Kaumana Cave Lava Tube
Walk inside a real lava tube carved by Mauna Loa's ancient flows — a raw, cool, darkly beautiful passage beneath the Big Island's volcanic landscape.
About this spectacle
Kaumana Cave is a lava tube formed by ancient volcanic flows on the slopes of Mauna Loa on Hawaiʻi Island. Visitors descend a short staircase into a fern-draped entrance skylight, then step into a world of raw volcanic rock stretching into near-total darkness. The cave splits into two tunnels — one requiring crouching through low passages, the other offering broader walking. Flashlights or headlamps reveal black basalt walls marked by drip formations, frozen lava drapes, and lava benches. The air inside is cool and damp, a striking contrast to the warmth outside. The soundscape drops to near-silence broken only by occasional dripping water. While not technically demanding, navigating uneven, jagged rock requires care. It is a visceral encounter with the forces that built the island underfoot.
When to go
Year-round
Getting there
Nearest airport: ITO. Nearest city: Hilo.
Booking options
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