• 1-888-820-2097NoSkype
  • Hawaii Tours Hawaii Activities Hawaii Adventures - Find us on Twitter
  • Hawaii Tours Hawaii Activities Hawaii Adventures - Find us on facebook
  • Accredited Business in Hawaii - BBBOnline Reliability Program
  • Incredible Journey

    1973
Hawaii Oahu Kauai Maui discount Tours ActivitiesSelect By Island
Big Island Hawaii Discount Tours Cheap Activities Hawaii
Big Island Hawaii Discount Tours Cheap Activities Maui
Big Island Hawaii Discount Tours Cheap Activities Oahu
Big Island Hawaii Discount Tours Cheap Activities Kauai

Tom Barefoot's Tours Home Page

If you're looking for tours and activities in Hawaii you've come to the right place. We've been booking Hawaii tours and activities for over 30 years and our Hawaii tour and activity selection is the largest you will find in the state of Hawaii.

When you're trying to figure out what to do in Hawaii, it can really help to ask a local experienced professional. Tom Barefoot's Tours is a booking agency that can help you arrange virtually anything you want to do in Hawaii. We carry over 2000 regularly scheduled activities across the state, and we also specialize in creating customized private tours.

Hawaii Tours and Activity Guide

We Carry the largest array of activities and tours in all of Hawaii. With our commitment to offering competitive pricing, This is the best sourse to browse hawaiian activities.

Please feel free to browse our tour and activity guide. From helicopters tours to Snorkeling Trips and Ziplines, we can help you make your hawaiian adventure memorable.




Hawaii in all its spendor

Welcome to the Island of Hawaii

($32.90 - $3750.00)

The Big Island of Hawaii is the island chain's largest and newest island. The Big Island in fact is so large you could fit the land area of all the other islands combined into the land area of the Big Island and still have room to spare. As if it's not big enough already it continues to expand with each passing day as it is fueled from deep within the earth below with the power of a volcanic thrust that brings its magma from below the earth's surface and provides spectacular daily displays of it fiery growth on the surface. The Big Island is mostly formed by its two enormous volcanoes known as Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa which both exceed 13,000' in height making them, if measured from the base of the sea floor, the largest mountains in the world. The busiest volcano on the island in modern times is however a much smaller vent volcano off the side of Mauna Loa which is called Kilauea. This volcano has been going-off non-stop since the 1970's and its slow moving lava can be seen inching its fiery pathway to the coast and into the ocean to the visual delight of thousands of grateful visitors anxious to see earth's creation in action.





Maui in all its spendor

Welcome to the Island of Maui

($15.00 - $3800.00)

The island of Maui is the second largest in the Hawaiian chain and is referred to as the "valley isle" because of its huge central valley created between the older West Maui Mountains and the newer Mount Haleakala which forms the eastern coasts. The West Maui mountains have been extinct for the last million years but Haleakala is considered dormant and will someday in all likelihood show signs of volcanic activity again although, the last brief eruptions were back in the 1790's. Maui County is actually made of four distinct islands which share the same enormous underwater mountain foundation. These islands are Maui, Molokai, Lanai and Kahoolawe in addition to a famous and prominent off-shore crater-head well-known for its snorkeling called Molokini. The West Maui Mountains raise to a height of about 5000' and Haleakala raises close to 2 miles above sea level to a height above 10,000'. The top of Haleakala is famous for its immense crater which descends 3000' and is about 21 miles in circumference. Maui is known for its variation of rainfall and as such contains many microclimates within its short 48 mile length. Maui's leeward coastlines have white sand beaches and relatively little rainfall where as Maui's windward coasts can have rainfall averages in places over 100 inches and are covered in lush dense tropical rainforests.





Oahu in all its spendor

Welcome to the Island of Oahu

($20.00 - $6879.90)

Oahu is the second oldest island in the Hawaiian chain of islands and parts of the island are about 4 million years old. Oahu is essentially made of two equally impressive and parallel mountain ranges called the Waianae Range which is the oldest of the two and the one that faces outward to its sister island of Kauai across the channel to the west, and the the Koolau Range which is where you will find Honolulu and Waikiki. Volcanic cinder cones also populate Oahu's landscape. These cone-shaped outcroppings along Oahu's shorelines are the last vestiges of fiery vents that once dominated the Oahu panorama. The most famous of these are now known as Diamond Head, Punchbowl and Coco Head craters. Oahu's extreme beauty is often concealed along the south-eastern and western shorelines as much of the land area along the coastline has been covered by human civilization. In fact there are more people located on this beautiful island of Oahu than can be found on all of the other islands put together. These population centers are very different than found in most cities however in that the spectacular mountains located behind are in most cases remote and spectacular in their natural beauty.





Kauai in all its spendor

Welcome to the Island of Kauai

($19.20 - $1359.00)

The island of Kauai is the oldest of the major islands in the Hawaiian chain. Kauai's volcano has been extinct for over 5 million years. It is also the northern most island and generally the first island to receive "weather" generated from the huge body of water north and west of Hawaii. Rain clouds are attracted by land mass and the first spot many of the north Pacific weather patterns are drawn to is Kauai and in fact so much rain is attracted to the island that it's summit of Mount Wai'ale'ale is the wettest spot on the planet with an average yearly rainfall of 420". The extreme rainfall, pounding surf and constant trade wind breezes have contoured the island into a series of sculpted peeks with razor edge ridges which are laden with dripping green jungles and immense waterfalls. On the eastern portion of Kauai can be found an alluvial plain of relatively flat topography that is detailed with gently flowing serpentine shaped navigable rivers suitable for kayaking and other river going vessels.



Competitively Priced Hawaii Activities!