
Hawaii KTV
Hawaii KTV is one of the more recognizable names in the Nagoya Entertainment District, with a tropical-theme interior that plays to its branding: palm-leaf wallpaper, tiki-style lighting, and a reception area built around a faux beach hut. The venue has about 18 private rooms across standard, VIP, and a handful of party-sized rooms that fit up to 20 guests. The song library is extensive and the sound systems are above average for Nagoya, with recent equipment upgrades in the VIP rooms. Malaysian visitors make up a larger share of traffic here than at competing venues, and the staff include several Malay speakers. Hostess services are available and operate on the standard Nagoya billing model (drink fees, sit-down charges, tips). The venue runs longer hours than most, with weekend rooms available through 05:00, and the bar menu is pricier than street-level pubs but in line with the other full KTV operations on the strip.
Where to stay near Hawaii KTV
Hotels and rentals within walking distance.
What to Expect
A larger-than-average KTV with themed decor and a mix of standard and party-sized rooms. Group energy is higher than at smaller KTVs because more rooms fit larger groups. Hostess selection runs through a lineup at check-in, and staff respect opt-out preferences if communicated clearly at the start.
Themed, louder, and group-oriented compared to discreet KTV operations.
Mandarin and Hokkien pop dominant, strong Malay and Indonesian pop catalog, English classics and modern chart tracks
Casual. Smart casual for VIP and party rooms; no formal enforcement elsewhere.
Larger groups (8 to 20), Malaysian weekenders, birthday and stag parties, guests wanting better sound than the budget KTVs
Cash preferred (IDR, SGD, MYR accepted at house rates), cards with 3 percent surcharge, no QRIS for final bill
Price Range
Standard room 350000 IDR/hr, VIP room 650000 IDR/hr, party room 1000000 IDR/hr, beer bucket 450000 IDR, hostess drink 180000 IDR
Standard ~$23/hr, VIP ~$43/hr, party ~$67/hr, beer bucket ~$30, hostess drink ~$12
Hours
19:00-04:00 Sun-Thu, 19:00-05:00 Fri-Sat
Insider Tip
Book VIP rooms ahead for Saturday nights; walk-ins often face 45-minute waits after 22:00. Ask staff to itemize the tab each round rather than at checkout. Malay-speaking hosts are on shift most weekend evenings and can help Malaysian groups navigate the billing.
Full Review
Hawaii KTV builds its identity around volume and theming rather than subtlety. The entrance is dressed with a tiki-style reception booth and palm-themed lighting, and the corridor to the rooms is lined with framed photos of past events. The room mix favors larger spaces, which explains the venue's popularity with Malaysian weekend groups and bachelor parties from Singapore. Standard rooms seat six to eight, VIP rooms fit 10 to 14, and the two party rooms stretch to 20 with dedicated dance space and higher-spec sound systems.
The sound is a genuine step up from budget KTVs in the same district. Recent upgrades added better microphone systems and touchscreen song selection with a clean search interface. The library is one of the largest in Nagoya, with strong coverage of Mandarin, Hokkien, Cantonese, Indonesian, Malay, and English tracks. Song weight leans Mandarin-heavy for the Chinese-Indonesian locals who use the venue midweek, and Malay-heavy on weekend nights when the ferry arrivals shift the crowd.
Hostess services follow the standard Nagoya template. Guests who want them select at check-in and pay per-drink and per-hour charges separately from the room bill. Guests who do not want hostesses can decline at reception without pushback; the venue does not auto-assign. Bill management discipline matters. Snack platters, beer buckets, and hostess drinks all get added individually, and weekend bills routinely run above initial estimates. Ask for an interim tab every two rounds and the final checkout becomes predictable.
Safety concerns at Hawaii are typical of Nagoya KTVs. Bill disputes are the main risk, not physical safety. Drink spiking is not widely reported, but group visitors should still watch their drinks, especially when hostesses handle the pouring. Transport back to Nagoya Hill or the ferry terminals is quick at any hour via GoJek. Compared with Memory and Grand Dragon's upstairs floor, Hawaii trades some discretion for louder group energy and better sound.
The Neighborhood
Hawaii KTV occupies a building on the dense KTV strip that defines Nagoya's entertainment blocks, walking distance from Nagoya Hill Superblock. The surrounding area holds other KTV operations, late-night food stalls, and massage parlors.
Getting There
From Batam Centre ferry terminal, GoJek or Grab to Nagoya runs 15 to 25 minutes and costs 30000 to 50000 IDR. From Harbour Bay ferry the ride is about 10 minutes. From Batu Ampar ferry terminal a GoJek takes five minutes. Hang Nadim Airport is 25 minutes by taxi.
Other Venues in Nagoya Entertainment District

Pacific Palace
Large entertainment complex in the heart of Nagoya's nightlife district. Features a main dance floor, KTV rooms, and multiple bars under one roof.

Golden Prawn 888
Popular KTV venue with private rooms of varying sizes and a full food and drink menu. Caters mainly to Singaporean and Malaysian visitors on weekend trips.

Arena Pub
Late-night bar in the Nagoya entertainment area with live bands covering pop and rock hits. Gets busy after midnight, especially on weekends.

New Hollywood Disco
Long-running Nagoya disco playing a mix of Indonesian pop, Mandarin hits, and Western dance music. One of the louder, more energetic options in the district.

Wow KTV
Modern KTV complex with well-maintained private rooms and an extensive song library in multiple languages. Popular with groups visiting from Singapore.

Grand Dragon Pub & KTV
Two-floor entertainment venue near Nagoya Hill combining a street-level bar with private karaoke rooms upstairs. Draws a younger crowd, 18 to 35, on weekends.