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Visayas · Know the place

Boracay

the white-sand party rock that's still, beneath the beach clubs, the ancestral island of the Ati and a haggle-and-paluto seafood market town.

The short version

What Boracay is known for.

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food

Talipapa paluto seafood

D'Talipapa Market, Station 2, Boracay

Skip the resort buffet. At D'Talipapa wet market you haggle for fat prawns, scallops and oysters, then carry them next door to a cook who grills and butters them for a small fee. It's the most local, most affordable way to eat on the island — and the freshest.

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food

Chori burger

Merly's BBQ and beachfront stalls, Boracay

Boracay's own street-food invention, born in 1988 at a humble beachside BBQ stall: a chorizo patty in a bun with banana ketchup, mayo and atchara. It's the cheap, garlicky midnight snack that fuels the island after the bars — pure working-class genius.

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craft

Puka shell craft

Puka Shell Beach vendors, northern Boracay

The island's namesake beach gave the world the puka-shell necklace — strung from tiny naturally-holed shells that fishers once gathered by hand. Buy them straight from the artisans near Puka Beach rather than the mall and you keep an old island livelihood alive.

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heritage

Ati ancestral heritage

Ati Village, Barangay Manoc-Manoc, Boracay

Long before the resorts, the Ati — a Negrito people — were Boracay's first settlers, and the island remains their ancestral land, formalized by a 2011 domain title. A small community still lives in Manoc-Manoc; their story is the island's true origin, honored in Aklan's Ati-Atihan dances.

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food

Fresh talaba (oysters)

D'Talipapa Market paluto stalls, Boracay

Boracay's oysters rival Capiz and Iloilo's — plump, briny, and dirt cheap at the market. Order a kilo grilled with garlic butter and you'll understand why locals roll their eyes at the overpriced beachfront versions.

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Spend it local

Eat, drink & shop the towns you pass through.

Independent, Filipino-owned — from the carinderia that’s fed the port for forty years to the roastery the cool kids queue for. Your spend lands where it belongs.

Boracay

The classics · old-school & beloved
Market
D'Talipapa Market

Try Haggle-and-paluto fresh seafood (prawns, scallops, talaba)

The island's true belly — a tight maze of seafood, fruit and dried-goods stalls where you bargain for the catch and hand it to a paluto cook to grill on the spot. Meals here run a fraction of beachfront prices, and the spend goes to vendors, not resort chains.

Station 2, Boracay (Malay, Aklan)source ↗
Carinderia
Merly's BBQ

Try Chori burger and longga burger

The humble grill stall credited with inventing the Boracay chori burger back in 1988 — chorizo patty, banana ketchup, atchara, all on a soft bun. Cheap, smoky, beloved by locals and night-owls; the opposite of a beach club and far more authentically Boracay.

Boracay (beachfront BBQ stall, Malay, Aklan)source ↗
Carinderia
Jasper's Tapsilog & Restaurant

Try Tapsilog and affordable Filipino turo-turo meals

One of the island's OGs, slinging honest turo-turo plates — tapsilog, humba, caldereta — since 1995, beloved by locals and budget travelers alike. Meals around a hundred pesos on an island built for splurging; this is where Boracay's workers actually eat.

Main Road near D'Mall, Balabag, Boracay (Malay, Aklan)source ↗
Maker
Puka Shell Beach artisans

Try Hand-strung puka shell necklaces and jewelry

On the quieter northern beach that gave puka shells their global fame, local makers still string necklaces and bracelets from hand-gathered shells. Buying direct here supports an island handicraft that predates the resorts.

Puka Shell (Yapak) Beach, northern Boracaysource ↗
Maker
Ati Village

Try Ati community crafts and cultural heritage

Home to Boracay's indigenous Ati, the island's first people, now a small community holding their 2.1-hectare ancestral domain amid the resort boom. Visiting respectfully and buying their crafts channels tourism money to the people who were here first.

Barangay Manoc-Manoc, Boracaysource ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Restaurant
Nonie's

Try Farm-to-table brunch, bread baked daily

Sustainability-driven brunch sourcing ~90% from small Visayan family farms.

Station X, Station 2source ↗
Café
Café Maruja

Try Specialty coffee + soufflé pancakes

Nostalgic beachfront café serving ethically sourced Filipino coffee.

Station 3 beachfrontsource ↗
Café
Blackfish Coffee Bar

Try Isla Coffee (cinnamon mocha)

A hidden Station 1 specialty bar opened by two flight attendants.

Station 1, down an alleysource ↗
Restaurant
Subo Boracay

Try Reconstructed heritage Filipino dishes spanning Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao

Chef Jian Sacdalan's neo-traditional Filipino restaurant inside a Spanish-colonial house transported piece by piece from Vigan and rebuilt on the island.

Calle Remedios, Station 3, Boracaysource ↗
Café
The Black Attic Cafe

Try Specialty coffee; Black Attic Burger; beach-view dining

A cozy beachfront cafe and B&B at Bolabog (Bulabog) Beach with dark, refined interiors serving barista-made specialty coffee and comfort food.

Bolabog/Bulabog Beach, Balabag, Boracaysource ↗
What’s on

Festivals & the living scene.

Happening along the way
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Apr
Love BoracayFestival
Boracay · Apr 25–May 3, 2026

The island's flagship long weekend — successor to LaBoracay — beach music, sunset sessions and DJ parties on White Beach.

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May
Takeover Beach Music FestivalNightlife
Boracay · early May, Love Boracay weekend

Tropical EDM beach festival with water cannons and big DJ lineups on White Beach Station 1.

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all yr
Epic BoracaySpot
Boracay · nightly · club after midnight

D'Mall's beachfront resto-bar by day, Boracay's main DJ dancefloor onto the sand after midnight.

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all yr
Boracay PubCrawlSpot
Boracay · most nights

The long-running yellow-shirt bar crawl — five White Beach bars a night with games and group entry.

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all yr
DiniBeachFood
Boracay · daily · sunset · Diniwid Beach

A treehouse bar-restaurant built into the Diniwid cliffs — fresh Filipino seafood, craft cocktails and Boracay's best sunset.

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all yr
Cafe Got SoulFood
Boracay · daily 7am–10pm · Station 1

Beachfront café on White Beach — crepes, quinoa bowls and sunset DJ sets; the island arm of the Got Soul hi-fi brand.

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Your stopovers aren’t dead time — they’re someone’s festival, and your spend is their season.