structured. Plan your ride separately so you’re not scrambling right after the lei moment.
How to Make This Feel Like a Special Arrival (Not Just Another Stop)

If you want this to land as a true honeymoon highlight, you’ll get the best result by doing a little prep and managing your expectations.
First, be ready at the right time. Since the greeting centers on baggage claim, your best move is to not hang back while you’re still deciding where to stand. As soon as you’re at the baggage area, keep your eyes up for the sign.
Second, decide how you’ll handle photos. The experience is built for capturing the moment on your phone, so think about what you want before you’re standing there. For example, if you want both of you in the frame with the lei fully visible, tell the greeter where you want to stand rather than moving after the photo is supposed to happen.
Third, wear or bring something that works with a lei. You’ll want your lei to look good for photos, and you’ll want it to stay comfortable. A lei is best treated like a delicate accessory you’ll want to keep for the start of the trip.
Finally, keep the surprise intact if that’s your goal. One less-favorable review suggested the surprise felt spoiled due to meeting timing confusion. You can reduce that risk by using any flight-tracking or arrival messages you receive and by following the exact guidance when you land. Surprise depends on timing.
Who This Airport Lei Greeting Is Best For
This experience is strongest for couples who want a romantic start without extra effort.
You’ll likely love it if:
- You’re on a honeymoon or anniversary trip
- You want a meaningful Hawaiian tradition right after landing
- You value stress reduction at the airport more than a long curated activity
- You like taking quick photos immediately while the moment is fresh
It may not be your best choice if:
- You want guided storytelling and a longer cultural program
- You’re looking for transportation included (it isn’t)
- You want a longer on-the-ground visit rather than a short welcome
It also fits well for anyone who likes the idea of a dedicated greeter with a sign, especially if your travel party gets anxious when airports are crowded.
Should You Book the Honolulu Honeymoon Airport Lei Greeting?
My take: book this if you want your arrival to feel personal, Hawaiian, and low-stress, and you’re comfortable with the fact that it’s a short 20-minute greeting.
If the idea of searching for staff while jet-lagged sounds miserable, this is exactly the kind of service that pays off. The fresh lei, the tradition-forward presentation, and the personalized welcome sign are the core reasons people rate this highly. Reviews also highlight how greeters handled delayed flights with communication, and how the lei itself can be memorable because it smells good and looks great.
If you’re the type who expects a longer experience or you’re counting on it to solve transport, you might feel disappointed. Read it as: a beautiful landing moment, not a replacement for a sightseeing day.
FAQ
Where does the greeting take place?
Your greeter meets you at Honolulu International Airport (HNL) at your arrival gate/baggage claim area.
How long does the Honolulu airport lei greeting last?
The experience is about 20 minutes.
What is included in the price?
It includes a lei greeting at baggage claim.
Is transportation included?
No. Transportation is not included.
How much does it cost?
It’s $78 per group up to 2.
Is there a private group option?
Yes. It’s a private group.
What language does the greeter speak?
The host/greeter communicates in English.
Is it wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the experience is wheelchair accessible.
What are the cancellation terms?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























