The Number That Tells the Story
What Happened
If 2002 was the year the market stopped fearing and started recovering, 2003 was the year it fully ignited. Single-family sales jumped 24% to 1,271 transactions. The median price hit $455,000 — up 20% from the prior year's $380,000. Condo sales also surged, crossing 1,000 transactions for the first time. Low interest rates, a recovering national economy, and renewed confidence in Maui as a destination drove buyers from the mainland in record numbers.
The inventory that had built up during the 2001–2002 slowdown was absorbed rapidly. By mid-2003, sellers were beginning to hold firm on price. By year-end, multiple offers were reappearing on desirable properties. The boom had unambiguously begun.
Wailea & Mākena
The luxury corridor in 2003 set the stage for the extraordinary years ahead. Wailea/Mākena single-family prices rose sharply and the first signs of institutional and international buyer interest appeared. Developers who had been cautious in 2001–2002 returned to the market with new projects. The communities that would define South Maui luxury — Ho'olei, Papali Wailea — were beginning to take shape.
What It Meant for Buyers
Buyers who moved in early 2003 got the last of the reasonable pricing. By the second half of the year, the market had turned decisively in favor of sellers. Those who waited for 2004 paid 20% more. Those who waited for 2005 paid 50% more. The window was closing fast.
What It Meant for Sellers
After two years of a cautious market, sellers found their footing in 2003. Days on market shortened dramatically over the course of the year. By Q4, well-priced properties were selling quickly and sometimes with competing offers. Sellers who had held through the slowdown were rewarded.
Jolanta's Feedback
I felt the shift in 2003 before the numbers confirmed it. There was a different energy from buyers — urgency replacing hesitation. I started telling clients: don't wait. The ones who listened in early 2003 made extraordinary decisions. The ones who waited another year paid dearly for the delay.

