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Kailua HI Homes for Sale – Windward Beach Town Living Near Kailua Beach Park

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Homes for sale in Kailua pull in homebuyers who want Windward Oʻahu life that feels lived-in—beach mornings at Kailua Beach Park, quick runs through Kailua Town, and those familiar routes on Kailua Rd and Oneawa St that shape your normal week. If you commute or head into town often, the real decision is usually Pali Hwy vs H-3, and that choice matters more than people expect once you’re doing it in real time. In areas like Enchanted Lake (Kaʻelepulu) and the streets closer to Kalama Beach Park, you’ll see a mix of classic single-family homes and updated interiors, with setups that actually match the lifestyle here—lanai space that gets used, rinse-off spots after the beach, and airflow that makes the trade winds feel like part of the house. Kailua’s draw is that it still feels like a neighborhood first, with the ocean close enough to shape your days without turning everything into a “special occasion.” Scroll the listings below and watch for what holds up in person: parking and driveway reality, wind exposure, and how close you truly are to the parts of Kailua you’ll use on a weekday.

Latest Homes for Sale in Kailua, HI

98 Properties Found
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Current Real Estate Statistics for Homes in Kailua, HI

98
Homes Listed
25
Avg. Days on Site
$1,310
Avg. $ / Sq.Ft.
$4,275,233
Med. List Price

Kailua real estate overview

Quick scan

What living in Kailua feels like on a normal week

Read this once, then click a few listings below and picture your actual weekdays—school run, groceries, a quick beach stop, and back home.
Daily-life center

Kailua Town is the “grab it and go” hub

Most weeks naturally orbit around Kailua Town Center (609 Kailua Rd) and the streets nearby—coffee, pharmacy runs, groceries, and the kind of errands you want to handle quickly. If you’re picturing a walkable, easy-feeling routine, this part of Kailua is where it usually clicks.

Weeknight vibe

Early mornings and earlier evenings

Kailua tends to reward people who like calm, steady days. Morning walks, a quick run, school drop-off, then back into town for what you need. Evenings usually feel relaxed—more “cook at home and reset” than “let’s stay out late.”

Beach access, realistically

Kailua Beach Park is an easy “yes” when it’s part of your routine

The best version of Kailua is when beach time feels woven into the week—before work, after school, or a low-key sunset stop. The practical move is treating it like a habit: go earlier, park with intention, and keep a simple backup plan (walk, bike, or quick drop-off) for busier days.

Small detail that helps
Kailua Beach Park has nightly closure hours—good to know if you’re planning evening walks or a last stop after dinner.
A very Kailua habit

Thursday farmers market makes the week feel local fast

Want a simple “can I see myself here?” test? On Thursday (4–7 pm), swing through the Kailua Farmers’ Market at 609 Kailua Rd, then decide dinner on the way home. It’s one of those small weekly routines that makes Kailua feel connected.

Property snapshot

What Kailua homes tend to be like, and what to notice early

The goal is a good fit—something that supports your week, not just a listing photo you like.
Home types

Single-family is the main lane here

Kailua is known for single-family homes, with condos and townhomes in specific pockets. When you’re browsing, focus on how the home “lives” day to day—parking, storage, and an easy indoor/outdoor setup matter more than people expect.

Tour checklist

Airflow and shade are real features

Comfort on Oʻahu often shows up in small, obvious things during a tour—cross-breeze, where the afternoon sun hits, and whether the yard is actually usable. If a place feels comfortable without you “working around it,” that’s a strong sign.

Coastal upkeep

Near-water living: look closer, then feel good about it

If you’re closer to the shoreline, it’s smart to check condition and materials—windows, exterior hardware, anything metal outside. It’s not a red flag; it’s just normal ownership here, and the right home will show pride of care.

Buyer-friendly mindset

The best Kailua purchase usually feels “easy to keep”

A home that’s simple to live in tends to win here. Comfortable airflow, practical parking, and a layout that makes everyday life feel smooth. When a house supports the week, the whole buying experience tends to feel lighter.

Fast “fit” questions
  • Can you picture a normal weekday here—school drop-off, groceries, dinner?
  • Where do guests park without stress?
  • Does it feel cool and bright at the same time?
Verify by address

Quick confirmations that make buying in Kailua feel simple

These are confidence checks—fast answers up front so the rest of the process stays smooth.
Flood & drainage

Check flood zones early

Some Kailua pockets sit closer to low-lying areas, including around Kawainui Marsh. A quick flood-zone check helps you ask better questions during inspection and keeps surprises off the table.

Open Hawaii Flood Hazard Assessment Tool
Coastal awareness

Know your tsunami evacuation zone

This is a “check it once and file it” item. If you’re buying closer to the shoreline, confirm the zone for your address so you feel prepared—not worried.

Check NOAA Tsunami Evacuation Map
Permits & additions

Verify permits before you assume

You’ll see homes with added rooms, covered lanais, or reworked layouts. Verifying permits early makes the rest of your inspections, appraisal, and insurance conversations feel cleaner.

Use Honolulu DPP Permit Search
Parks & routines

Check park closure hours once

If you’re planning evening walks or quick after-dinner beach stops, it helps to know the posted closure hours for places you’ll use often, like Kailua Beach Park and Kalama Beach Park.

Local context

Kawainui Marsh awareness

Kawainui isn’t just “a marsh on a map.” It’s a defining part of Kailua’s landscape, and understanding where it sits helps you interpret drainage and street-to-street differences after heavy rain.

DLNR Kawainui Marsh Overview
Who this tends to fit best

The kind of homebuyer who usually feels at home in Kailua

This isn’t about “right” or “wrong.” It’s about choosing a place that supports your week in a way that feels natural.
Weekday ease

You like routines that stay simple

Kailua tends to click for people who want a steady weekday flow—errands that don’t take all day, a quick coffee stop, and a neighborhood that feels calm once you’re home. If your ideal week has fewer “big plans” and more easy wins, you’ll probably get the appeal.

Outdoors built in

You want beach time to feel normal

People who love Kailua usually aren’t saving the shoreline for vacations—they’re fitting it into regular life. A morning walk at Kailua Beach Park, an after-school stop at Kalama Beach Park, or a quick sunset reset when the week feels long.

Community cues

You like “see you there” habits

Kailua feels especially right if you enjoy small, repeatable community moments—like making Thursday farmers market at Kailua Town Center (609 Kailua Rd) part of your week, or bumping into familiar faces when you’re out grabbing what you need.

Home comfort

You notice how a home feels, not just how it looks

Kailua homebuyers who end up happiest tend to care about livability—good airflow, a comfortable lanai, practical parking, and a layout that makes daily life easy. It’s the kind of place where a house that “breathes” can matter as much as the finishes.

Quick self-check

Try this before you get attached to a listing

If you can picture a normal week using Kailua Town Center for errands, and you like the idea of a simple beach routine at Kailua Beach Park or Kalama Beach Park, you’re already thinking like someone who tends to enjoy living here.

Two easy real-world tests
  • Do one weekday drive at your actual commute time, not “best case.”
  • Run a simple errand loop: groceries + one stop in town, then home—see if it feels easy.

Kailua daily life starts with a Windward routine, not a Honolulu routine

If you’re homebuying in Kailua, it helps to picture your “normal week” through Windward eyes. You’ll hear people talk mauka/makai like it’s second nature, and it actually matters—because your shortcuts, school routes, and beach stops all change depending on where you land. Real estate here isn’t just about the house; it’s about how easily you move between home, town, and the water without turning everything into a mission.

Small local habit
“Pau hana” in Kailua often means a quick stop in town, then straight home—no need to make it a big deal, just easy.
Street names you’ll learn fast
Kailua Rd, Kuulei Rd, Oneawa St, Hamakua Dr, and Kawailoa Rd show up in everyday routes and listing descriptions.

Getting around: Pali, Likelike, and H-3 each feel different on a workday

A lot of Kailua real estate shoppers are balancing lifestyle with commute. The easiest way to keep the buying process positive is to run one realistic drive at your actual time—school drop-off timing, work start time, whatever you live by. Pali (Hwy 61), Likelike (Hwy 63), and H-3 can each make sense depending on where you’re headed, but they don’t “feel” the same in real life. Do one test run and you’ll stop guessing.

Map it once

Kailua is one of those places where your commute route is part of your homebuying decision. Pull up a map for any listing you like and check these three “real-world” routes—then pick the one you’d actually use most days.

Pali (Hwy 61)
Often the “straight shot” feel into town. If your weekday life touches Downtown or Kakaʻako, this is usually the first route people test.
Likelike (Hwy 63)
A common option if you’re aiming toward Airport timing or you want another way over the mountains for your workday loop.
H-3
The “to the other side” route—handy if your regular life pulls toward Pearl Harbor, Aiea, or Kapolei more than town.
Buyer-friendly approach

Keep it simple: pick one listing you like, then map a “weekday loop” from that address—home → school → town errand → home. When the loop feels easy, the real estate decision usually feels easier too.

Where people actually spend time: town food, beach snacks, and park meetups

Kailua has a real “regulars” culture. You’ll see it at places like Cinnamon’s when it’s busy, at Kalapawai when you want something quick near the beach, and at Island Snow when you’re doing a small treat stop. For practical shopping, a lot of week-to-week life runs through Foodland Farms, Whole Foods Market (Kailua), and Target—not glamorous, but very real for day-to-day.

Weekend classic
If you’re the “early start” type, Kaiwa Ridge (Lanikai Pillbox) is a common Saturday plan—people go early for a reason.
Family anchor
Kailua District Park (21 S Kainalu Dr) is the kind of place you end up using without thinking about it—games, practices, quick meetups.

The pocket feel inside Kailua: town-side, beach-side, and Enchanted Lake

One reason Kailua real estate can feel surprisingly nuanced is that the area changes street by street. Some pockets feel more town-connected, others feel quieter and more residential, and areas around Kaʻelepulu Pond (Enchanted Lake) can feel like their own little world—especially if you’re near the golf side by Mid-Pacific Country Club. None of this is “better” or “worse.” It’s just different, and it’s why short-listing by map view is so helpful.

Local landmark worth knowing

Ulupō Heiau State Historic Site sits right by the edge of Kawainui Marsh. Even if you don’t live near it, it’s one of those places that quietly explains why Kailua feels rooted and older than the shopping centers.

What to look for in Kailua real estate tours that photos don’t show

Kailua homebuying goes smoother when you pay attention to “feel” items on tour. Walk the perimeter. Stand in the living room for a minute and notice airflow. Look at shade patterns. Check where you’d store boards, strollers, or gear without cluttering the house. These are the small things that make island living feel easy once you move in—kinda the difference between “nice house” and “good daily life.”

Tour moment
Step outside to the lanai and picture a real evening—where would you sit, where does the breeze come from, and does it feel comfortable without extra effort?
Practical check
Look at parking and turn-around space like you actually live there. In Kailua, “easy parking” can be a daily quality-of-life upgrade.

Schools and community anchors: what homebuyers usually ask about first

Even if you don’t have kids, schools shape neighborhood patterns—traffic flow, after-school activity energy, and how certain pockets feel at different times of day. In Kailua, you’ll hear names like Kalaheo High School come up in real estate conversations because it’s a familiar reference point in the community.

The positive way to handle it is simple: confirm boundaries and programs for your address early, then you can shop with confidence instead of second-guessing. Same thing with parks and sports—when you know where you’ll spend your weekends, it’s easier to pick the right part of Kailua.

Where this leaves you

If Kailua sounds like your kind of pace—calm weeknights, easy town access, and the water close enough to use often—scroll into the real estate listings and start clicking based on location first. The map view will tell you more than the prettiest photos.

Cross-shopping

If you like Kailua, these are the other Oʻahu areas homebuyers usually compare

This is the “okay, but what else?” part of the search. Same island, different day-to-day setup. If one of these fits your week better, you’ll feel it pretty fast.

Windward comparison

Kailua vs Kāneʻohe

Both are Windward, but the “default week” can feel different. Kailua leans beach-routine and town convenience in the same breath—especially if you’re looking at Kailua Town, Coconut Grove, or Beachside. Kāneʻohe often feels more “valley-and-bay” in how people talk about it, with pockets that read greener or more tucked-in.

Fast way to compare
Open one listing in each area, then do the same weekday test: home → errands → home. For Kāneʻohe, start around Kāneʻohe Town, or if you want a greener feel, glance at Haʻikū.
Beach lifestyle alternative

Kailua vs Waimānalo

If you love the Windward coast but want a different day-to-day feel, Waimānalo is a common comparison. Kailua tends to feel more “town + beach in one place,” especially around Lanikai and Kawailoa. Waimānalo can feel more open and quieter in a way some people really prefer—less “pop into town,” more “home base first.”

What to check early
Compare your “must-do” errands: if you want them tightly bundled, Kailua usually wins. If you want space and a slower feel after work, Waimānalo might be the one that feels right.
Town-side coastal option

Kailua vs Kahala

This comparison usually comes up when someone loves the idea of coastal living, but wants to be closer to town energy and town-side access. Kailua feels like a true Windward home base. Kahala keeps you in Honolulu’s orbit while still feeling residential—more “town-side convenience” without going full urban.

How to choose
If your week regularly pulls you into Honolulu, Kahala may feel smoother. If your best days involve Windward mornings and a calmer “home at night” feel, Kailua often fits better.
Choose based on your week

The best choice usually shows up in your routine

If daily errands and beach time both need to feel easy, start your Kailua search around Kailua Town and Coconut Grove. If you want a quieter “water-pocket” feel, look at Enchanted Lake. And if the dream is beach-adjacent, the usual starting points are Beachside and Lanikai.

Quick compare checklist
  • Which place makes your commute feel simplest on a real workday?
  • Where do you picture your “pau hana” stop without thinking?
  • What’s your easiest beach plan—walk, quick drive, or weekend only?
  • Which area’s listings match the home style you keep saving?
FAQ

Kailua homebuying questions that come up fast (and how locals usually verify them)

Kailua real estate gets easier when you verify a few things early. These are the checks that help homebuyers feel confident without overthinking every listing.

How do I check flood zones for a specific Kailua address?
The fastest “source of truth” start is the State’s Flood Hazard Assessment Tool (FHAT). Plug in the address (or TMK if you have it) and save a screenshot for your home file. In Kailua, this is especially worth doing if a listing is near lower-lying pockets or closer to Kawainui Marsh / Enchanted Lake, where drainage and heavy-rain behavior can matter street-by-street.
How do I confirm if a Kailua home is in a tsunami evacuation zone?
Use the City’s searchable tsunami map and enter the address. It’s a quick “check once, file it away” step that keeps the buying process smooth—especially if you’re looking closer to the shoreline or you just want clear peace of mind.
How can I verify permits for additions, renovations, or an ʻohana space?
In Kailua, it’s common to see homes with added rooms, extended lanais, or other upgrades. The buyer-friendly move is to verify permits early using the City’s DPP Building Permit Search (search by address, TMK, or permit/application number). It keeps your inspection conversations and future plans for the home clean and straightforward.
How do school boundaries work in Kailua, and how do I verify for an address?
The clean way to do this is to use the Hawaiʻi DOE Find Your School tool with the exact address you’re considering. Even if schools aren’t your top priority, boundaries and programs can shape daily life—morning traffic, after-school routines, and where families tend to cluster.
Are there park closure hours in Kailua (like Kailua Beach Park or Kalama)?
Yes—closure hours can apply to specific facilities and parking lots, and it’s worth checking if you’re picturing evening beach walks or quick late stops. The City posts a park-by-park list. It’s the kind of small detail that makes day-to-day routines feel smoother once you know it.
What should I pay attention to on a Kailua home tour that photos don’t show?
In Kailua, “livability” shows up in the feel: airflow (cross-breeze), shade (where the afternoon sun hits), and everyday storage (boards, beach gear, strollers, tools). Take one quiet minute in the living area and then on the lanai—if it feels comfortable without fighting it, that’s usually a very good sign for Windward living.
What’s the best way to test the commute from Kailua before you buy?
Do one “real-life” drive at your actual time—school drop-off timing, work start time, or whatever your week revolves around. From Kailua, homebuyers often compare the feel of the main routes into town—Pali (H-61), Likelike (H-63), and H-3—because each can make sense depending on your destination. One test run usually replaces a lot of guesswork.
Are there condos/townhomes in Kailua, and what’s worth checking early?
Yes—Kailua has pockets where townhomes/condos are part of the mix. The “easy win” checks early are: parking (assigned vs guest), pet rules, what utilities are included, and how the community handles maintenance/reserves. If it feels simple to live with—coming home, carrying groceries, hosting a friend—those practical pieces usually matter more than the listing photos.
Good next step

Once these basics feel clear, scroll into the Kailua real estate listings and click by location first. The map view will usually tell you more about “fit” than the prettiest interior photo.