Dog boarding · Honolulu, HI
Aloha Cat Hotel
Rates not listed — call for current rates.
About Aloha Cat Hotel
Aloha Cat Hotel offers dog boarding in Honolulu, HI, located at 202 Iolani Ave. The facility hasn't published rates online — call for current pricing.
Rates & hours
- Cat boarding
Good to know
- Boarding
- Yes
- Daycare
- Call to confirm
- Hours
- Call to confirm
- Rate
- Not listed — call
- State license
- Not on file — varies by state
- Last verified
- June 2026
Choosing dog boarding in Honolulu
Boarding facilities like Aloha Cat Hotel house your dog overnight — anything from a standard kennel run to a private suite — while daycare covers daytime-only care with supervised play. Rates are usually per night for boarding and per day for daycare, and most facilities require proof of vaccination, so have records ready when you book.
Aloha Cat Hotel hasn't posted rates online yet — boarding is billed per night and varies with room type and add-ons; call ahead to confirm current rates, drop-off windows, and availability. We haven't matched this facility to a state license record; about half of US states don't license boarding facilities, so that alone isn't a red flag.
We sourced Aloha Cat Hotelfrom open mapping data, confirmed it's a genuine boarding or daycare facility (not a groomer, shelter, or in-home sitter), and re-check Honolululistings every month. Anything we can't verify is marked “call to confirm” rather than guessed — if you spot something out of date, let us know.
Good to know
Frequently asked questions
How much does boarding cost at Aloha Cat Hotel?
Aloha Cat Hotel hasn't published a rate online yet. Boarding is billed per night and varies with room type and add-ons; call (808) 670-0415 for current rates.
Does Aloha Cat Hotel offer dog daycare?
Aloha Cat Hotel is listed for boarding; we haven't confirmed a daycare program. Call (808) 670-0415 to ask — many boarding facilities also take day guests.
Is Aloha Cat Hotel state-licensed?
We haven't matched Aloha Cat Hotel to a state license record. That isn't a red flag by itself — roughly half of US states don't license boarding facilities at all. Ask the facility directly if licensing matters in your state.