Isla
← Explore the islands
Palawan · Know the place

El Nido

but slip off the bangka and the real town is a morning palengke, a beach grill with plastic tables in the sand, and karinderyas where the catch costs a few hundred pesos.

The short version

What El Nido is known for.

Tap a card for the story.

food

Buy-and-grill seafood at the palengke

El Nido Public Market (palengke), busiest 6–10 AM; cooking-fee eateries nearby

The smartest meal in El Nido starts at the public market at dawn, when the boats come in around 5am: pick your fish, squid, or shellfish, then carry it to a nearby eatery that'll grill it, steam it with ginger, or turn it into soup for a small cooking fee. A whole feast lands around PHP 300–600 — the way locals have always eaten by the bay.

source ↗
food

Inihaw na pusit & kinilaw

Beachfront grills like Sea Slugs on the El Nido town beach

El Nido's two anchor dishes are dead simple and unbeatable fresh: whole squid grilled over coals, and kinilaw — line-caught tuna or tanigue 'cooked' in coconut vinegar and calamansi with ginger, onion, and chili. Eat them where the grill is right there in the sand at a beachfront place as the sun drops over Bacuit Bay.

source ↗
nature

Bacuit Bay & the limestone karst

Bacuit Bay island-hopping tours; Taraw Cliff hike (guided only)

The reason everyone comes: jagged limestone cliffs rising straight out of turquoise water, with hidden lagoons you paddle into through cracks in the rock. Long before island-hopping, the Tagbanua and Cuyonon held these cliffs sacred — homes of ancestral spirits. The name Taraw itself is Cuyonon for the white limestone. Climb the cliff with a guide for the view, or just take the bangka through the lagoons.

source ↗
heritage

Cuyonon & Tagbanua roots

El Nido Public Market and surrounding barangays

El Nido's first people were the Tagbanua and Cuyonon, and their language still names the land — Taraw, the very cliffs over town. Their everyday culture shows up at the market in handmade suman wrapped in leaves, bundles of native greens, and the deep local read on which fish runs in which season.

source ↗
product

Palawan wild honey & cashew

Pasalubong and handicraft shops in El Nido town

From the forests behind the coast comes pure wild honey gathered by Batak and Tagbanua hunters who can name the flowering trees in their order of bloom and read the giant honeybees' moods, plus Palawan cashews turned into buttery spreads. Raw honey and cashew are the pasalubong worth carrying out, sold by local makers in town.

source ↗
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.

El Nido

The classics · old-school & beloved
Market
El Nido Public Market (Palengke)

Try Morning catch (you pick, they cook) and handmade suman

Where real daily life happens before the tourists wake — fish still flipping in baskets, bundles of banana leaves, native vegetables, handmade suman. Buy your seafood here at dawn and a market-side eatery will cook it for PHP 50–80. The most local, most affordable way to eat in a pricey town.

El Nido town proper; busiest 6–10 AMsource ↗
Restaurant
Sea Slugs

Try Grilled fish and buttered crab, by the beach

Plastic tables stuck in the sand, the grill blazing at the entrance, and a seafood case where you point at your squid, crab, or fish — usually with a reggae band going. Generous, reasonably priced, and pure beachfront El Nido, with your feet practically in Bacuit Bay.

Barangay Masagana, El Nido town beachsource ↗
Bakery
Midtown Bakery (New El Nido Bakery)

Try Hot pandesal and affordable everyday bread

One of the oldest — and for years nearly the only — bakery in El Nido, turning out hot pandesal, pan de coco, and cheap loaves for fishermen, tricycle drivers, and island-hoppers loading up before a boat tour. Where locals, not tourists, buy their daily bread.

Rizal St., Barangay Buena Suerte, El Nido; 6 AM–7 PMsource ↗
Restaurant
UGAT Filipino Kitchen

Try Heritage-leaning Filipino dishes (kare-kare, kilawin)

UGAT means 'roots,' and the kitchen on Calle Hama leans into them — kare-kare, kilawin, adobo paté made with Palawan ingredients — instead of the generic Western fare that floods tourist towns. It's a modern, slightly fusion take rather than a carinderia, but it's a real place to taste the Philippines, not just El Nido.

Calle Hama, El Nido townsource ↗
Carinderia
Silog Republic

Try Silog plates (garlic rice + egg + protein) for about a dollar

Garlic rice, a fried egg, and your pick of protein for around 65 pesos — the silog joint that keeps budget travelers and locals fed in a town where prices climb fast. Cheap, open all hours, and unpretentious Filipino breakfast-all-day.

Rizal St., Barangay Maligaya, El Nidosource ↗
Market
El Nido Night Market food stalls

Try Grilled street eats and inexpensive local plates

After dark the beachfront strip near the pier fires up its grills — cheap skewers, fresh seafood, and rice plates eaten elbow-to-elbow with locals. Budget PHP 200–400 and you've got the casual, affordable counterpoint to El Nido's beach clubs.

Beachfront near the pier / Calle Hama, evenings from ~6 PMsource ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Café
Hama Coffee

Try Flat white with a bay view

Oceanside specialty café with some of El Nido's best espresso over Bacuit Bay.

Calle Hama · 7am–5pmsource ↗
Bakery
Huk & Co

Try Naturally leavened sourdough

El Nido's first artisan bakery — plant-based sourdough and pastries fresh daily.

C Hotel, Rizal Stsource ↗
Bar
Manille Beach Bar

Try Manille-liqueur cocktails

Lio Beach craft-cocktail bar built around heritage distiller Destileria Limtuaco.

Shops @ Liosource ↗
Shop
Kalye Artisano

Try Handmade soaps, weaves, tribal crafts

An artisans' village gathering Filipino makers, eateries and a craft school.

Lio Tourism Estate · 8am–5pmsource ↗
Restaurant
El Nido Boutique ArtCafe

Try Farm-to-table plates + local art

Pioneer organic farm-to-table café above a Palaweño handicraft boutique.

Sirena St, El Nidosource ↗
Café
Grounded Specialty Coffee

Try 100% Arabica espresso drinks with oat/almond/soy milk (the oat-milk latte is the standout) plus vegan dishes and pastries

A 100% plant-based specialty cafe whose limestone-inspired interior, designed by a local architect to echo El Nido's karst cliffs, is repeatedly singled out by reviewers as design-forward in a way unusual for the Philippines.

El Nido town center; daily, morning-eveningsource ↗
Café
Lost Islands Center for Kape (LICK)

Try Freshly roasted Philippine single-origin beans, brew experiences and Kape Kamp coffee education

A specialty roastery-cafe on Lio Beach dedicated to championing Philippine single-origin coffees, roasting in-house with brew profiles inspired by El Nido's cliffs and jungle.

12B Sitio Uno, Lio Estate, El Nido; daytimesource ↗
Shop
Manggad

Try Handwoven Mangyan baskets, Palawano banigs and Palawan-made contemporary Filipino-design objects

A curated craft boutique at Kalye Artisano showcasing Philippine craftsmanship -- Mangyan baskets, Palawano banigs and contemporary Filipino design -- whose name means 'treasures' in Hiligaynon.

Kalye Artisano, Lio Tourism Estate, El Nido; daily 8am-5pmsource ↗
Show 2 more in El Nido
Maker
Ka Likha (Soul Creations)

Try Tribal-inspired statement jewelry and mythology-driven mixed-media art from shells, wood, bone and upcycled objects

An indigenous-rooted artisan studio by Filipino couple Nuno and Pagasa making tribal-inspired jewelry, Philippine-mythology mixed-media art and upcycled crafts from ethically sourced natural materials.

Ka Likha, Kalye Artisano, Lio Beach, El Nidosource ↗
Bar
District Bar + Kitchen

Try Vietnamese comfort dishes with craft cocktails made from fresh, real ingredients; upstairs evening disco bar

A two-level Vietnamese comfort-food-and-cocktail bar run by Palawan-native Eva and her UK partner Jeremy, who trained in Vietnam, filling a gap for proper Vietnamese fare and fresh-ingredient cocktails in El Nido.

El Nido town; eveningssource ↗
What’s on

Festivals & the living scene.

Happening along the way
tap a row for the story
May
El Nido Fiesta (San Isidro)Culture
El Nido · mid-May

The town's patronal fiesta — processions, games, and the bay lit up at night.

all yr
SAVA Beach BarSpot
El Nido · daily · DJ till ~2am

El Nido town's chic beachfront bar — sunset happy hour into a DJ dance floor with theme nights.

source ↗
all yr
Pukka BarNightlife
El Nido · nightly · reggae then house

El Nido reggae bar with a big dance floor — early reggae gives way to a late DJ spinning house.

source ↗
all yr
El Nido Full Moon PartyNightlife
El Nido · monthly · around the full moon

Beachside full-moon party — sunset acoustics into electronic sets, fire dancers and face paint.

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