Hawaii · Speed Limits Explained

Hawaii Speed Limits Explained

A complete guide to speed limits explained in Hawaii, based on the official HI DOT driver handbook.

Capital: Honolulu Min permit age: 15 years 6 months Permit fee: $5 Hold period: 180 days

Default speed limits in Hawaii

When no sign is posted, Hawaii uses default ("prima facie") speed limits set by statute: 25 mph in residential districts, 25 mph in business districts, 15 mph in school zones during school hours and when children are present, and 50 mph on undivided rural highways. On Interstates, the maximum is 60 mph on rural sections and 55 mph on urban sections — and on a few corridors Hawaii posts higher or lower numbers, which always override the default.

The Hawaii basic speed law

The basic speed law applies even when you are well below a posted limit. It says no driver may operate a vehicle at a speed greater than is reasonable and prudent given current weather, visibility, traffic, road surface, and the presence of pedestrians or other hazards. A Hawaii officer can cite you for going 55 in a 65 zone if rain, fog, or congestion makes 55 unsafe — and the citation will hold up.

For a deeper read on this topic across all 50 states, see our right-of-way, speed limits, and alcohol and drugs articles.

Minimum speeds and impeding traffic

Hawaii also has minimum-speed rules. On Interstates and other limited-access highways, you may not drive so slowly that you block the normal and reasonable movement of traffic, except when reduced speed is necessary for safety. Drivers who insist on cruising in the left lane below the posted limit can be cited for impeding traffic.

School zones, construction zones, and fines

In a Hawaii school zone the limit drops to 15 mph when children are present or when a flashing beacon is active. Construction-zone fines in Hawaii can be doubled, and citations follow the worker-present rule whether or not you actually see a worker. Do not assume an empty work zone is safe to speed through — automated enforcement is increasingly used in Hawaii construction corridors.

How the test asks about speed

Speed-limit questions on the Hawaii permit test are usually scenario-based. Expect to see a sentence like "It is raining and traffic is slow on a 65 mph highway. The safest speed is…" — and the correct answer is always the slower one that respects the basic speed law. Memorize the 25/60/15/50 mph defaults and you will get the recall questions right; remember the basic speed law and you will get the scenario questions right too.

Quick facts about Hawaii

  • Capital: Honolulu
  • Minimum permit age: 15 years 6 months
  • Current permit fee: $5
  • Supervised hold period: 180 days
  • Adult BAC limit: 0.08% · Under-21 BAC: 0.02%
  • Default speed limits: 60 mph rural Interstate, 55 mph urban Interstate, 25 mph residential, 15 mph school zone
  • Handheld phone use: banned
  • Vision standard: 20/40 acuity in at least one eye, corrected or uncorrected
  • Reinstatement fee after suspension: $55
  • Official source: HI DOT

Other Hawaii guides on PermitPrep

Each link below opens a dedicated Hawaii page. Every guide is built from the same official HI DOT handbook so the rules stay consistent across topics.

Ready to test what you have learned? Take the free Hawaii permit practice test — 20 randomized questions, instant grading, full explanations.