UHERO Forecast: Hawaiʻi headed toward mild recession with U.S. economic outlook deteriorating
Hawaiʻi’s economic prospects remain poor, with U.S. trade policy impacting key international visitor markets, and tariffs and uncertainty weighing on the U.S. economy, according to the University of Hawaiʻi Economic Research Organizationʻs third quarter forecast for 2025.
In Hawaiʻi, visitor numbers are down, job growth has stalled, and housing activity remains weak. Inflation also is expected to rise over the next year as tariffs feed through to consumer prices.
Construction remains the only major source of strength, supported by large federal contracts and other public projects.
The UH Economic Research Organization forecasts a mild recession in the islands over the next year, with the weakening U.S. economy threatening a potentially deeper downturn.
Signs of U.S. weakness are increasingly evident, with consumer spending slowing to a near standstill, and other than health care, the number of jobs has ceased to grow and may have begun to decrease.
The national unemployment rate remains stable only because of the loss of foreign-born workers.
Key Hawaiʻi visitor markets are facing similar strains, the UHERO report said. Canada has fallen into recession as tariffs cause exports to plunge. Japan’s modest recovery will slow as exports fall and interest rates rise.

“A deeper global slowdown would inevitably rebound on Hawai‘i’s economy through weaker tourism demand,” the report said.
Visitor industry conditions deteriorated mid-year, and seasonally adjusted arrivals fell 8% between April and July. International markets have seen the biggest losses, with the Canadian visitor census down 9%.
That leaves Hawai‘i dependent on a continental U.S. market that is vulnerable to a U.S. recession. While losses to date are a bit smaller than anticipated last spring, UHERO sees arrivals about 5% lower than last year by the middle of 2026. UHERO also expects real visitor spending to decline by more than $600 million.
Hawai‘i payroll job growth has stalled since March, with 15,000 fewer jobs than pre-pandemic levels. Many sectors are now contracting, led by federal job losses and tourism sector declines.

The drop in federal jobs — down more than 1,200 already — will deepen as deferred resignations take effect at the end of this month. Payrolls are projected to fall through late 2026 before a slow recovery begins.
Honolulu inflation receded to 2.3% in July, even as overall U.S. inflation picked up. The gradual pass-through of tariffs will lift consumer price index inflation to about 4% at the end of next year before it begins to ease.
By 2026, inflation will have lifted local prices by an average of 1.5% more than it would have been, permanently raising typical household costs by roughly $1,400 annually. State income tax relief worth about $2,000 for the median-income household will help to support purchasing power, but federal SNAP and Medicaid cuts will remove benefits for tens of thousands, hitting the lowest-income families hardest.
Hawai‘i’s sole area of resilience continues to be construction, where recently announced military construction, ongoing Skyline work and Aloha Stadium redevelopment will sustain industry employment near 40,000 jobs through the end of the decade. Maui rebuilding also will support the industry. The biggest risk to the sector is the impact of tariffs on the cost of materials.
Condo markets are the weakest they have been since 2010, partly because of high mortgage rates and surging insurance costs. The Maui condo market has seen a large plunge in activity, with the value of resales down nearly 50% compared with mid-2023. This reflects in part uncertainty over Bill 9, a proposal to phase out transient vacation rentals in apartment districts. The fate of this bill remains uncertain.
The report said that UHERO expects a mild Hawai‘i recession is imminent. There will be periods of losses in payroll jobs, real GDP and personal income, combined with higher inflation.
A gradual recovery is expected by late next year. Risks are now more clearly tilted to the downside. A U.S. recession would compound global weakness, while prolonged high tariffs, stricter immigration enforcement and deep federal spending cuts could intensify local impacts. Even if the recession proves shallow, higher prices and tepid growth will impose ongoing costs on Hawai‘i households, the report said.