Every Hawaiian party needs a batch cocktail — something mixed in advance, sitting in a big bowl or dispenser, ready for guests to serve themselves so the host can actually enjoy the party instead of playing bartender all night. Hawaiian Rum Punch is that drink. It’s simple, it’s crowd-pleasing, it’s scalable to any size gathering, and it tastes like a vacation in a cup.

The beauty of rum punch is that it follows an ancient Caribbean formula that works every time: one part sour, two parts sweet, three parts strong, four parts weak. Sour is citrus juice. Sweet is fruit juice and syrup. Strong is rum. Weak is water or ice. Stick to the ratios and you can improvise endlessly — swap fruits, change rums, add grenadine or orgeat — and it’ll always balance out. The Hawaiian version leans into the tropical fruits that define island flavor: pineapple, guava, lilikoi, and orange.

Serves 10-12

Garnish

Make the Punch Base

Serve

Variations

  • POG Rum Punch: Replace the orange juice and guava nectar with POG juice (passion orange guava) for a quintessentially Hawaiian version. This is the lazy genius move — POG already has the perfect fruit blend built in.
  • Spiced Rum version: Use spiced rum (Captain Morgan or Sailor Jerry) instead of dark rum. The cinnamon and vanilla notes add warmth.
  • Non-alcoholic: Skip the rum entirely and increase the fruit juices proportionally. Add extra ginger ale for fizz. Still delicious, still tropical, and everyone can enjoy it.
  • Frozen punch: Blend individual servings with ice for a slushy version. More work but perfect for hot days.
  • Li hing punch: Add 2 tablespoons of li hing mui powder to the base for a sweet-salty-sour Hawaiian twist that locals go crazy for.

Tips for the Perfect Punch

  • Make the base the night before. Rum punch is always better after the flavors have had time to marry overnight in the fridge.
  • Add soda last. If you add the ginger ale too early, it goes flat. Add it right before guests arrive, or set the bottle next to the punch bowl and let people top off their own cups.
  • Ice block trick: Freeze water in a bundt pan or large Tupperware container the day before. A single large ice block melts much slower than cubes and looks impressive floating in the punch bowl.
  • Frozen fruit as ice: Freeze pineapple chunks, orange slices, and cherries and use them as ice cubes. They keep the punch cold and look beautiful, and as they thaw they add more fruit flavor.
  • Don’t skimp on fresh lime. The lime juice is what keeps the punch from being cloyingly sweet. It’s the balance point of the whole recipe. Always use fresh.
  • Label it. If you’re serving this at a party with kids present, clearly label the punch bowl as alcoholic. A kid-friendly version (without rum) in a separate dispenser is always a good move.
  • For individual cocktails, set out a Blue Hawaii station or a Mango Mai Tai option alongside the punch bowl. For a dramatic centerpiece, add a Scorpion Bowl.

This is the perfect companion for a Hawaiian backyard party — set it up and let your guests help themselves while you focus on the grill.

Prep Time: 10 minutes | Chill Time: 2 hours | Serves: 10-12