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Retaining Wall Cost in Hawaii 2026 — Average: $9,072 — illustrated 2026 guide
Home Improvement · Hawaii

Retaining Wall Cost in Hawaii

2026 estimates — concrete block, stone, timber, and poured concrete

$6,350
Low estimate
$9,072
State average
$13,608
High estimate

30 linear ft × 3 ft high concrete block wall, Hawaii labor rates. Updated June 2026.

Calculate Your Hawaii Retaining Wall Cost

Retaining Wall Cost by Material — Hawaii 2026 (30 linear ft × 3 ft)

Material 30 ft × 3 ft (HI) Per lin. ft
Timber / Railroad Ties $958 $32/lf
Concrete Block (Allan Block) $1,361 $45/lf
Gabion (Rock-filled Wire) $1,361 $45/lf
Poured Concrete $1,764 $59/lf
Natural Stone $2,520 $84/lf

3-foot wall installed including materials, labor, drainage, and excavation. Hawaii rates applied. Heights over 4 ft add 30–130% to cost.

FAQs — Retaining Wall Cost in Hawaii

Retaining wall installation in Hawaii averages $9,072 for a 30 linear foot × 3 foot high concrete block wall in 2026 — above the national average. Costs range $6,350–$13,608 depending on material and wall height.

Hawaii retaining walls over 4 feet typically require building permits and may require engineering drawings. Drainage is critical — proper gravel backfill and perforated pipe prevent 90% of wall failures. Get 2–3 contractor bids; prices vary significantly by region and material availability.

Most Hawaii jurisdictions require building permits for retaining walls over 4 feet high. Some cities require permits for walls over 30 inches. Walls over 6 feet require an engineer's stamp in virtually all states. Permit costs run $100–$500. Unpermitted retaining walls can be ordered demolished at your expense. Always check with your local building department before starting.

The cheapest retaining wall material in Hawaii is timber (railroad ties) at $958 for 30 linear feet installed. However, timber lasts only 10–20 years. Concrete block (Allan Block) costs $1,361 for 30 linear feet and lasts 40–75 years — best long-term value. Natural stone costs $2,520 for 30 linear feet but looks best and lasts 100+ years.

Retaining wall lifespan in Hawaii: timber/railroad ties 10–20 years; concrete block 40–75 years; poured concrete 50–100 years; natural stone 100+ years (mortared). The #1 cause of premature failure is poor drainage — hydrostatic pressure from water buildup behind the wall. Proper drainage (gravel backfill + perforated pipe) doubles or triples wall lifespan for any material.

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