Wind Chill in Hawaii
Snow days are rare in Hawaii, but when they happen SnowSense™ is here. Live probability for 3 Hawaii cities, updated every 30 minutes.
Hawaii Winter Profile
Hawaii rarely sees school-closing winter weather. Across the 3 Hawaii cities tracked by SnowSense™, average annual snowfall is only 0.0 inches — and most of those inches fall in high-elevation areas or extreme-outlier events. For most Hawaii families, a snow day is a once-a-decade local story rather than an annual possibility.
When winter weather does arrive in Hawaii, districts close schools quickly and for longer than northern districts would. The reason is infrastructure: Hawaii doesn't stockpile salt, maintain plow fleets, or drill bus drivers on ice-route protocols — none of which is economically justified for events this rare. So when an ice event or hard freeze hits, closures extend for multiple days while conditions thaw naturally.
Use the city links above to see live snow day probability for your specific Hawaii location. On days without active winter weather, the probability will show as near-zero; on days when an event is developing, the number refreshes every 30 minutes as the forecast updates.
Cold-Day School Closures in Hawaii
Schools in Hawaii typically close for cold alone when wind chills drop below dangerous thresholds. The exact threshold varies by district — urban districts with walking students tend to close at warmer wind chills than rural districts where all students ride buses.