Arrivals pickup guide
Picking someone up at Honolulu (HNL)? The Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa)is the free designated waiting area where drivers park at no charge while their passenger's flight lands and bags are collected. Below you will find exact directions, the time limit and fee rules, how to know when your passenger is ready, and what to do if the lot is full.

The HNL cell phone lot is called the Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa). HNL operates two free cell phone lots. Diamond Head Lot (primary, east side): from H-1, exit to Nimitz Highway, turn left onto Lagoon Drive, then right onto Aolele Street — the lot is on your left near the Lagoon Drive intersection at roughly 2843 Aolele St. Ewa Lot (west side): from Nimitz Highway, turn onto Service Road A on your right, near the Airport Post Office at the Nimitz Highway and Aolele Street intersection.
Open the Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa) in Google Maps for turn-by-turn navigation to the lot entrance.
60 minutes free. There is no charge regardless of how long you stay, but plan your timing so you pull up to arrivals right as your passenger steps outside — circling burns time and fuel, and curbside officers will wave you on if you stop too early.
Capacity: The Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa) holds ~25 spaces (Diamond Head lot). On busy travel days the lot can fill up, so arrive early and have a backup plan.
Track the flight on FlightAware or Flightradar24, then have your passenger text or call you the moment they have their bags and are walking out to the curbside pick-up zone.
As a general rule, ask your passenger to text you only after they have their bags and are physically walking toward the arrivals curb — not when the plane touches down. Checked-bag passengers typically need 15–25 minutes after landing for baggage claim at domestic airports, and 45–60 minutesafter landing at international gates where customs adds extra time. Once you get the “at curb with bags” message, pull out and head straight there — a precise pick-up beats circling every time.
Both lots are completely uncovered with no shade — Honolulu sun is intense — so keep the engine running for A/C; also confirm which lot is closer to your passenger's baggage claim before you leave home, as Diamond Head (east) and Ewa (west) serve different sides of the terminal complex.
If the Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa) is full when you arrive, you have three practical options:
Plan your trip
Know exactly when to leave for the airport
The Leave-By Calculator combines the live HNL TSA wait time, your drive with real-time traffic, and your boarding window into one exact time to walk out the door — no more guessing or adding “just in case” buffers by hand.
Calculate your Leave-By TimeMore HNL guides
The HNL cell phone lot is called the Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa). HNL operates two free cell phone lots. Diamond Head Lot (primary, east side): from H-1, exit to Nimitz Highway, turn left onto Lagoon Drive, then right onto Aolele Street — the lot is on your left near the Lagoon Drive intersection at roughly 2843 Aolele St. Ewa Lot (west side): from Nimitz Highway, turn onto Service Road A on your right, near the Airport Post Office at the Nimitz Highway and Aolele Street intersection.
60 minutes free. The lot holds approximately ~25 spaces (Diamond Head lot).
Track the flight on FlightAware or Flightradar24, then have your passenger text or call you the moment they have their bags and are walking out to the curbside pick-up zone.
If the Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa) is full, your best options are to do a slow loop of the airport access road and try again, pull into a short-term or daily parking garage (free for the first 15–30 minutes at many airports), or wait in an adjacent surface lot if one is available. Avoid stopping on the terminal curbside — officers will wave you on immediately.
Most cell phone lots, including the Cell Phone Waiting Lots (Diamond Head & Ewa), require drivers to remain with their vehicles at all times. Unattended vehicles are typically towed at the owner's expense. If you need to use a restroom or grab a snack, look for amenities inside or adjacent to the lot before committing to a long wait.