2018 Hawaii gubernatorial election

After prevailing in an intensely competitive primary election on August 11, 2018, incumbent Democratic governor David Ige ran successfully for re-election to a second term in office, considerably improving on his margin of victory from 2014, in which he only won a plurality.

Republicans Andria Tupola and Marissa Kerns headed one of two 2018 major-party gubernatorial tickets that included two women.

[1] This was Hawaii's only gubernatorial election since 1994 without Linda Lingle or Duke Aiona as the Republican nominee, as well as the first since the 1990 election in which the winner was of a different party than the incumbent president.

As of 2023, this election was the only time since 1998 that an incumbent Democratic governor of Hawaii was re-elected.

with David Ige and John Carroll with David Ige and Raymond L'Heureux with Colleen Hanabusa and John Carroll with Colleen Hanabusa and Andria Tupola with Colleen Hanabusa and Raymond L'Heureux Ige won both congressional districts.

Results by county:
Ige—50–60%
Ige—40–50%
Hanabusa—40–50%
No data
Results by county:
Green—50–60%
Green—30–40%
Tokuda—30–40%
Carvalho—40–50%
No data
Results by county:
Tupola—50–60%
Tupola—40–50%
No data
Results by county:
Kerns—30–40%
Lipscomb—30–40%
No data
Results by county:
Brewer—100%
No data
Results by county:
Ing—100%
No data
Results by county:
Teruya—50–60%
Blackwell—40–50%
Blackwell—50–60%
No data
Results by county:
Robotti—50–60%
Magaoay—50–60%
No data