Hanawa Hokiichi (塙保己一, 23 June 1746 – 7 October 1821) was a Japanese blind kokugaku scholar of the Edo period.
Hanawa was born in Hokino Village, Musashi Province (present day Kodama, Honjō, Saitama) to a farming family.
She had left him 23 copper mon as his inheritance, a trivial sum, but he was able to obtain a position as a reciter of war ballads (such as the Taiheiki) in the household of a wealthy silk merchant, and moved to Edo in 1760 at the age of 15.
While in Edo, his early teacher was the noted kokugaku scholar Ametomi Sugaichi, who ran a school training blind people massage, acupuncture, and music.
In 1766 he was able to make a pilgrimage to Ise Shrine with his father for 60 days, continuing on to visit Kyoto, Osaka, and Mount Koya.
Hanawa Hokiichi's birth home in Honjō was made into a memorial museum and was proclaimed a National Historic Site in 1944.