Pacific Boats & Yachts is proud to present one of the most unique commercial marine opportunities currently available in Hawaiʻi.
This offering includes a corporation holding a highly sought-after private access 65’ commercial slip position within Honokohau Harbor, along with associated commercial use and mooring permits currently utilized for passenger vessel operations. Included in the sale is the 2009 Lagoon 500 catamaran “NO WIKI.” Commercial opportunities of this scale and positioning within Honokohau Harbor are exceptionally limited and rarely become available to the open market. For operators familiar with Hawaiʻi’s commercial marine industry, securing long-term commercial harbor access alone can represent a substantial barrier to entry.
Positioned along the world-famous Kona Coast, this location provides direct access to some of the most desirable boating waters in the Pacific. The Kona coastline is renowned for calm water conditions, year-round boating weather, snorkeling, diving, sunset cruising, whale watching, sportfishing, and luxury ocean tourism experiences that attract visitors from around the world. The Lagoon 500 platform offers expansive deck space, exceptional stability, large entertaining areas, four private cabins with ensuite heads, and the layout flexibility that has made the Lagoon series one of the most recognized charter catamarans in the world.
This opportunity is not being represented as a turn-key charter business, but rather as a strategic commercial harbor and permitting acquisition with substantial long-term upside potential. The vessel presents an opportunity for refit, modernization, repowering, repositioning, or eventual replacement, depending on the buyer’s operational vision and business model. For many commercial operators, the true value lies in securing the rare combination of commercial harbor positioning, permitting structure, and operational flexibility within West Hawaiʻi.
Whether you are an existing charter operator expanding your fleet, an investor seeking scarce waterfront commercial infrastructure, or an entrepreneur looking to establish a commercial marine presence in Hawaiʻi, opportunities like this are increasingly difficult to replicate.






















