The marketing photos are shot with a fisheye lens, you're shocked upon entering the unit to see how small it is. I'll describe some of the features and you decide if it's a luxury unit. The white track light canisters in the living area and kitchen have yellowed in the last there decades of use. The white drapes in the bedroom are stained, apparently from rain exposure a year or two previous. The pale floor tiles really make the dirty black grout pop. The grout reaches it's pinnacle of grunge where it meets the shower and morphs into multiple shades of brown and black. Nimble feet and skinny legs are helpful when operating the bathroom door as it clears the toilet by only an inch, really. We found stepping into the shower first before closing the bathroom door was helpful. Interesting use of a bar sink for the bathroom sink, created some helpful vanity space. Pots and pans have long lost their non-stick coatings, only one was usable. The manager Sherry, told my wife the contract couldn't be broken, all the other units were the same and she was just nit-picking. Use realistic photos and accurate adjectives when marketing the property, luxury and newly renovated don't fit. All said, the grounds are well maintained and the units are thirty yards from one of the nicest sections of white sand beach on Maui. An in-service on customer relations would be beneficial for the management.