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🗓️ Last Updated: Spring 2025 — Year-round availability

Horseback Riding on the Big Island, HI

The Big Island has two genuinely distinct horseback riding experiences, and they’re unlike anything else available in Hawaii. On the Hamakua Coast above Waipi’o Valley, you ride 500 acres of a traditional Hawaiian land division through coconut orchards, banana groves, and ocean cliff pastures where wild horses may join the group. In the Kohala Mountains, Na’alapa Stables takes you across 12,000 acres of a working paniolo ranch founded in 1850, with open-range riding — no nose-to-tail, trotting and cantering available — at 3,000 feet with Mauna Kea visible behind you.

If you’re searching for horseback riding near you while you’re on the Big Island, these two experiences are in different parts of the island and serve different parts of any Big Island itinerary. One important note before you book: WOH Ranch on the Hamakua Coast enforces a strict 200-pound weight limit, with riders weighed on-site and no refund if the limit is exceeded. Read that section carefully before you purchase. Na’alapa’s current limits should be confirmed directly when booking.

See the Top-Rated Big Island Horseback Rides ›

This page covers three featured horseback riding options on the Big Island of Hawaii, across two operators and two geographic zones. WOH Ranch (Waipi’o on Horseback) on the Hamakua Coast is the highest-reviewed Viator-bookable horseback experience on the Big Island, rated 4.7/5 across 435 reviews with wild horse encounters and fresh fruit from the property. Na’alapa Stables at Kahua Ranch in the Kohala Mountains offers open-range highland riding and private sunset rides on a working 12,000-acre paniolo ranch founded in 1850. If you want to explore more options, browse more horseback riding listings on the Big Island.

Why Go Horseback Riding on the Big Island

The Big Island is the largest and most geographically varied island in Hawaii, and the horseback riding here reflects that range more completely than any other island in the chain. The Hamakua Coast above Waipi’o Valley is tropical in the way that people imagine Hawaii before they get there: ocean cliffs, coconut groves, banana trees, fishponds, wildflower pastures, and a wild horse population that has lived on this land for generations. Riding through a working Ahupua’a, the traditional Hawaiian land system that organized territory from mountain to sea, is a way of experiencing how the island’s landscape actually functioned rather than how it looks from a tour van window.

The Kohala Mountains are a different Hawaii entirely. At 3,000+ feet elevation in the northwest corner of the island, the landscape is open highland pasture with panoramic views across the Pacific and back toward Mauna Kea, which is often snowcapped. Kahua Ranch, where Na’alapa Stables operates, covers 12,000 acres and has been a working cattle and sheep ranch since 1850. The paniolo tradition here is multigenerational — the guides carry a knowledge of this land and this livestock culture that comes from family history rather than equestrian training programs. And the open-range riding format, where experienced riders can trot and canter across the pastures rather than plodding nose-to-tail behind the horse in front, is genuinely unusual for Hawaii horseback operations.

The logistics for both operators are self-directed. WOH Ranch on the Hamakua Coast is 2.5 miles from the Waipi’o Valley Lookout on the North Big Island, accessible from Hilo or from the Kohala Coast resorts with appropriate drive time. Na’alapa Stables at Kahua Ranch is in the Waimea area of North Kohala, most convenient for visitors based on the Kohala Coast or in Waimea. Both book directly or via Viator, and the departure zones are far enough apart that choosing based on where you’re staying on the island is the most practical approach.

Best Places to Go Horseback Riding on the Big Island, HI

The Hamakua Coast above Waipi’o Valley is the most scenically dramatic riding terrain on the Big Island for visitors who want tropical farmland and ocean clifftop views in a single ride. The WOH Ranch trail moves through 500 acres of what is called an Ahupua’a, the traditional Hawaiian land division system that ran from the mountains to the sea, encompassing everything a community needed in between. A working coconut orchard, banana groves, fishponds, and wildflower pastures are all present along the route, and the clifftops above Waipi’o Valley open to panoramic Pacific Ocean views. The wild horses that share this land are encountered on rides unpredictably, and when they appear alongside the guided group, it’s a different kind of interaction from anything a standard tourist trail produces. Guides also offer fresh fruits picked directly from the property during the ride.

Kahua Ranch in the Kohala Mountains operates at a scale that’s difficult to fully appreciate until you’re standing in it. Twelve thousand acres of open highland pasture, with ancient Hawaiian agricultural ruins visible across the landscape, snowcapped Mauna Kea behind you, and the Kohala coastline dropping away toward the Pacific below. Na’alapa Stables’ open-range format means riders with experience can actually move through that terrain at a pace that matches it, rather than being constrained to the single-file walk that most Hawaii operations default to. For experienced riders who’ve felt limited by Hawaii’s standard trail ride format, the Na’alapa open-range ride is the specific answer to that frustration.

Riding by Experience Level on the Big Island

Both operators on this page accommodate beginners. WOH Ranch’s small group format, maximum 8 riders, gives the guides meaningful bandwidth to pay attention to each rider, and the tropical farmland terrain is manageable rather than technically demanding. The guides provide instruction throughout. Na’alapa Stables explicitly calibrates the ride to each rider’s ability — beginners stay at a comfortable walk through the highland pastures, while experienced riders get the open-range format with trotting and cantering available. That dual-capability structure is rare in Hawaii and is the main reason experienced riders specifically seek out Na’alapa when they’re visiting the Big Island. In my experience, the operations that can genuinely serve both ends of the experience spectrum in the same group are the ones that produce the most broadly positive reviews, because no one comes away feeling like the ride was calibrated to someone else.

Weight limits are a critical planning variable on the Big Island. WOH Ranch enforces a strict 200-pound limit with on-site weigh-ins, and exceeding the limit results in no participation and no refund. This is a lower weight limit than most Hawaiian horseback operations. If any rider in your group is at or near 200 pounds, contact WOH Ranch directly before purchasing. Na’alapa Stables’ weight limits should be confirmed directly when booking at naalapastables.com — their limit is generally higher, but current policy should always be confirmed rather than assumed.

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Who Should Go Horseback Riding on the Big Island

Families and first-timers who want the most reviewed Big Island trail ride

WOH Ranch is the answer here. The 435 Viator reviews at 4.7/5 give it the strongest documented track record of any horseback experience bookable on the Big Island through a major platform. The small group maximum of 8 riders gives the guides real bandwidth for each participant, and the Ahupua’a setting through coconut orchards, banana groves, and ocean cliff pastures is visually unlike anything available elsewhere on the island. The wild horse encounters are genuine rather than managed, and the fresh fruit from the property during the ride is the kind of small specific detail that earns a review from someone who wasn’t expecting it. The strict 200-pound weight limit must be confirmed before purchase — that’s the one planning variable that can derail a booking if it’s not addressed before you arrive at the ranch.

Experienced riders who want more than a walking trail

Na’alapa Stables at Kahua Ranch is the only open-range horseback operation on the Big Island where experienced riders can actually trot and canter across the land rather than following a single-file formation at a walk. If you’ve ridden before and found Hawaii trail rides limiting, Na’alapa specifically addresses that. The 12,000-acre highland ranch gives you terrain worth moving through at pace, and the paniolo guides can calibrate the ride to experienced riders rather than managing everyone at the same beginner-appropriate speed. The 2.5-hour ride option gives experienced riders enough time in the saddle for the terrain to feel substantive. For riders visiting the Big Island who want the horseback experience to feel like actual riding rather than a guided walk, Na’alapa is the one to book.

Couples and anyone planning a romantic or special occasion experience

Na’alapa’s private sunset ride at Kahua Ranch is the most cinematic romantic horseback experience on the Big Island and one of the most dramatic in all of Hawaii. Riding across open highland pasture at 3,000+ feet as the sun sets over the Pacific Ocean, with Mauna Kea behind you and the Kohala coastline dropping away below, is the kind of setting that reviewers describe in terms they don’t usually use for organized tour activities. The Paniolo Dinner add-on on select evenings extends the experience into a full ranch evening with live music, cattle roping demonstrations, and stargazing under the Kohala Mountain sky. For honeymooners, anniversary travelers, or anyone planning a day on the Big Island that’s built around a single memorable experience, the Na’alapa sunset ride is the one I’d plan the rest of the itinerary around.

First-time riders

Both operators accommodate beginners. WOH Ranch’s small group format of 8 maximum and the manageable tropical farmland terrain make it a solid starting point for first-timers who want a scenically compelling ride without technical demands. Na’alapa’s guides calibrate the pace to beginner riders while managing the more experienced members of the same group differently, which means first-timers at Kahua Ranch have space to be comfortable without feeling like they’re holding the group back. In my experience, the highland terrain at Na’alapa is actually well-suited to first-timers because the open pasture gives the guide clear sightlines to every rider in the group throughout — there’s nowhere to get into trouble that a paniolo guide can’t see and respond to quickly.

Browse more horseback riding listings on the Big Island

What to Know Before You Book Horseback Riding on the Big Island

WOH Ranch 200-pound weight limit — read this before you purchase

WOH Ranch enforces a strict 200-pound maximum weight limit with on-site weigh-ins before the ride. Exceeding this limit results in no participation and no refund. This is one of the lower weight limits in the Hawaii horseback market. If any rider in your party is at or near 200 pounds, contact WOH Ranch directly before purchasing through Viator. The no-refund policy makes this the single most important planning variable for this listing.


Na’alapa weight limits — confirm directly

Na’alapa Stables’ current weight limits should be confirmed directly at naalapastables.com when booking. Their limit is generally higher than WOH Ranch’s, but current policy should never be assumed — confirm before you reserve. This applies to all three ride formats at Na’alapa, including the private sunset ride.


Which side of the island are you staying on?

The Big Island is genuinely large, and the two operators on this page are in different areas. WOH Ranch is on the Hamakua Coast near the Waipi’o Valley Lookout in the north, convenient from Hilo but a significant drive from the Kohala Coast resorts. Na’alapa Stables is in the Waimea area of North Kohala, convenient from Kohala Coast resorts and Waimea, but a longer trip from Hilo or Kailua-Kona. Choosing based on where you’re based during your Big Island visit is the most practical approach.


Age requirements

Age minimums for both operators should be confirmed directly when booking. WOH Ranch’s small group format and manageable terrain accommodate a range of ages; confirm minimum age with the operator. Na’alapa Stables’ open-range format and highland terrain make age and experience level relevant — contact them to discuss your group before booking if you have children in the party.


Experience level

No prior riding experience is required at either operator. WOH Ranch guides manage the group throughout the 2-hour ride. Na’alapa Stables specifically calibrates the ride to each rider’s ability, with trotting and cantering available for experienced riders and a comfortable walking pace for beginners in the same group. Mention your experience level when booking Na’alapa so the guides can plan the session appropriately.


What to wear

Closed-toe shoes or boots are required at both operations. Long pants protect your legs in the saddle. The Kohala Mountain highland at 3,000+ feet is noticeably cooler than the coast, even on warm Big Island days, and the sunset ride at Na’alapa involves riding into the late afternoon temperature drop — bring a layer. The Hamakua Coast at WOH Ranch is tropical and exposed, so sunscreen is essential. Bug spray is worth applying before a WOH Ranch ride near the fishponds and fruit groves.


Na’alapa Paniolo Dinner add-on

The Paniolo Dinner at Kahua Ranch is available on select evenings and includes live music, cattle roping demonstrations, branding, and stargazing. This is a separate event from the standard trail rides and requires advance booking and availability confirmation. If the Paniolo Dinner is specifically part of your Big Island plans, contact Na’alapa directly to confirm which evenings it’s offered during your travel window before booking your flights around it.


Book ahead

WOH Ranch is flagged as likely to sell out on Viator, and the maximum group size of 8 means daily capacity is genuinely limited. Na’alapa Stables is similarly flagged, and the private sunset ride slots are the first to fill. For any Big Island horseback booking during peak Hawaii travel periods (December through April and summer), book as early as your travel dates are confirmed. The sunset and private formats at Na’alapa should be treated as the most time-sensitive bookings on this page.

Horseback Riding on the Big Island: Frequently Asked Questions


WOH Ranch enforces a strict 200-pound maximum weight limit, with riders weighed on-site before the ride. Exceeding this limit results in no participation and no refund. This is one of the lower limits in the Hawaii horseback market, so confirm it applies to your group before purchasing. Na’alapa Stables’ weight limits should be confirmed directly at naalapastables.com — their limit is generally higher, but current policy must be verified before booking. If any rider in your party is at or near these limits, contact each operator before purchasing.


No. Both operators accommodate beginners and first-time riders. WOH Ranch guides manage the group throughout the 2-hour ride across the Hamakua Coast terrain. Na’alapa Stables calibrates the pace to each rider’s ability — beginners ride at a comfortable walk while experienced riders who want to trot or canter across the Kohala highland pastures can do that in the same session. Mention your experience level when booking Na’alapa so the guides can plan accordingly.


The Big Island’s horseback riding is more geographically varied and more historically grounded than most other Hawaiian island options. WOH Ranch’s Ahupua’a ride through a traditional Hawaiian land division system with a working coconut orchard, banana groves, fishponds, and wild horse encounters is specific to the Hamakua Coast and doesn’t have a direct equivalent on the other islands. Na’alapa’s open-range format across 12,000 acres of a working ranch founded in 1850, with trotting and cantering available, is the most substantive horseback option in Hawaii for experienced riders — the scale and freedom of movement simply aren’t available elsewhere in the state at this level.


Quite possibly, yes. WOH Ranch explicitly notes that the property hosts a genuine herd of wild Hawaiian horses, and encounters with the herd during rides are a documented feature of the experience rather than a marketing claim. These are not managed or domesticated animals — they’re a wild herd that shares the land with the guided rides, and their proximity to the trail varies by day. When encounters happen, reviewers consistently describe them as one of the highlights of the ride. There’s no guarantee of a sighting on any specific departure, but the herd’s presence on the property means the possibility is real and the encounters that do happen are genuine.


The Paniolo Dinner is a separate evening event at Kahua Ranch that includes live music, cattle roping demonstrations, branding, and stargazing. Na’alapa Stables offers this on select evenings, and couples can combine a private sunset ride with the Paniolo Dinner for a full Hawaiian ranch evening. This requires advance coordination with Na’alapa directly — contact them at naalapastables.com or by phone to confirm which evenings the Paniolo Dinner is offered during your travel window, and to arrange the combination with a private sunset ride. It’s not a standard add-on that books automatically online.


Na’alapa Stables’ private sunset ride at Kahua Ranch is the strongest romantic horseback experience on the Big Island. The private format puts just the two of you with a dedicated paniolo guide across the highland pastures at golden hour, watching the sun set over the Pacific from 3,000+ feet with Mauna Kea behind you. Multiple reviewers describe the Kohala highland sunset as the most beautiful moment of their entire Hawaii trip. For a proposal, contact Na’alapa directly to discuss where on the ranch the moment should happen and what arrangements the guides can make. The Paniolo Dinner add-on on select evenings extends the experience into a full evening at the ranch.


Both operators run year-round, and the Big Island’s climate varies significantly by region. The Hamakua Coast where WOH Ranch operates is one of the wetter parts of the island, with afternoon rain possible year-round — morning departures are generally drier. The Kohala Mountains where Na’alapa operates are cooler and more temperate, with excellent riding conditions most of the year. Peak Hawaii tourism is December through April and summer; book further ahead during those windows. For the Na’alapa sunset ride specifically, the longer days of summer mean later golden-hour departures, while winter sunsets come earlier — confirm current departure timing with Na’alapa when you book.


WOH Ranch is flagged as likely to sell out on Viator, and the maximum group size of 8 riders means any given day has limited capacity. Same-week booking during peak season is unreliable. Na’alapa Stables is similarly flagged, with the private sunset ride slots the most constrained option. For the Paniolo Dinner combination, last-minute booking is not an option — that requires coordination with the ranch that takes planning time. For any Big Island horseback booking between December and April or during summer, book at least a week ahead. For sunset and private rides at Na’alapa, book as early as your travel dates allow.

Ready to Book Horseback Riding on the Big Island?

Two genuinely distinct horseback experiences on Hawaii’s largest island. WOH Ranch puts you on 500 acres of Hamakua Coast Ahupua’a farmland above Waipi’o Valley with wild horse encounters and Pacific cliff views, backed by 435 Viator reviews at 4.7/5. Na’alapa Stables gives experienced riders open-range access to 12,000 acres of a 175-year-old paniolo ranch in the Kohala Mountains, with a private sunset ride and Paniolo Dinner option that reviewers describe as the most memorable moment of their Hawaii trip. The 200-pound weight limit at WOH Ranch is strictly enforced on-site with no refund — confirm this for your group before purchasing.

WOH Ranch books via Viator. Na’alapa Stables books directly at naalapastables.com. Call Na’alapa for sunset and private ride availability.

LocalHorsebackRiding.com covers horseback riding destinations across all 50 states and Hawaii, with listings and guides for every kind of rider. If you want to explore more options on the Big Island or compare rides on other Hawaiian islands, there’s more to dig into below.

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