It’s a long travel day from north Alabama — there are no short routes to Hawaii — but the right airport choice makes it much smoother. Here’s how we get there, what it’ll cost, and how to hop between islands.

Hawaii is roughly 4,500 miles from Alabama. Expect one long travel day each way: a connection (or two) plus a ~6-hour Pacific crossing from the West Coast. Total door-to-door is usually 14–20 hours depending on layovers.
Hawaii is 5 hours behind Central (no daylight saving). Flying west you “gain” hours — arrive Hawaii in the afternoon/evening feeling like late night. Coming home you lose them, so we’ll plan an easy first day back.
Our preference order is Muscle Shoals → Huntsville → Birmingham → Nashville. Here’s how that holds up for a Hawaii trip specifically:
| Airport | Drive from Shoals | Hawaii routing | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| MSL — Muscle Shoals | Local | 2 connections (tiny regional first); long, fragile | ❌ Impractical for Hawaii |
| HSV — Huntsville | ~1.25 hr | 1 stop (via ATL/DFW/etc.) to Honolulu | ✅ Best balance — likely our pick |
| BHM — Birmingham | ~2 hr | 1 stop; similar to HSV | ✅ Good alternative |
| BNA — Nashville | ~2.5 hr | 1 stop; more flights, sometimes cheaper | ✅ Worth pricing |
| ATL — Atlanta (drive) | ~3.5–4 hr | Nonstop to Honolulu (Delta, seasonal) | ⭐ Consider for the nonstop |
Delta flies a nonstop ATL→HNL. Driving ~4 hours to Atlanta to skip a connection (and a second takeoff/landing) can be worth it — fewer missed-connection risks, one flight each way. We’ll compare “HSV 1-stop” vs. “drive to ATL nonstop” on price and hassle when fares open.
Your route options from north Alabama, side by side. June is peak, so book early.
| From | Routing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ATL → HNL | Nonstop (Delta) | Simplest; one flight each way |
| HSV → HNL | 1 stop | Closest airport; usually 1 connection |
| BNA → HNL | 1 stop | Most flight options; price-check first |
| BHM → HNL | 1 stop | Comparable to HSV |
| MSL → HNL | 2 stops | Not worth the extra connection |
HNL = Honolulu (Oʻahu). Other island airports: OGG (Maui), LIH (Kauaʻi), KOA (Kona) & ITO (Hilo) on the Big Island. Some mainland flights connect straight to OGG/KOA, which can save an inter-island hop.

If we visit more than one island, short flights connect them — there are no passenger ferries between the major islands (except the small Maui–Lānaʻi route).
Each hop adds cost, a packing day, and a new rental car. For a relaxed trip, one or two islands keeps island-hopping minimal. See island combos on the Islands page.
Safe snacks + GF tamari packets in the carry-on; airport/airplane GF food is unreliable. (See Food.)
Give connections real time — a missed connection to Hawaii can cost a day. Avoid the tightest layovers.
Arriving evening + 5-hour time gap = we’ll keep the first day mellow (grocery run, beach, early dinner).
If we change islands, smaller bags make the half-day transfer painless.
Book seats early so the four of us sit together on the long legs.
Hawaii is a U.S. state — domestic ID only. (REAL ID for everyone by the trip.)