Where season 1 of The White Lotus was filmed

Most of the action in the tropical first season of The White Lotus happened in and around a real hotel — but not all of it!

Though it may have flown slightly under the radar during its initial 2021 release, you'd be hard-pressed to find someone today who hasn't heard of HBO's The White Lotus. Mike White's sharp, satirical dramedy has the world firmly in its bitingly-written, beautifully-shot clutches thanks to a stunning first season, which nabbed it five statues at the 2022 Emmys.

Though it's now an anthology with season 2 set in Sicily, the first installment featured an all-star cast of vacationers and resort staff exchanging bickers and barbs at the fictitious White Lotus Resort — a high-end, full-service hotel located in Hawaii. The first season was a captivating slow-burn class satire that was both wildly funny and socially prescient even as it careened towards sure doom. White — who wrote and directed every episode himself without the help of a writers' room — is palpably dedicated to the stories he weaves with a special emphasis on the surroundings. The idyllic yet ominous resorts defined both season 1's tropical adventures and the second season's Italian exploits, with the settings clearly characters themselves. So, where was that elevated beach resort that drew us in at the onset?

Here are some of the (literally and figuratively) breathtaking locations from season 1 of The White Lotus.

01 of 05

The White Lotus Resort (Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea, Kihei, Hawaii)

Photograph by Mario Perez/HBO Jolene Purdy, Murray Bartlett, Alexandra Daddario, Jake Lacy HBO The White Lotus
Mario Perez/HBO

Most of the action in season 1 took place in and around the Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea, located on the island of Maui in Hawaii. Filmed in 2020, when COVID-19 precautions were especially stringent, the cast was actually quarantined at the hotel for the duration of the shoot, which went from October to December.

Although most film and television productions need to move their setups from location to location (sometimes even from city to city) to find the ideal look for each scene, White and his team were able to make full use of the interiors and exteriors at the five-star Four Seasons. Its offices, spa, restaurants, lobby, pools, and bars — all redressed for the production's purposes — were the show's mise-en-scène. The White Lotus emblem is featured prominently around the hotel and on actors playing staff, who wore White Lotus-branded outfits. One of those staff was played by Alec Merlino, White's fellow contestant from Survivor's 37th season, where White was the runner-up. Two other alums from White's season, Kara Kay and third-place contestant Angelina Keeley, appeared in the first episode of season 2.

02 of 05

The Pineapple (Lokelani Presidential), Palm (Elite Oceanfront), Hibiscus (Oceanfront Prime), and Tradewinds Suite (Maile Presidential Suite)

Photograph by Mario Perez/HBO Alexandra Daddario, Jake Lacy HBO The White Lotus
Mario Perez/HBO

The guest rooms at the hotel underwent revamps by Laura Fox, the show's production designer, who was trying to match a very specific design request from White: that the rooms look like a mix between the infamous Madonna Inn, which is arrestingly colorful, and the elegant and refined Four Seasons. The Pineapple Suite — obnoxious honeymooner Shane's (Jake Lacy) golden goose — was actually the Lokelani Presidential Suite, disguised in yellows, greens, browns, and replete with pineapples.

But Shane and his new wife Rachel (Alexandra Daddario) were initially placed, to Shane's well-documented dismay, in the Palm Suite instead. It's the root cause of his feud with Emmy winner Murray Bartlett's hotel manager Armond, and was one of the Four Seasons' Elite Oceanfront Suites, redecked in velvet and green. Jennifer Coolidge's emotionally volatile, solo-traveling Tanya ended up in the pink-and-red-hued Hibiscus Suite (one of the hotel's Oceanfront Prime Suites). And then there's the dysfunctional Mossbacher family — played by Connie Britton, Steve Zahn, Sydney Sweeney, and Fred Hechinger, along with Brittany O'Grady as Sweeney's character's college friend Paula — who spent a tumultuous week in the Tradewinds Suite, which is actually called the Maile Presidential Suite. Although the teens in the show slept on pull-outs beds in the living room and kitchenette, this is actually the Four Seasons' second-largest suite, with three bedrooms, four bathrooms, two living rooms, and a full sauna.

03 of 05

Arrival Landing (Olowalu Landing, Olowalu, Hawaii)

Photograph by Mario Perez/HBO Murray Bartlett, Jolene Purdy, Natasha Rothwell, Lukas Gage HBO The White Lotus
Mario Perez/HBO

Although most of season 1 was filmed at the Four Seasons, there were a few other locations used. One of the times the crew ventured away from the hotel's grounds was when they filmed the arrival scene in the pilot episode. The soon-to-be guests at the White Lotus traveled to the hotel by yacht, next traversing a green lawn where staff awaited them with manufactured ease and gleaming smiles.

Armond told them the resort was just a "short ride away" in a golf cart, which is true in reality as well. The Olowalu Landing, where this scene was filmed, is a drive — not a walk — from the hotel. Depending on one's definition of short, however, it won't be as quick a ride as it appeared to be for the show's guests. In reality, it's about a 40-minute drive down the coast of Maui to get from the Landing to the Four Seasons.

04 of 05

The White Lotus Beach (Wailea Beach, Kihei, Hawaii)

Photograph by Mario Perez/HBO Fred Hechinger HBO The White Lotus
Mario Perez/HBO

The beach on which Hechinger's screen-obsessed teen Quinn woke up one morning — post-argument with his sister — to find his electronics washed away is, as it's portrayed on the show, directly next to the hotel. The Four Seasons is a few steps up from Wailea Beach, which is prominently featured in several key moments, including when Tanya found Paula's coveted backpack of drugs after Paula and Olivia (Sweeney) left it there mistakenly. It was also significant as one of the secret meeting places for Paula and her local lover boy Kai (Kekoa Scott Kekumano), and was the site of Quinn's ultimate spiritual awakening.

Throughout the season, Quinn found himself connecting with the ocean, the islanders, and the traditions of the community. He especially found unexpected joy in rowing a Hōkūle'a — a voyaging canoe — with local friends he met on this very beach.

05 of 05

The Airport (Kahului Airport, Kahului, Hawaii)

Photograph by Mario Perez/HBO Jake Lacy, Alexandra Daddario HBO The White Lotus
Mario Perez/HBO

As The White Lotus opened, an older vacationing couple in an airport lounge attempted to engage in genuine conversation with an especially-snarky Shane. The couple was morbidly curious when they heard he'd spent the week at the White Lotus — didn't someone just die there? Like the rest of the show's filming locations, the airport in the first scene of the pilot wasn't a constructed set; it's a functioning airport called Kahului Airport. As Maui's main airport, it's responsible for much of the traffic in and out of the island and the state itself — although tourism in Hawaii is a complicated discourse.

Being the only non-tropical location in the season, the Kahului Airport provided a uniquely neutral space to launch a turbulent story. After an unreadable Shane stared out the airport window at the box labeled "human remains" being loaded onto his plane, the story jumped back in time to one week earlier, introducing viewers to all of the potential victims and suspects in a provocative and effective twist on the classic murder mystery structure.

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