Discover 4 practitioners and 9 wellness centers across all four Hawaiian islands
A ritualist is a practitioner who designs and facilitates intentional ceremonies — marking transitions, honoring grief, celebrating milestones, or creating sacred space for healing and reflection. The field is diverse: some ritualists are trained within specific religious or spiritual traditions; others work in an interfaith or non-denominational capacity, drawing on symbolic action, storytelling, music, and the natural world to craft meaningful ceremony. In Hawaiʻi, where the land itself holds deep ceremonial significance in Native Hawaiian culture and where spiritual practice is woven into daily life for many communities, ritualists often bring a profound sense of place to their work — conducting ceremonies at sacred sites, on the shoreline, or in settings that connect participants to the natural environment.
Ceremonial practitioners are found across all four major Hawaiian islands, offering services that range from private grief rituals and life transition ceremonies to wedding and commitment blessings, ancestral honoring, and group seasonal rites. Some ritualists are also trained in related modalities — Hawaiian healing, family constellation, or soul guidance — and may weave these approaches into their ceremonial work. Sessions can unfold over a single ceremony or across a longer container of preparation and integration.
Because ritualists come from widely varying backgrounds and traditions, it's worth reading about a practitioner's training, lineage, and approach before reaching out. Ceremonial practitioners on Kauaʻi and Maui often work in close relationship with the land and indigenous wisdom keepers.
Browse ritualists and ceremonial practitioners across Hawaiʻi below.

Makawao

Keaau
Honolulu

Waimea