A Long-Term View
What 25 Years of RAM Data Show
The island-wide single-family median was $295,000 in 2001. In 2025, the same metric was $1,295,000. That is a 4.4-times change over 25 years, through two recessions, a global pandemic, and the August 2023 Lahaina wildfire. These figures are reported by RAM as part of their annual MLS resale data.
Historical performance is a record, not a prediction. Past appreciation does not guarantee future results, and any decision to buy real estate on Maui should be made for personal and lifestyle reasons first, with the financial picture considered alongside qualified professional advice.
Why Buyers Look at Maui for the Long Term
Several characteristics shape the way buyers think about Maui as a long-term holding:
- Limited supply. The coastline is finite. State conservation designations and existing development boundaries mean new oceanfront inventory in South Maui is extremely limited.
- Master-planned communities. Wailea is a 1,500-acre master-planned community that has been developing in phases since the 1970s and is now largely built out. Mākena has very limited remaining development capacity.
- Microclimates and lifestyle range. Maui offers six distinct regions, from the dry leeward coast to the rainforests of the windward side, from sea level to the slopes of Haleakalā. Buyers choose based on the lifestyle they want to live, not on a single "best" location.
- Global recognition. Maui is consistently recognized by travel publications and remains a sought-after destination for visitors from around the world.
1031 Exchanges Into Maui
Some buyers structure their Maui purchase as part of a 1031 exchange — deferring capital gains from the sale of an investment property by reinvesting the proceeds into a like-kind property within IRS-mandated timeframes:
- 45 days from the sale of the relinquished property to formally identify the replacement property.
- 180 days from the sale of the relinquished property to close on the replacement.
1031 exchanges are subject to specific rules under the Internal Revenue Code and require coordination with a qualified intermediary, your CPA, and your real estate attorney. The information here is general and is not tax, legal, or financial advice.
Multi-Property Buyers
Some buyers add to their Maui holdings over time — purchasing a second or third property on the island after owning one for a number of years. The reasons vary: family use, generational planning, lifestyle expansion. Each transaction is its own decision, with its own due diligence and its own timeline.
What This Article Is Not
This is not investment advice. It is a summary of long-term context drawn from publicly available RAM data and a description of how some buyers think about Maui as a long-term holding. Whether real estate is right for you depends on your personal circumstances, your financial picture, your tax situation, and your goals — all of which deserve qualified professional advice from a CPA, financial advisor, and real estate attorney.
Jolanta's Reflection
The conversations I value most are the ones where the buyer is taking their time, asking good questions, and treating the decision as the long-term commitment it is. Maui is a place to put down roots, not a place to chase a short-term return. The clients who have become lifelong friends are the ones who came to the island for the right reasons.
Source: RAM MLS resale data. Statistics are approximate and not guaranteed. Does not include new construction. This article is for general informational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Consult a qualified CPA, tax attorney, real estate attorney, or financial advisor for guidance specific to your situation.

