Grand Wailea opened in 1991 as the product of a $600 million vision that had never been attempted in Hawaii: a resort of European scale and American excess, set directly on Wailea Beach and designed to be the last word in tropical luxury for an entire category of traveller. Thirty-five years later, its $65 million art collection — Hawaii's most significant private collection, including works by Botero, Leger, Warhol, and Chagall displayed across the grounds — and its nine-pool network still produce a first arrival that is genuinely arresting.
The pool complex is the defining feature and the legitimate reason to choose Grand Wailea over its more restrained neighbours: nine interconnected pools across a garden landscape, including a 2,000-foot-long river pool with a current, multiple water slides including a 150-foot slide, grottos, caves, a swim-up bar, and a dedicated children's water playground. For a family holiday, this infrastructure resolves the question of what to do with three days on Maui in a way that no other property in the state can replicate.
The 780 rooms occupy a main tower and surrounding buildings that have been comprehensively renovated in recent years, with Waldorf Astoria standards now visibly applied to a building that pre-dates the brand's involvement. The result is rooms that are genuinely competitive with the Four Seasons and Fairmont Kea Lani — no longer the weak link in the Grand Wailea offer. The Waldorf Astoria Spa is 50,000 square feet, Hawaii's largest, with treatment rooms built over waterways that produce the ambient sound of moving water through every treatment.
The resort fee ($75/night) is the highest on the Wailea corridor, but it covers a wider set of amenities than competitors charge for individually: beach equipment, cultural activities, fitness classes, and parking. Calculate the total cost of ownership before dismissing the comparison with the Four Seasons, which has no resort fee but starts higher on the room rate.
The nine-pool complex wins every family travel comparison in Hawaii. Children who arrive at Grand Wailea leave knowing that resort pools can be experiences rather than amenities. The scale means different family members can pursue entirely different programmes simultaneously. The Camp Grande children's programme runs year-round for ages 5–12 with genuine activities rather than supervised television.
The pool bar, the beach, Humuhumunukunukuapua'a Restaurant on the water, and the scale of the property make Grand Wailea the default Wailea choice for a group stay. The energy suits it — unlike the Four Seasons, Grand Wailea is designed for celebration rather than discretion.
From $649/night + $75 resort fee/night.
More family-focused options across the Wailea corridor.



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