Honolulu – Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks

REVIEW · HONOLULU

Honolulu – Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks

  • 4.89 reviews
  • From $229
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Operated by Hawaii Travel Group Inc. · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.8 (9)Price from$229Operated byHawaii Travel Group Inc.Book viaGetYourGuide

Five-0 fans get real house access. This 4-hour Honolulu tour walks you through key filming spots, including the McGarrett estate at the Bayer Estate, and pairs the show look with the real deal.

I especially like the human scale: a small group capped at 10 and a live guide who can talk story beats without turning it into a lecture. In the best groups, guides such as Matt, and the tour’s Bruce, share how scenes were staged and why certain spots keep showing up.

One thing to plan for is that it is not suitable for wheelchair users, so consider alternative Oahu options if mobility needs are part of your day.

Quick hits: what makes this Five-0 tour worth your time

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - Quick hits: what makes this Five-0 tour worth your time

  • Exclusive access to McGarrett’s House (Bayer Estate): This is the big-ticket stop, with time inside the home tied to the show.
  • Photo moments at the Five-0 chairs: Easy, fun, and genuinely tied to the series look.
  • Real-world comparisons: You see how the actual property differs from the on-screen version.
  • Local Hawaiian snacks by the ocean: You’re not just driving past locations; you get a break at a scenic spot.
  • Show connections beyond the set: In some groups, people have chatted with Shawn Garnett (Flippa) and even met or heard from folks connected to the show’s early days.

Why Honolulu Five-0 locations hit different with a guide

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - Why Honolulu Five-0 locations hit different with a guide
A lot of TV filming sites are just quick photo stops. This tour aims for more than that by explaining what you’re looking at and how it turned into Five-0 on screen.

I like the approach here because it respects your time. You cover a handful of important locations in a tight 4 hours, and the stops connect into a story of where the show found its Honolulu feeling.

And since it’s capped at 10 people, you’re not shouting over a busload of noise. That matters when you want to actually hear the behind-the-scenes stuff.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Honolulu

The opening run: Honolulu Financial District and the show’s mood

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - The opening run: Honolulu Financial District and the show’s mood
You start in Honolulu’s Financial District, which is one of those areas that always looks a bit cinematic even when it’s not. The tour uses that as a springboard for the show’s style: sharp angles, fast pacing, and scenes that feel like they could cut into the episode at any second.

This first leg is more than getting you from A to B. It sets expectations for what kind of street-level details you’ll be watching for later, like why certain areas look busy on screen even if they aren’t.

If you’re a fan who catches yourself pausing at backgrounds on rewatch, this part is satisfying because it teaches you what to pay attention to.

McGarrett’s House at the Bayer Estate: the exclusive moment

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - McGarrett’s House at the Bayer Estate: the exclusive moment
Let’s be honest: the draw is McGarrett’s House. This tour is built around exclusive access to the Bayer Estate property, including time inside.

What makes this stop stand out is the way it handles the real-vs-set comparison. You’re shown differences between the actual home layout and how it appears in the series. That kind of context turns a simple visit into something you remember, because you start seeing production choices instead of just admiring a famous façade.

You’ll also get the benefit of a guide who can point out why certain angles work on camera, and what the show changed for effect. That’s the kind of practical storytelling that feels made for fans.

In past experiences, visitors have also shared that they were able to chat with the house owner and the tour’s Bruce at the property. That personal touch is a big part of why this tour feels different from a standard sightseeing run.

Local Hawaiian snacks and oceanfront downtime at the estate

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - Local Hawaiian snacks and oceanfront downtime at the estate
After the more intense house walk-through, the tour shifts gears. You get local Hawaiian snacks at the Bayer Estate and time to relax by the oceanfront setting.

This isn’t just a break to keep everyone calm. It gives your brain time to absorb what you’ve seen, then links it back to the broader Honolulu atmosphere the show uses so well. You’re not racing the whole time.

Also, since the tour is only 4 hours long, having a snack stop prevents the day from feeling like pure transport. It’s one of those smart pacing choices that makes the whole experience feel smoother.

Taking a seat in the Five-0 chairs and grabbing the real photos

The tour includes a chance to sit in the famous Five-0 chairs, which is exactly the kind of thing that makes your camera happy. But the real value is that it’s not random.

You’re placed there as part of the show’s visual language. It’s the moment where you can connect your memory of episodes to a real location, with the guide pointing out what to notice so the photos feel like more than just a souvenir.

Bring a phone or camera you’re comfortable using on a travel day, because this is one of those times you’ll want clean pictures. If the lighting is bright, try stepping a few feet to reduce glare.

King Kamehameha Statue and Honolulu context beyond the show

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - King Kamehameha Statue and Honolulu context beyond the show
A good TV tour doesn’t only chase set pieces. It also helps you understand the city outside the episode.

You’ll see the King Kamehameha Statue, which anchors the tour in Honolulu’s bigger story. That matters because Five-0 plays with local identity, and it’s easier to appreciate that when you can place it in real landmarks rather than only in backdrops.

This stop also helps you reset your eyes after the house details. Instead of focusing on doorways and angles, you get a broader view of the city’s scale and presence.

Hawaii Five-0 Headquarters: the stop fans talk about

Another key location on this tour is Hawaii Five-0 Headquarters. It’s the kind of stop where the show’s iconography becomes physical, and you can see how the series turns a specific setting into shorthand for the action.

Even if you’re not a hardcore superfan, you’ll get what this location represents fast. The guide’s job here is to connect the look you remember to how the place functions in the story.

And since your group is small, you’re more likely to move around comfortably and get the photos you want without feeling rushed or blocked.

The small-group format and guides like Matt and Bruce

Honolulu - Exclusive Hawaii Five-0 TV Show Tour with Snacks - The small-group format and guides like Matt and Bruce
A capped group of 10 changes the tone. You can ask questions without feeling like you’re holding up a line, and the guide can slow down when you’re clearly paying attention.

From the experiences described in this tour’s feedback, guides like Matt tend to keep things humorous and upbeat while staying grounded in real place details. The tour’s Bruce has also shown up in people’s stories as a central figure behind the scenes of how the experience runs.

That combination matters. You get both fan energy and practical guidance, so the tour doesn’t drift into vague references. It stays anchored to what’s in front of you.

Cast spotting: possible, never guaranteed

One of the fun promises is that you might even run into a cast member. It’s not guaranteed, but that possibility adds a layer of excitement without adding pressure.

In some past groups, visitors have reported conversations with Shawn Garnett (Flippa) at the house. Other stories include meeting or hearing from people tied to the show’s earlier days, like Dennis Chinn through connections connected to the original series.

So here’s the honest mindset to bring: treat cast encounters as a bonus. The real value is the exclusive access and the behind-the-scenes context you get regardless.

Who this tour is best for (and who might want something else)

This tour fits you best if:

  • You love Hawaii Five-0 and want the locations to feel real, not just visited.
  • You enjoy photo moments but also care about why a place looks the way it does on screen.
  • You like small-group tours with a live guide and time to actually talk.

It may not be the best fit if:

  • You’re looking for a wide-ranging Oahu highlights trip in one day. This is focused on Five-0 locations, not beaches, hikes, and museums.
  • Your schedule needs a fully accessible route, since it isn’t suitable for wheelchair users.

If you’re traveling with mixed interests, you may want to ask yourself whether the show is a shared love. It helps a lot.

Price and value: is $229 per person reasonable?

At $229 per person for 4 hours, this isn’t a bargain. But it also isn’t priced like a generic city tour.

The value argument is simple: you’re paying for exclusive access to McGarrett’s House plus local snacks and a structured route to major show locations. Small group size (limited to 10) also pushes costs up, but it’s the reason the experience feels personal.

If you’d normally pay for entry to multiple attractions and still spend time hunting down filming locations yourself, this can feel like a smarter use of limited vacation hours. You don’t need to guess which exact angles matter or where the key spots are.

Think of it like this: you’re not just buying sightseeing. You’re buying curated show context and a rare door-opening moment at the Bayer Estate.

Practical tips to get the most out of your 4 hours

A few things will help you enjoy the day more, without turning it into work.

  • Wear comfortable shoes, because house and filming-site stops usually involve walking and standing for photos.
  • Charge your devices early. The chair photo stop and the estate location are the times you’ll wish your battery was 100%.
  • If you’re a major fan, make a mental list of your top 3 episodes. The guide’s explanations will land harder when you can connect them to something you remember.

Should you book this Honolulu Hawaii Five-0 tour?

If Hawaii Five-0 is your kind of travel obsession, I’d lean yes. The standout reason is exclusive access to McGarrett’s House plus real set-to-home comparisons, and it’s wrapped in a small-group experience with local snacks and major filming landmarks like Five-0 Headquarters and the King Kamehameha Statue.

If you’re a casual viewer and just want a taste, you might decide to spend your time on a different kind of Honolulu day. But even then, the Bayer Estate access is the sort of thing you won’t replace with a self-guided photo run.

This is a tight, fan-focused 4 hours. Book it when you want the show to feel tangible.

FAQ

Is this a guided tour or self-guided?

It’s a live tour with an English-speaking guide.

How long is the tour?

The tour lasts 4 hours.

How big is the group?

The group is small, limited to 10 participants.

What’s the main attraction at Bayer Estate?

You get exclusive access to McGarrett’s House (Bayer Estate), including time inside and comparisons between the real house and the set.

Are local Hawaiian snacks included?

Yes. Local Hawaiian snacks are included at the Bayer Estate stop.

What filming locations does the tour include besides the estate?

The tour includes key filming locations such as the King Kamehameha Statue and Hawaii Five-0 Headquarters, plus other notable show spots in Honolulu.

Can I take photos during the tour?

Yes. You can sit in the famous Five-0 chairs and take photos at the stops.

Is meeting a cast member guaranteed?

No. The tour notes that meeting a cast member is not guaranteed, though surprises can happen.

Is the tour wheelchair accessible?

No. It is not suitable for wheelchair users.

What are the cancellation and payment options?

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and the listing offers a reserve now & pay later option.

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