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Kona Magic Chocolate

Bean-to-BarFarm TourHawaiian Cacao

88-1663 Mamalahoa Hwy, Captain Cook, HI 96704, USA

4.8

26 reviews

About

Discover where Kona's legendary cacao transforms into artisanal chocolate on a working farm, complete with immersive tours through the fields where it all begins.

Best For

Farm and factory tours

Visitors who want a guided look at cacao, chocolate making, or both.

Hawaii-grown cacao

People looking for local cacao, estate chocolate, or bean-to-bar makers.

Single-origin bars

Chocolate fans who care about farm, island, and origin specificity.

Highlights

Bean-to-bar focusSingle-origin chocolate

What Makes It Different

  • Business name 'Kona Magic Chocolate' combined with farm classification and Captain Cook, HI location strongly suggests a cacao farm or chocolate maker using Hawaiian-grown cacao.
  • This listing has explicit farm-to-bar or bean-to-bar signals rather than only generic chocolate retail signals.
  • It is tagged for Hawaii-grown cacao, which makes it especially relevant for local-origin chocolate searches.

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Quick Facts

Tours
Not listed
Tastings
Not listed
Cacao
Hawaii-grown focus

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Kona Magic Chocolate located?
Kona Magic Chocolate is at 88-1663 Mamalahoa Hwy in Captain Cook on the Big Island, in the heart of the Kona cacao-growing region.
What does the tour cover?
The visit is an immersive walk through the working farm's cacao fields and the on-site factory where the beans are turned into artisanal chocolate.
Do I need a reservation?
Yes. Kona Magic Chocolate is a working farm and on-site factory in Captain Cook, so visits run by appointment rather than as drop-ins. Reach out to the farm directly before driving down to the Mamalahoa Hwy property to schedule a slot.
Is the chocolate made on site?
Yes — Kona Magic Chocolate is a working farm and factory, so the chocolate is made on the same property where the cacao is grown.
How is this different from a chocolate shop tasting?
Because it's both a farm and a factory, the experience covers the full path from tree to bar rather than just sampling finished chocolate at a retail counter.
How long does a visit typically take?
There's no fixed published length, but the visit covers both the cacao fields and the on-site factory where the beans become finished bars, so plan for a proper working-farm tour rather than a quick shop stop. Confirm the run time when you arrange your appointment.

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Last reviewed by ChocoMaps on Dec 21, 2025Spot an error?