REVIEW · HONOLULU
Tandem Skydiving with GoJump in Hawaii
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The plane ride ends in a grin. GoJump Hawaii takes you up to 14,000 feet for a tandem jump over Oahu’s North Shore, with about a 50-second freefall and then a slow, view-filled parachute glide.
What I like most is how much they focus on keeping it calm and clear, even if your stomach is doing cartwheels. And I really appreciate the organized, safety-first way they handle timing, including delays when conditions aren’t right.
One thing to think about: you’ll likely spend extra for photo/video add-ons, and if the airfield is restricted or rescheduled (rare, but it happens), your jump time may shift.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at a Glance
- 14,000 Feet and That Weightless Moment You’ll Remember
- The North Shore Views: Ocean, Coastline, and a Slow Canopy Glide
- Before the Jump: Briefing, Tandem Instructors, and a Mostly Painless Flow
- Waikiki Pickup and Getting to the Airfield Without Stress
- Photo and Video Packages: Worth It, But Know What You’re Paying For
- Safety and Delays: Why They Might Reschedule You (And Why That Can Be Good)
- Price and Value: Is $219 a Fair Deal in Honolulu?
- Who Should Book This Experience (and Who Might Reconsider)
- Should You Book GoJump Hawaii?
- FAQ
- What height is the tandem jump from?
- How long is the freefall before the parachute opens?
- Where in Hawaii does this happen?
- How long does the whole experience take?
- Is pickup from Waikiki available?
- Does this include photo and video?
- Are there instructors for tandem jumps?
- How many people are in the group?
- What’s the cancellation approach if weather causes problems?
Key Highlights at a Glance

- Hawaii’s highest tandem jump (14,000 feet)
- About 50 seconds of freefall before the parachute opens
- North Shore ocean views from a truly different angle
- Optional shuttle from Waikiki to reduce stress
- Photo/video packages you can buy on site, including an outside-video option
14,000 Feet and That Weightless Moment You’ll Remember

Let’s start with the part you came for: the feeling. This tandem jump is done from 14,000 feet, and the freefall lasts about 50 seconds before the parachute deploys. That mix matters. You get the initial shock of stepping into the air, then a longer run where your brain finally catches up and you can actually enjoy it.
In the reviews, the most common theme isn’t just thrill. It’s control. People talk about instructors who are funny, clear, and good at keeping nerves from running the show. One review calls out Derek D and Marissa as fantastic to work with, and another mentions Debby as an instructor who made the whole thing feel unforgettable in the best way. That matters for first-timers. If you can keep your breathing even half as steady as your fear, everything gets better fast.
And here’s the practical angle: the higher jump changes your view and your timing. You’re not rushing through seconds. You’re seeing the coastline and ocean from above long enough to register what you’re looking at.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Honolulu.
The North Shore Views: Ocean, Coastline, and a Slow Canopy Glide

Oahu’s North Shore has a specific kind of beauty—water that looks close enough to touch and a shoreline that changes fast as you move overhead. From the air, it becomes a map you can watch happen in real time.
Once the parachute opens, the vibe shifts from chaos to calm. You stop blasting through the air and start gliding with the wind on your face (people mention that breeze feeling). That’s when you really get to look. You can take in the big ocean views, surf-area textures, and coastline angles you never see from the beach or the road.
A neat detail from the reviews: people love the glide-down portion as much as the freefall. It’s often described as beautiful, relaxing, and oddly fun even if the start is intense.
If you care about photos, this is also the phase where your images tend to be the most dramatic—because you’re moving slower and the view stays visible.
Before the Jump: Briefing, Tandem Instructors, and a Mostly Painless Flow
This experience is set up as a guided tandem jump. That’s good news for you. You’re not out there doing everything alone while your brain tries to learn how legs work in the sky.
What helps most, based on the reviews, is the vibe at the briefing and right before takeoff. People specifically mention instructors being informative and keeping them positive. One first-timer says the process felt painless and organized, and another says the instructor kept them from feeling nervous.
Here’s how you can use that in your planning: arrive ready to listen. Don’t show up expecting to wing it mentally. If you keep your focus on the instructions and the fact that your instructor handles the big steps, you’ll feel safer faster—and you’ll enjoy the experience more.
One more real-world tip: bring a willingness to wait. A review praising GoJump notes a delay for safety and weather decisions. The wait was about 45 minutes, not hours, but it still mattered that they chose comfort and safety over rushing through. That’s the kind of operational maturity that can make a jump feel smoother, even if you’re anxious.
Waikiki Pickup and Getting to the Airfield Without Stress

You have two logistics needs: getting to the meeting spot and not spending your whole morning fighting with transportation.
GoJump Hawaii offers pickup from Waikiki via shuttle. If you’re staying near Waikiki, that’s a big quality-of-life upgrade. One review specifically praises the Waikiki hotel pickup as painless, with a driver described as pleasant and safe.
Timing also matters. The activity window runs daily from 7:00 AM to 2:00 PM (per the operating schedule). The whole experience is about 3 hours approximately. In practice, that means you’ll want to plan your day around it, not squeeze it into a gap between beach and dinner.
Group size is also capped at a maximum of 50 travelers, which usually helps keep things from turning into a chaotic cattle-car situation. It won’t feel like a private ride, but it also won’t be a massive festival line either.
A small caution: one review mentions arriving and not finding a bus at pickup, leading to a taxi expense, then later getting help for an Uber return. That’s not the dominant theme, but it’s a reminder to build in a little patience and keep an eye on the exact pickup instructions you receive.
Photo and Video Packages: Worth It, But Know What You’re Paying For

Sky comes with proof. And GoJump sells photo and video packages on site. The idea is simple: relive the experience again and again with high-resolution images and optional video.
Reviews are enthusiastic about adding the outside video experience. One person calls it a video they’ll cherish for a lifetime, noting it costs extra. That’s a fair trade if you want something beyond shaky smartphone memories.
Still, there’s a downside to consider: delivery can be frustrating if you expect instant results. One review says they haven’t received photos or videos yet. That doesn’t automatically mean anything was wrong—just that you shouldn’t assume it’s instantly available before you leave.
Here’s how you can make this smoother:
- Decide in advance whether you want just standard photos or also the outside video.
- Plan your expectations for when you’ll get the files, not just whether you’ll buy them.
- If you’re traveling with limited time, mentally budget for the fact that the content may arrive after the day of your jump.
If you’re the type who hates spending on souvenirs, treat the photo/video packages as part of the value equation. For many people, the images turn the experience into something tangible you can show friends and family—especially because a sky moment doesn’t feel real once you land.
Safety and Delays: Why They Might Reschedule You (And Why That Can Be Good)

This is one of those activities where Mother Nature and military schedules can win.
The experience requires good weather, and if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’re offered a different date or a full refund. That’s a key safety signal. You’re not paying to gamble.
But there’s another factor mentioned in a review: rescheduling due to airspace restrictions, tied to military exercises. The guest in that case said the jump was rescheduled twice and noted it had been happening all week. That suggests you should keep a flexible mindset once you’re in Hawaii.
So what should you do with that information?
- Book with a buffer in your schedule. Don’t plan a tight itinerary where losing a morning ruins your whole trip.
- If your jump is important, consider building in extra options on your travel days.
- If you get a change, treat it as a safety and compliance reality, not a personal failure.
In other words: you’re buying access to the sky, not a guaranteed calendar appointment. GoJump’s reviews make it clear that when they delay, they frame it as safety-first, not profit-first.
Price and Value: Is $219 a Fair Deal in Honolulu?

At $219 per person, this isn’t a budget thrill. But it also isn’t a generic “try something once” experience. You’re paying for:
- a 14,000-foot tandem jump (highest in Hawaii, per the offering),
- the guidance of experienced tandem instructors,
- a structured, organized flow,
- and optional keepsake content through photo/video packages.
The value part is that you’re not just buying a moment. You’re buying an entire operation built around safety, timing decisions, and the training required to guide you through freefall.
What can affect your final cost is the add-ons. The outside video option costs extra, and photos/videos are sold on site. If you buy everything, the total spend can climb fast.
There’s also a complaint in the reviews about booking through a third party and price markup. That’s a real irritation if you care about price transparency. My practical advice is to double-check what’s included in your specific booking versus what you’ll add on later. For some people, the add-ons are the part that makes the experience feel complete—so budget accordingly.
Bottom line: if you want the highest tandem jump experience over Oahu with professional coaching and you don’t mind paying extra for a quality keepsake, $219 can feel reasonable. If you want a cheap thrill and refuse add-ons, this may feel pricey compared to other outdoor activities in Hawaii.
Who Should Book This Experience (and Who Might Reconsider)

This experience fits best if you:
- want a high-impact, memorable first-time sky moment,
- prefer tandem instruction rather than trying to do anything solo,
- like the idea of seeing Oahu’s North Shore from above,
- and want pickup convenience from Waikiki.
It also sounds great for people who get nervous at the start. Multiple reviews mention instructors helping jumpers feel calm and positive. If you’re worried about fear taking over, this is exactly the situation tandem training is designed for.
Who might reconsider? If you’re the type who hates schedule changes and refuses any plan flexibility, airspace restrictions and weather-related delays can be a bummer. But that’s not unique to GoJump; it’s part of the world you’re entering when you jump from a plane.
Also, if photos/videos are a big part of why you book, keep in mind that delivery issues show up in one review. That doesn’t mean it will happen to you, but it’s a signal to set expectations and confirm how and when content is shared.
Good to know: service animals are allowed, and most travelers can participate (the provider says so). No other personal restrictions are listed in the details you provided.
Should You Book GoJump Hawaii?
I’d book it if your trip includes Oahu’s North Shore and you want a standout adrenaline-and-views experience with serious instructors. The biggest reasons are simple: the height (14,000 feet), the about 50 seconds of freefall, and the fact that people consistently describe the process as organized, friendly, and safety-minded. Add in optional Waikiki pickup, and it becomes an easy-to-schedule “yes” on the ground.
If you do book, go in with the right mindset:
- Bring a little flexibility for weather and scheduling.
- Expect to spend extra if you want outside video or extensive photo/video packages.
- Plan your day so you’re not rushing back to other commitments right after landing.
If you want a one-time memory that feels bigger than your camera roll, this is the kind of jump that earns its bragging rights.
FAQ
What height is the tandem jump from?
The jump is from 14,000 feet.
How long is the freefall before the parachute opens?
You’ll experience about 50 seconds of freefall before the parachute deploys.
Where in Hawaii does this happen?
It’s over the North Shore of Oahu.
How long does the whole experience take?
The duration is about 3 hours.
Is pickup from Waikiki available?
A shuttle service from Waikiki to the airfield is offered for convenience.
Does this include photo and video?
Photo and video are available through photo/video packages, and high-resolution photos/videos are also available to buy on site.
Are there instructors for tandem jumps?
Yes. You’ll jump tandem with instructors, and reviews mention instructors by name such as Derek D., Marissa, and Debby.
How many people are in the group?
There’s a maximum of 50 travelers.
What’s the cancellation approach if weather causes problems?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

























