Dwell Hawaii is a family Oahu Real Estate duo featuring videos, blogs, and expert insights from Koa Cassady (Nephew) and Maila Gibson-Bandmann(Auntie). We aim to help you understand what it truly means to live in Hawaii by highlighting everything we know best about the various lifestyles, cultures, restaurants, things to do, beaches, and real estate offered by each unique neighborhood. Whether you're a local resident or moving to Hawaii, we hope you tune in as we detail all of the most buzzworthy topics related to living, buying, selling, or investing in Hawaii real estate. Expect pertinent updates on New Honolulu Condos in Kakaako & Ala Moana, Oahu New Homes in Hoopili & Koa Ridge, Investor Guidance to owning Airbnb in Hawaii, PCS Guides, The Best Places to Live in Hawaii, Oahu Real Estate forecasts and trends, and some of the most stunning visuals of Kailua, North Shore Oahu, Hawaii Kai, Kakaako, Kahala, Ewa Beach, Diamond Head, Kaneohe, Mililani, Ko Olina, and Waianae
I want to become a real estate agent in Hawaii but i dont have no experience. I'm a chef but i want to move into the real estate business in hawaii how can I do this?
Anyone else notice the bike chained up on the sidewalk, with its wheels missing at 4:12? 😂 The word "haole" is a lot like "Yankee" in some parts of the mainland. It can be neutral or it can be derogatory, depending on who is saying it and how they're saying it.
Watching from Korea I want to move there but I don’t have money and time to enjoy Hawaii 😮 One day I hope to stay there with my whole family including baby and dogs, wife
Keep voting Democrat if you never want to be able to buy your own home! In addition to the highest interest in the USA, the Federal Reserve is responsible for the INSANE INTEREST RATE on home loans by an appointee of the PRESIDENT!
How can this be called luxury when your kids would be assault by homeless and crazy people if they walked outside on their own? This area is filled with mentally ill people roaming around. It's certainly not "luxurious" living. I was having dinner nearby the other week and saw a road rage turn into a street fight where someone was seriously injured. This area is not safe in the evening or even during the day in some instances. I get the realtor and builder are going to talk it up but there is a lot of problem people around here and tons of racism in this area. If you have kids I would think twice, especially if they are white or asian as the schools are not welcoming.
The Know is don’t move to Hawaii unless you have a high paying job or willing to shack up with 5 other people or work multiple jobs just so you can afford rent and have enough for food.
Hawaii real estate, particularly in Oahu, is a joke! If you don’t make $200K/year, you will never be able to afford a place, especially a house, in all of Hawaii.
i'm a native hawaiian, living in wahiawa. an ACTUAL native not 1/3rd portugese, 1/3rd filipino and 1/3rd whatever else. we have not had good things happen while at the pokai bay fishing tournament (things stolen), yokohama bay (fights with the non hawaiian locals), or even the subway behind the gas station (attempted car break in). as a result, i approach waianae - if i must because i mostly avoid it - with caution. and frangible ammo.
Mahalo for this video. I was born and raised in Wahiawa, up the ‘heights’ on Nakeke Place. Fished a lot at Lake Wilson, bought comic books at the bus station, went to the newly constructed Iliahi Elementary School, and went to Leilehua during my freshman year. My best friends were Japanese, Hawaiian, Filipino, and haloes-military brats. Million bucks a house? Auwe!
I grew up down there and have attended school, lived and worked at several places on the continent. Some of the nicest people and families that I am still close to are from that Coastline. Mahalo for being upfront and honest. The price for living in paradise is multi-faceted, the solution is multi-pronged but the spirit of the land, its surroundings and the people there are what makes that entire area a special place.
I’ve only been to 3 of the islands, and they are all beautiful, but I keep going back to Oahu. It just feels so comfortable to me. You can go from city to country very fast, and it’s all so lovely in between. The air just feels so good in Hawaii, you are #lucky to live in paradise!