Kihei Caffe Maui Coast Hotel
Casual Kihei breakfast-and-brunch spot at the Maui Coast Hotel serving Hawaiian-style diner plates, coffee, and daytime comfort food. A practical choice for hearty, local-leaning meals in South Maui.
- Breakfast and brunch focus
- Some lunch and dinner service
- Casual hotel-adjacent setting
- Indoor and outdoor seating
Kihei Caffe Maui Coast Hotel is a casual, counter-service breakfast-and-brunch spot that gives South Maui travelers a practical alternative to a hotel buffet. It sits inside the Maui Coast Hotel, but the personality is pure Kihei Caffe: hearty Hawaiian-style diner plates, strong coffee, and a daytime menu built for people heading to the beach, the road, or an early start on the island. It stands out less for polish than for reliability and local breakfast energy.
What it does best
This is the place for filling plates that feel familiar in Hawaii: eggs, pancakes, French toast, loco moco-style comfort food, corned beef hash, fried rice, and other breakfast standards with local leanings. The menu is broad enough to cover early lunch and even some dinner service, but breakfast is clearly the sweet spot. Coffee and espresso drinks are part of the draw, though the real appeal is the food itself—hearty, straightforward, and geared toward appetite more than fuss.
For travelers staying in Kīhei or passing through South Maui, that makes it especially useful. It works well before a beach day, after a sunrise outing, or anytime a sit-down meal needs to happen without turning into a production.
The feel of the place
The experience is casual and unpretentious. Ordering happens at the counter, and seating includes both indoor and outdoor options, which suits the hotel-adjacent setting nicely. The location has a relaxed poolside, resort-meets-local-diner feel rather than a polished dining-room atmosphere. That is part of the charm: it feels easy, quick, and built for real-world vacation mornings.
Kihei Caffe itself has been a South Maui breakfast name since 1998, and this Maui Coast Hotel outpost extends that identity into a more convenient, hotel-linked setting. It has the feel of a long-running local brand that knows exactly what kind of meal people want here.
Tradeoffs to know
The main tradeoff is that popularity and convenience can come with friction. Peak-hour waits are a real possibility, and service is built for volume rather than leisurely table dining. Pricing can also feel a little less friendly than the menu suggests, especially once add-ons or payment surcharges enter the picture. Food quality is generally well-liked, but consistency can vary from plate to plate.
Who it’s best for
This is a strong fit for families, beach-day planners, and anyone who wants a hearty South Maui breakfast without overthinking it. It is less ideal for diners seeking a quiet, white-tablecloth meal or a deeply chef-driven brunch. For those who want a dependable, local-leaning breakfast with a casual island feel, it makes a lot of sense.









