Most people have a special place in their heart for Girl Scout Cookies. Of course, the cookies delicious, but the Girl Scout Cookie Program also helps girls follow their passions and fulfill goals. The Girl Scout Cookie Program is the largest girl-led entrepreneurial program in the world.
Hint: it’s not just about cookies! Girl Scouts learn five skills that are essential to leadership, to success, and to life: Goal Setting, Decision Making, Money Management, People Skills, and Business Ethics.
Girl Scout Cookies in Hawaiʻi
Girl Scout Cookie® proceeds stay local. Use the Cookie Locator Hawaiʻi map below to find cookie booth sales near you or to discover a local troop that’s selling cookies online. Buy a few extra boxes to keep in the freezer until the next cookie season (oh yeah, mine always last until next year…NOT!). You can also buy Girl Scout Cookies to donate to first responders, the military, and other worthy organizations.
Girl Scouts of Hawai`i is headquartered in Honolulu. There are also Girl Scout representatives on Hawaiʻi Island, Kauaʻi, and Maui. You are welcome to stop by the Honolulu headquarters during regular business hours and learn more about the 100+ year history of Girl Scouts in the islands. The main office is located at 1164 Bishop Street Suite 200 Honolulu, HI 96813, with additional offices on Hawaiʻi Island, Kauaʻi, and Maui.
More info: Girl Scouts of Hawaii (gshawaii.org)
2025 Girl Scout Cookie season Hawaiʻi
Listed below are the available cookies in Hawaiʻi this season. All Girl Scout Cookies are both kosher and Halal certified. There are also vegan and gluten-free offerings.
- Adventurefuls™: Indulgent brownie-inspired cookies topped with caramel flavored crème with a hint of sea salt.
- Thin Mints®: Vegan! Crisp, chocolate cookies dipped in a delicious mint chocolaty coating.
- ** Samoas® (aka Caramel deLites®): Crisp cookies with caramel, coconut, and chocolaty stripes
- ** Tagalongs® (aka Peanut Butter Patties®): Crispy cookies layered with peanut butter and covered with a chocolaty coating
- Do-si-dos® aka Peanut Butter Sandwich: Crunchy oatmeal sandwich cookies with peanut butter filling
- Trefoils®: Iconic shortbread cookies inspired by the original Girl Scout cookie recipe
- Lemon-Ups®: Crispy lemon cookies baked with inspiring messages
- Girl Scout S’mores®: Crunchy graham sandwich cookies with chocolate and marshmallow filling
- Toffee-tastic®: Gluten free! Rich, buttery cookies with sweet, crunchy toffee bits
** Why do some cookies have different names? Each Girl Scout council contracts with one of two licensed bakers, whose recipes and ingredients may differ slightly: ABC Bakers and Little Brownie Bakers. That’s why some cookies look the same but have two different names—yet are similarly delicious!
More info: Girl Scout Cookies® | | Girl Scouts of Hawaii
Where to buy Girl Scout Cookies in Hawaiʻi
Each Girl Scout council across the country sets their own prices to reflect the local cost of cookies and fundraising goals. The cost of each box sold in Hawaiʻi is reinvested in Girl Scouts of Hawaiʻi. The price of a box of cookies ranges from $6-$7 depending on variety.
In-person sales are February 21 – March 28. You can also order cookies online from a local Troop for delivery (minimum four boxes). Whether you want to buy cookies in person or online, find a Girl Scout Troop near you using the map below or visit: Find Cookies | Girl Scouts (gshawaii.org).
Girl Scout Cookie History
For more than 100 years, Girl Scouts and enthusiastic supporters have helped ensure the success of the annual cookie sale. The sale of cookies began as early as 1917, five years after Juliette Gordon Low started Girl Scouts in the United States. The Mistletoe Troop in Muskogee, Oklahoma, baked cookies and sold them in its high school cafeteria to help finance troop activities.
In the 1920s, Girl Scouts in different parts of the country baked their own simple sugar cookies with their mothers and with help from the community. The cookies were packaged in wax paper bags, sealed with a sticker, and sold door-to-door for 25 to 35 cents per dozen.
In 1933, Girl Scouts of Greater Philadelphia Council baked cookies and sold them in the city’s gas and electric company windows for 23 cents per box of 44 cookies, or six boxes for $1.24. A year later, Greater Philadelphia took cookie sales to the next level, becoming the first council to sell commercially baked cookies.
In the 1940s, due to shortages of cookie ingredients during World War II, Girl Scouts instead produced and sold Girl Scout calendars. After the war, cookie sales resumed. From the 1950s to 1980s, new cookie flavors were added and cookie production was streamlined nationwide to ensure consistency and quality from every local Girl Scout Troop.
From the 1990s into the 21st Century, Girl Scouts have continued to modernize, innovate, and most importantly—have fun—while developing valuable life skills. In 2010, the “Digital Cookie” program took the cookies online and introduced Girl Scouts to digital-age skills about online marketing, app usage, and ecommerce.
Event calendar of free and affordable things to do
Listed below are all types of free and affordable things to do in the next 30 days across the Hawaiʻi Pae ʻĀina.
Featured Events are listed first each day, highlighted by a photo. These are unique, popular, or annual events that we or our advertisers don’t want you to overlook.
You might also like: Hawaiʻi on the Cheap – affordable living and things to do (hawaiionthecheap.com)
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