Isla
← All routes
CebuEl Nido
Multi-modal · 4–6 days

Cebu ↔ El Nido

The same Lio monopoly, priced from Cebu — and the same way around it, through Puerto Princesa.

Fares web-checked Jun 7, 2026·4 sources below
Direct
₱14,224–₱18,000
Isla
₱4,000
Save up to
up to ₱14,000

El Nido's Lio airport is served only by CebGo and AirSWIFT, so direct fares stay high. Puerto Princesa, by contrast, gets low-cost competition — that gap is the arbitrage.

Cebu to El Nido, the long way is cheap.

Direct round-trip· into Lio — thin and pricey
Cebu
El Nido
₱14,224 · ~1.5h flying
CebGo / AirSWIFT into Lio · cheapest RT ~₱14,224
Via Puerto Princesa· fly the competitive gateway, van up the coast
Cebu
Puerto Princesa
Underground River
Honda Bay
Baker's Hill
El Nido
Big Lagoon
Nacpan Beach
Secret Lagoon
₱4,000 · RT · van ~5–6h each way
Cebu Pacific CEB→PPS ~₱1,350 + Lakkbay shared van ~₱650

~₱14,200 direct into Lio.
~₱4,000 via Puerto Princesa — ₱10,200 saved.
Isla
Find the route, not just the flight.
As much the point as the savings

The money gets you there. The city is why you go.

Besides the savings, Isla sells the trip you’d have flown over — towns mid-fiesta and after dark. Here’s what’s on.

Happening along the way
tap a row for the story
Mar
Balayong FestivalFestival
Puerto Princesa · around Mar 4 (city founding)

Puerto Princesa's founding festival for the pink balayong cherry tree — street dancing, parades and fireworks.

source ↗
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.

May
Karagatan FestivalFestival
Puerto Princesa · first week of May

A four-day ocean festival on the west-coast beaches — banca races, sand sculpting and a beach-party finale.

source ↗
Jun
Baragatan FestivalCulture
Puerto Princesa · mid-June

Palawan's founding fiesta — the whole province gathers on the capital's streets.

Nov
Subaraw Biodiversity FestivalCulture
Puerto Princesa · around Nov 11 yearly

Biodiversity festival marking the Underground River's New 7 Wonders win — a grand eco parade.

source ↗
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 ↗
Show 5 more
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 ↗
all yr
Baywalk Night MarketFood
Puerto Princesa · nightly · the Baywalk

Seafront night market — grilled seafood and street food under the palms facing the bay.

source ↗
all yr
Tiki Resto BarNightlife
Puerto Princesa · nightly live band from 9pm

A PPS favourite — a live band every night and cocktails in a lively tiki setting.

source ↗
all yr
Before & After ClubSpot
Puerto Princesa · weekend nights

Underground-music club above Chez Rose Beach Bar — techno and DJ nights, fire dancers on the sand below.

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

Cebu

The classics · old-school & beloved
Market
Carbon Public Market

Try Dried mango, lechon by the kilo, fresh produce, native delicacies

Over a century old and named for the coal once piled here in Spanish times, Carbon is where Cebu's home cooks and carinderia owners actually shop — thousands of vendors of fish, fruit, handicrafts, and the cheapest dried mango and lechon-by-the-kilo in the city.

Downtown Cebu City near the pier; busiest early morningsource ↗
Carinderia
Larsian sa Fuente

Try Grilled pork BBQ, chicken, seafood with puso (hanging rice)

An open-air barbecue village feeding Cebuanos since the 1970s — dozens of smoky stalls grew up around Col. Alvino Mondarez's original grill, the name a contraction of his mother Pilar and her twin Siana. Grab a low stool, point at skewers of pork and seafood, and mop it up with puso. The most democratic dinner in Cebu.

Don Mariano Cui St., Fuente Osmeña, Cebu City; eveningssource ↗
Carinderia
Pungko-Pungko sa Fuente

Try Ngohiong, chicharon bulaklak, ginabot with puso and spiced vinegar

A street-food ritual still alive: a basket of fried ngohiong, chicharon bulaklak, and ginabot lands in front of you while you sit (pungko) on a tiny stool, eating with your hands and a cup of vinegar. The cheapest, greasiest, most Cebuano lunch there is.

Near Fuente Osmeña Circle, Cebu Citysource ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Café
Linear Coffee Roasters

Try Single-origin pour-overs

Cebu's leading independent roastery — roasts on-site and supplies the city's cafés.

C. Rosal St + Mandauesource ↗
Maker
The Chocolate Chamber

Try Cebu tablea + sikwate tasting

Bean-to-bar chocolate from Cebu's 'chocolate queen' Raquel Choa.

Cebu City (Casa de Cacao)source ↗
Café
Current Coffee Roasters

Try Light-roast pour-overs of African single origins (Shakiso, Kossa); cupping-table events for the specialty-curious

Cebu's most serious third-wave micro-roastery, serving clean light roasts of high-scoring African single origins in small, ever-changing batches.

Gov. M. Cuenco Ave, Cebu City; daily 9am-5pmsource ↗
Show 18 more in Cebu
Carinderia
Cebu Original Lumpia House (Manalili St.)

Try Ngohiong (five-spice spring roll), fresh lumpia, Fil-Chinese classics

Born in 1956 as a Plaridel Street congee shop, it burned down and rose again on Manalili as Lumpia House — the family eatery that helped make ngohiong a Cebuano household word, still the cafeteria-style benchmark locals measure all others against.

Manalili St., downtown Cebu Citysource ↗
Market
Carcar Public Market

Try Carcar lechon, MatMat chicharon, ampao, bucarillo

Steps from Carcar's rotunda, this is the affordable beating heart of Cebu's heritage town — the cheapest lechon on the island sold beside paper bags of MatMat chicharon, ampao, and bucarillo made by families who've done it for generations.

Carcar City, ~40 km south of Cebu Citysource ↗
Market
Taboan Public Market

Try Danggit (dried rabbitfish), dried pusit, salted fish

Cebu's dried-fish capital — a pungent, glorious warren of stalls selling danggit, dried pusit, and salted fish that pasalubong-hunters raid by the kilo, most of it shipped in from Bantayan Island. Not for delicate noses, but this is the salt-cured soul of Cebuano breakfast.

Brgy. San Nicolas, ~2 km southwest of downtown Cebu Citysource ↗
Restaurant
CnT Lechon

Try Cebu-style roast lechon, sold whole or by the kilo

The local benchmark for crackling — CnT's skin shatters like chicharon while the meat stays herby and juicy, a Cebu institution that families order whole for every fiesta and balikbayan homecoming.

Several branches across Cebu Citysource ↗
Carinderia
Sutukil (STK) seafood stalls, Mactan

Try Grilled, soured, and raw fresh seafood (sugba-tula-kilaw)

Pick your fish off the ice, then choose its fate — Sugba (grill), Tula (soup), Kilaw (raw in vinegar). STK is Cebu's hands-on, no-frills seafood ritual, born on Mactan and best eaten cheaply by the sea.

Mactan Island seafood market, Lapu-Lapu Citysource ↗
Shop
Basilica Minore del Santo Niño

Try Oldest Santo Niño image in the Philippines; pilgrim candle-dancing

The country's oldest Catholic church, founded 1565, built to house the Santo Niño image Magellan left in 1521 — the spiritual core of Sinulog, where candle vendors and dancing devotees crowd the courtyard year-round. Free to enter; the real, living heart of Cebuano faith.

Osmeña Blvd., downtown Cebu Citysource ↗
Café
Kamp Craft Coffee & Roastery

Try Build-your-own 'reserve menu' where you pick the bean origin; vinyl-and-paperback campfire vibe

A camping-inspired neighborhood roastery in Kamputhaw, intentionally anti-industrial and quiet, with a vinyl soundtrack and a planned bean-your-way reserve menu.

16 Molave St., Kamputhaw, Cebu City; daily ~9am-8pm (opened Oct 2025)source ↗
Bar
Llula (Llula Cebu)

Try Craft cocktails over slow-frozen clear ice; Spanish tapas, croquetas and battered eggplant with honey

A passcode-protected speakeasy in a converted Apas house, marked by a dragonfly mural, pairing Spanish tapas with craft cocktails over clear directional-freeze ice.

Barangay Apas, Cebu City (residential; weekly-changing passcode entry)source ↗
Restaurant
CAVA Restaurant & 12 Notes Speakeasy

Try 12 Notes hidden speakeasy with Thursday live-jazz sessions inside a colonial-era casa

A 120-year-old restored Cebuano heritage house (the former Circa 1900) turned Western-cuisine restaurant with a hidden jazz speakeasy that comes alive at night.

Circa 1900 Compound, Sanjercasville Rd, Lahug, Cebu Citysource ↗
Restaurant
The Pig & Palm

Try Confit pork belly and pork-built small plates; cocktails blending Filipino fruits with British technique

A modern-European pork-focused sharing-plates restaurant co-owned by Cebuana Irha Atherton, carrying a 2026 Michelin Bib Gourmand.

GF MSY Tower, Pescadores Rd, Cebu Business Park, Cebu Citysource ↗
Restaurant
Lasa Modern Filipino Kitchen

Try Crispy pata, shrimp kinilaw with kimchi and chicken-skin nachos on a jungle-edge terrace with city-to-sea views

A mountaintop Busay restaurant serving modern Filipino cooking with regional soul on an open terrace overlooking Cebu and the sea, with a 2026 Michelin Bib Gourmand.

Busay, Cebu City (near Temple of Leah; ~15-20 min from downtown); daily 11am-10pmsource ↗
Restaurant
Abaseria Deli & Cafe

Try Shareable Cebuano home dishes (sinigang pasayan, humba); Friday-only binignit

A nostalgic, craft-filled Cebuano home-cooking restaurant grown out of a former family business, famous for its Friday binignit and 2026 Michelin Bib Gourmand.

Don Gil Garcia St., Cebu Citysource ↗
Shop
ANTHILL Fabric Gallery

Try Hand-woven hablon, abaca, inabel and ikat textiles and terra-cotta jewelry; 2025 'Habol, Hablon, Hinablon' exhibition

A 15-year-old Cebu social enterprise and lifestyle store elevating Visayan hablon handweaving as a contemporary art form, now also Cebu's first 'living fabric gallery.'

Pedro Calomarde St. cor. Acacia St., off Gorordo Ave, Cebu Citysource ↗
Bar
Owl Stories and Spirits

Try Light cocktails (Cucumber Gin, Tequila Sundown) sipped over nearly a hundred curated titles, with a piano free to play

A book-bar hybrid in Cebu's Atua Midtown built as a quiet refuge for readers, pairing a personal-collection library with a short cocktail list, a playable piano, and live music.

Unit 108, Atua Midtown, Cebu City; Tue-Sun 2pm-10pmsource ↗
Restaurant
Sialo

Try Tasting menus from 13 to 19 to a 29-course Handurawan, built on Cebu crops, native fruits, wild greens and local seafood

A reservations-only progressive Cebuano tasting-menu restaurant whose 'local is luxury' ethos reworks heritage dishes with modernist technique — the most ambitious fine dining out of Cebu.

7A Pres. Laurel St, Villa Aurora, Brgy. Kasambagan, Cebu City; reservationssource ↗
Shop
Craft Story

Try Handmade goods from Cebuano makers like Happy Garaje, Papers & Tschai, and Peregrina

A concept retail space at The Crossroads, Banilad that gathers small-scale Cebuano makers, giving roughly 50 local artisans a curated venue to sell handmade goods.

The Crossroads, Banilad, Cebu City; Tue-Sun 10am-9pmsource ↗
Shop
Lost Books Cebu

Try A tightly curated local-and-international selection in a tiny former-ATM footprint

An indie bookshop built inside a converted ATM kiosk in downtown Cebu, conceived as a home for Visayan authors alongside a tight local-and-international mix.

CAO Mercado Building, Osmeña Blvd, Cebu City; opened Oct 2024; Tue-Sun 10am-7pmsource ↗
Shop
Makers at Dear Paper

Try Whimsical stationery and lifestyle goods from 35+ Cebuano and Filipino makers, anchored by Dear Paper's own designs

A multi-brand craft concept shop in Cebu's Bonifacio District grown out of the Dear Paper stationery brand, housing stationery and lifestyle goods from 35+ local artists.

Bonifacio District, F. Cabahug St, Cebu Citysource ↗

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 ↗
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 ↗
Show 10 more in El Nido
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 ↗
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 ↗
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 ↗

Puerto Princesa

The classics · old-school & beloved
Market
Old Public Market (Malvar/Burgos Streets)

Try Day-boat seafood (tuna, marlin, prawns) and bundles of dried danggit

Come early and watch the whole city's kitchens get stocked — blue marlin and yellowfin tuna landing fresh, tiger prawns still twitching, and danggit hanging in fragrant bundles. Haggle a little; this is where Puerto Princesa actually eats.

Malvar St. cor. Burgos St., city center; busiest in the morningssource ↗
Restaurant
Rene's Saigon

Try Chao long (Palawan-style pho) and homemade banh mi

Run by a Vietnamese-Filipino family who learned their banh mi from a refugee baker, this is where Palawan's chao long tastes like home, not a novelty — and the homemade 'French bread' is worth the detour on its own. A short walk from the old airport, closed Mondays.

Rizal Avenue Extension, near the airport; 9AM–8:30PM, closed Mondayssource ↗
Carinderia
Bona's Chao Long Haus

Try Beef chao long and 'French bread'

Ask a local which chao long is THE chao long and they'll send you here. The tiny eatery was started by Ms. Lanh, a Vietnamese woman from the refugee camp; when she resettled in the US in 2004 she taught the new owners her secret recipe, and the bowl has tasted the same ever since.

Manalo Street, Puerto Princesasource ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Restaurant
Kalui Restaurant

Try Daily fresh-catch seafood set

Iconic shoes-off native seafood house in a hand-built wooden home of Palaweño art.

Rizal Ave · closed Sunsource ↗
Bakery
Baker's Hill

Try Hopia (mongo, ube)

Homegrown bakeshop-and-garden park — the city's pasalubong stop.

Mitra Rd · 7am–8pm, free entrysource ↗
Maker
Sabuya Coffee Roast House

Try Single-estate Palawan robusta

Palaweño roastery turning Palawan-grown beans into single-estate roasts.

Brgy. Sta. Monicasource ↗
Show 8 more in Puerto Princesa
Restaurant
Viet Ville Restaurant (Sta. Lourdes)

Try Vietnamese spring rolls, chao long, and oven-fresh baguettes

Out at KM 13, this is the eating heart of the village built for Vietnamese boat people who chose to stay — once nearly a ghost town, now revived with an onsite bakery firing fresh baguettes and live music on the weekends. The spring rolls and chao long come with a side of Palawan's refugee history.

KM 13, Barangay Sta. Lourdes, north of the citysource ↗
Restaurant
Balinsasayaw Chicken Grill & Restaurant

Try Grilled chicken and the shared 'bilao' platter

Named for the swiftlet whose nests make the soup, this Rizal Avenue mainstay built its name on the bilao feast — a woven platter heaped with grilled chicken, fish, squid, rice, corn soup, and fruit, made for a table to share. Locals have been booking the little curtained huts here for years.

Rizal Avenue, near Shakey's/Jollibeesource ↗
Bar
Kinabuch Grill & Bar

Try Tamilok, crocodile sisig, and grilled pulutan over cold beer

The open-air grill that grew from a small joint into a city landmark on the strength of locals at happy hour. It's the place that turned tamilok and crocodile sisig into the city's signature dares — sit down, order a beer, and let someone talk you into the worm.

369 Rizal Avenue, Puerto Princesasource ↗
Café
Itoy's Coffee Haus

Try Strong brewed coffee and morning pastries

Long before third-wave anything reached Palawan, regulars called Itoy's 'Puerto Princesa's Starbucks' — a no-frills Rizal Avenue staple where people have parked themselves over strong brewed coffee and pastries for decades.

Rizal Avenue, Puerto Princesasource ↗
Carinderia
Tiya Ising's Filipino Restaurant

Try Home-style Filipino comfort dishes like kare-kare

Old photographs of Puerto Princesa line the walls and vintage films flicker in the background while the kitchen turns out the kind of Filipino comfort food — kare-kare, classic ulam — that tastes like a tita's Sunday. A small, affordable love letter to the old town, going since 2015.

Rizal Avenue area, Puerto Princesasource ↗
Restaurant
Cacaoyan Forest Park and Restaurant

Try Authentic Palaweno dishes and seasonal Filipino comfort food sourced from local fishers and farms, served amid forest walkways and artist murals

A forest-immersed farm-to-table restaurant near the Subterranean River that was named Best Sustainable Rural Tourism Product of the Philippines (Gastronomy) at the ASEAN Sustainable Tourism Awards announced at the 2024 ASEAN Tourism Forum.

Sabang, near Puerto Princesa Subterranean Riversource ↗
Café
Gold • Cup Specialty Coffee Roasters

Try Single-origin hand- and machine-brewed coffee (Spanish latte and iced latte are popular), plus wholesale roasted beans

An independent Puerto Princesa roastery-cafe hand-crafting single-origin coffee from Asian, African and Central American beans, and a favorite of the city's creatives and remote workers.

293 Rizal Avenue (Chiu Building) and Abad Santos St, Puerto Princesa; dailysource ↗
Café
Lax Cafe

Try Slow-brew coffee from direct-trade Palawan beans, plus seasonal specials highlighting local harvests

A minimalist, community-minded specialty cafe near Palawan State University that sources beans direct from Palawan farmers, trains young local baristas and doubles as an art-and-music space with a donate-or-borrow mini-library.

Tiniguiban area (near PSU), Puerto Princesasource ↗

There’s more to El Nido than the route.

Get to know El Nido

Want this route bookable in one tap? Get the heads-up:

El Nido’s only airport, Lio, is served by just two carriers — CebGo and AirSWIFT — so the direct flight from Cebu lands around ₱14,000round-trip, and AirSWIFT can push it past ₱18,000. It’s the same monopoly that makes the Manila route expensive, just billed from the Visayas.

The way around is identical: fly Cebu to Puerto Princesa — a competitive low-cost route at ~₱1,350 one-way — then take a shared Lakkbay van up to El Nido for about ₱650. The whole round-trip comes to roughly ₱4,000, a saving near ₱10,200, and the Underground River and Honda Bay come free with the detour.

Why this works

Puerto Princesa is Palawan’s real gateway — dense flights, real competition, cheap seats. El Nido is a boutique strip with neither. The van that connects them (~5–6 hours up a scenic coast road) costs less than a airport sandwich. You trade half a day for ten thousand pesos and two bonus stops.

The trade-off

It’s a time-for-money swap: ~6 hours of van each way versus a 90-minute flight. If your trip is three days, fly direct. If it’s a week, the van is the obvious call — and the better story.

Two audiences. Same destination.

When you get there.

Young + exploring

Surf, food, late nights, photogenic stops.

  • Tour A and C back to back if you have the days; skip the crowded Tour B
  • Sunset at Las Cabanas, then the Marimegmeg beach bars
  • Nacpan's twin beaches by scooter — go on a weekday
  • Puerto Princesa's night market on Rizal Ave on the way through

Families

Shallow swim, eagle centers, walkable downtowns.

  • Honda Bay's calm snorkeling out of Puerto Princesa
  • Underground River — a UNESCO site kids actually remember
  • Shared vans seat the whole family; book the front row
  • El Nido town beach for easy swimming between island tours
Sources

Every fare, with a link.

Fares are indicative and move with the date and season — these are the public pages we checked them against, as of Jun 7, 2026. Click through and see for yourself. No three-year-old blog screenshots.