Rhodocollybia laulaha is a species of fungus in the family Omphalotaceae. Found in Hawaii, it was described as new to science in 1999 by mycologists Dennis Desjardin, Roy Halling, and Don Hemmes. The fruitbodies have caps that are 3to in diameter, bell-shaped to convex in shape, and light brown (young specimens) to grayish orange or orange-white (old specimens). Gills have an adnexed attachment to the stipe, and are narrow and very crowded together. The stipe is 3to long by 0.6to thick. The specific epithet laulaha - Hawaiian for "widespread" - refers to its widespread distribution and common appearance on the Hawaiian Islands.