Finding Parking in Heavily Populated Areas in Hawaii

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Finding parking in a busy city like Honolulu
What to avoid doing when you are looking for parking
Conclusion
 
hawaii-parking

 

Finding parking in a busy city like Honolulu

Finding parking in Honolulu can be pretty difficult just like it can be in any other large city in the country. This comes with large amounts of people and a small amount of available area to park on the street. Fortunately, as long as you stay smart and savvy, you should always be able to find a place within a few blocks of your destination to park in Honolulu. You might be able to find free parking on the street, paid metered parking on the street or you might be able to pay to keep your car in a parking lot for a few hours.

Finding free parking on the street will be the most difficult of the three possibilities mentioned above but it will obviously be the cheapest and likely the most convenient in terms of walking distance. The easiest to find parking will likely be metered parking for which you will likely have a maximum of two hours to park once you pay the meter. If you need longer term parking and cannot find a non-metered spot, you should consider a paid parking lot. You can use this guide to find some great parking lots and their prices in Honolulu.
 

What to avoid doing when you are looking for parking

There are a few things that you will need to avoid if you want to both successfully find parking as well as avoid getting a parking ticket. First, you should search out parking early on the days that you need it. If you are looking for parking during the week, this will mean finding parking before rush hour begins or after it ends. In Honolulu, this means you really should try to find parking before 7AM or after 3PM. Otherwise, you might need to pay to park in a parking lot.

You also should take extra care to make sure that you check all signs when you park as well as the color of the curb. If you do not, you could end up with a hefty ticket. Reading signs will be self-explanatory but checking the curbs is because they are color coded in certain areas near and around Honolulu. So, for example, if you see that the curb is painted blue, then that means that parking next to that curb is for handicapped people only. A yellow curb means that parking is only allowed at certain times. If you see a yellow curb, check for nearby signs.
 

Conclusion

Finding parking in a busy city like Honolulu can be a bit of a chore. But, if you make sure that you look for parking early and/or outside of rush hour times, you could end up with a free spot on the street. If you are unable to find a spot, you can elect to go with a metered spot on the street or pay to park in a parking lot for a longer-term spot. Regardless of where you end up parking, always be sure to check the color of the curb as well as any street signs in order to avoid a costly parking ticket.

Category: Hawaii Car Shipping.