Manila ↔ Boracay
Boracay's own airstrip is a tiny 950-metre strip. When it spikes to ₱14,000, fly into Kalibo instead and ride in by land.
At typical and low fares the direct Caticlan flight often wins on price and time. The Kalibo bypass is a peak-season hedge: when the slot-constrained Caticlan strip spikes (Dec–Apr holidays), Kalibo stays competitive and the land transfer pays for itself many times over.
When Caticlan spikes, fly Kalibo.
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.
AprLove BoracayFestivalBoracay · Apr 25–May 3, 2026
The island's flagship long weekend — successor to LaBoracay — beach music, sunset sessions and DJ parties on White Beach.
source ↗MayTakeover Beach Music FestivalNightlifeBoracay · early May, Love Boracay weekend
Tropical EDM beach festival with water cannons and big DJ lineups on White Beach Station 1.
source ↗all yrEpic BoracaySpotBoracay · nightly · club after midnight
D'Mall's beachfront resto-bar by day, Boracay's main DJ dancefloor onto the sand after midnight.
source ↗all yrBoracay PubCrawlSpotBoracay · most nights
The long-running yellow-shirt bar crawl — five White Beach bars a night with games and group entry.
source ↗all yrDiniBeachFoodBoracay · daily · sunset · Diniwid Beach
A treehouse bar-restaurant built into the Diniwid cliffs — fresh Filipino seafood, craft cocktails and Boracay's best sunset.
source ↗all yrCafe Got SoulFoodBoracay · 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.
source ↗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.
Manila
RestaurantTo Ho Panciteria Antigua (New Toho Food Center)Try Camaron rebosado, pancit canton, lumpiang Shanghai — old-school Fil-Chinese fare
Five Chinese friends opened Toho in 1888, and Binondo has eaten here ever since — through fires, rebuilds, and four generations of the Wong family. Some food historians push the roots back even further, to 1866; either way it's billed as the oldest restaurant in the country. No airs, just deep, smoky wok cooking that Rizal himself is said to have tasted.
BakeryEng Bee Tin Chinese DeliTry Hopia ube, tikoy, and mooncakes
A migrant named Chua Chiu Hong started this as a tiny Ongpin stall in 1912; when his grandson Gerry took over a near-bankrupt shop in 1987, he folded ube into the humble hopia and turned purple yam into Binondo's signature. The flagship still sells the cheap, perfect pasalubong every Filipino knows — buy it by the box.
CarinderiaNew Po Heng Lumpia HouseTry Fresh lumpia, made to order
Down the narrow Carvajal alley, wedged beside a wet market, this counter rolls fresh lumpia to order in front of you — soft wrapper, heap of vegetables, crunch of peanuts and sugar. It's the cheapest, most honest bite in Binondo, and finding it feels like a secret handshake (as of 2025 it's running from a temporary spot on the same street during a renovation).
BarThe CuratorTry Speakeasy craft cocktails
Specialty café by day, hidden cocktail bar by night — on Asia's 50 Best Bars.
CaféYardstick CoffeeTry Single-origin pour-overs + Flavor Bar
Homegrown Makati roastery that helped launch Philippine third-wave coffee.
CaféCommuneTry Barako (Liberica) + Filipino comfort food
Poblacion café-roaster built around 100% Philippine coffee from local farmers.
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CarinderiaEstero Fastfood (LGA Fastfood)Try Frog-leg dishes plus stir-fried Fil-Chinese plates
Regulars just call it 'Estero' because it sits right beside the canal off Ongpin — plastic stools, red lanterns, and a cult following for one wild specialty most carinderias won't touch. Cheap, gutsy, zero pretense; order the frog legs ahead, since they're not always on hand.
RestaurantSincerity Café & RestaurantTry Sincerity fried chicken, fresh fried lumpia, oyster cake
Behind the 1960s interiors and family photos sits the clan that claims to have invented Binondo's famous Chinese-style fried chicken — and people still cross the city for it. Home-cooked comfort food at honest prices: the chicken, the fresh fried lumpia, the oyster cake. A neighborhood institution, not a tourist set piece.
CaféCafé Mezzanine (The Fireman's Coffee Shop)Try Lechon kawali, asado with adobo egg, Soup No. 5
Run by the Eng Bee Tin family, this little Ongpin canteen sends every peso of profit to the volunteer Binondo-Paco fire brigade — Uncle Gerry, the owner, lost a finger on a rescue. So your lechon kawali and Soup No. 5 literally fund the fire trucks. Cheap, hearty Fil-Chinese eating with a story you won't find on the menu.
MakerExcelente HamTry Sweet glazed smoked ham, sold whole or by the kilo
Since 1963 this single tiny store near Quinta Market has glazed and smoked whole hams the old way — sweet, sticky, deeply smoky — sold whole or shaved by the kilo. Manileños quietly queue here every Christmas; it's the everyman's heritage ham, no boutique markup.
CarinderiaGlobe Lumpia HouseTry Lumpiang sariwa (fresh ubod spring roll) in brown sauce
Named for the old Globe Theater it moved into in the 1950s, this Raon institution guards a fresh-lumpia recipe carried from China and, by family rule, handed down only to the sons. People still line up for the ubod-stuffed lumpiang sariwa drowned in brown sauce — pure working-class Manila nostalgia, beloved by Black Nazarene devotees.
MarketQuinta MarketTry Fresh seafood, produce, and old-school carinderia merienda
Built in 1851 as the central market for Quiapo's rich families, Quinta is where the city has shopped for fish, produce, and merienda for nearly two centuries — and locals swear halo-halo was born in its carinderias. Rebuilt in 2017 but still gloriously alive: a riverside fishport, wet stalls, and turo-turo dishing pancit, dinuguan, and puto.
RestaurantAristocrat RestaurantTry Chicken barbecue with java rice, kare-kare, pancit
It began in 1936 when Lola Asiang — later crowned the 'Mother of Filipino Cooking' — figured she was already feeding half her clan, so she might as well sell, first from a rolling store. The Roxas Boulevard flagship still serves her legendary chicken barbecue with java rice, around the clock, and is now a marked historic site. Heritage you can actually afford.
BakeryPanaderia Dimas-AlangTry Pugon-baked pan de sal, bonete, ensaymada
Baking since 1919 and named for Rizal's pen name, this Pasig panaderia fires what may be the last wood-burning pugon in Metro Manila — 24/7, by hand, recipes through generations of panaderos. Its pan de sal once won a blind taste-test as the metro's best, the crust still carrying that smoky breath of the oven. A true heritage maker, not a revival.
ShopPlaza Miranda religious-craft & sampaguita vendorsTry Carved santos & rosaries, devotional candles, fresh sampaguita leis
The forecourt of Quiapo Church has been a noisy bazaar of candle-sellers, herbalists, and rosary makers for generations — carved wooden santos, scapulars, and dawn-strung sampaguita garlands sold straight from the people who make them. Folk Catholicism as a living trade, where your peso reaches a carver or a flower-stringer directly.
BarBibioTry Acid-and-fat-balanced small plates built to match low-intervention natural wine; orange/skin-contact bottles
A cozy, design-forward natural wine bar in Poblacion built around a communal table and a fridge spanning the full natural-wine spectrum.
RestaurantJune EateryTry Famously fluffy pancakes; New Zealand-influenced seasonal plates by Chef Kier Ibañez, with natural wine
The brighter, breezier BGC sister to Bibio — a cafe-bistro of fresh, seasonal modern plates by day that carries the same natural-wine list at night.
BarBombvinos BodegaTry Adobo sa Puti Rice, Tocino Toast and Beef Salpicao with curated natural wine
A chef-led neighborhood natural-wine bar showing what Filipino flavors can do alongside low-intervention bottles.
RestaurantLiyabTry Nine-course fire-driven Filipino tasting menu (P7,000), finished table-side
A 28-seat rooftop tasting-menu room where Chef Charles Montañez cooks Filipino ingredients over open flame, finishing most courses table-side.
RestaurantInatôTry Seasonal Filipino tasting menu pairing smoky charcoal notes with bright vinegars and clean seafood
An intimate eight-seat marble-counter room where ex-Toyo Eatery chef JP Cruz reimagines Filipino cuisine 'his way' over an open kitchen.
RestaurantKása PalmaTry Seasonal seafood and root crops grilled over custom wood-fired hearths; indoor tasting menu
A Poblacion dining room celebrating Philippine seafood with French technique, split between a refined indoor counter and a wood-fired jungle kitchen.
RestaurantToyo EateryTry Modern Filipino tasting menu; the iconic 'Bahay Kubo' vegetable garden course
The pioneer of modern Filipino fine dining — Jordy and May Navarra build a tasting menu entirely from Philippine ingredients, fermentation and preservation.
RestaurantMetizTry Eight-course tasting menu — aged tanigue with fermented rice and mushrooms; ~99% local ingredients
Half-French, half-Filipino chef Stephan Duhesme reinterprets Philippine cuisine through fermentation and French touches in an intimate Karrivin room.
BakeryPanaderya ToyoTry Potpot Pandesal (pure sourdough), Leche Pan, Bicho, Kesong Puti Inipit
The bakery sibling of Michelin-starred Toyo Eatery, reinventing the traditional Filipino panaderia with 100% sourdough and organic flour.
ShopBRGYTry Concept-store-exclusive small-batch pieces from Filipino designers (Jun Escario, Lorico, Viktor Jeans) plus furniture and home decor
A rotating concept store and hub for modern Filipino design, refreshing its roster of local designers and small-batch lifestyle finds every few months.
MakerBumi and AsheTry Hands-on pottery, rug-tufting and silver-clay workshops; ceramics by local artists
Manila's largest ceramics studio — a multidisciplinary space for wheel-throwing, rug-tufting and silver-clay jewelry, tucked into Cubao Expo.
ShopHUB: Make LabTry ~22 micro-stalls of local design, craft and zines inside a 1928 heritage building
An adaptive-reuse creative incubator and alternative shopping center in heritage Escolta, housing roughly two dozen independent makers and brands.
MakerTahanan Pottery Shop & StudioTry Stoneware and earthenware by Filipino studio potters, plus wheel-throwing and hand-building workshops
A ceramics hub in Quezon City that is the country's leading pottery-supply shop and a working studio, offering wheel and hand-building classes for all levels.
ShopSolidaridad BookshopTry A deep, idiosyncratically curated selection of literature and Filipiniana in a true writers' haunt
The legendary Ermita bookshop founded in 1965 by National Artist F. Sionil José, a literary landmark and longtime gathering place for Filipino writers.
ShopSpatioTry A curated mix from 100+ Filipino brands, set to a custom ube scent and a Filipino-sound playlist, with Bar Shu's Ube Colada
A revamped multi-sensory concept store at Opus, Bridgetowne that home over 100 Filipino makers and designers across fashion, accessories, home, and lifestyle, with an in-store cafe and bar.
ShopCommon Room PHTry Handmade Filipino goods from 200+ local makers, plus the upcycling-focused Mess Studio and a community library
A collaborative concept store in Katipunan, Quezon City housing 200+ Filipino crafters and brands, founded by the makers behind Pop Junk Love as a shared 'common room' for local creatives.
BarGaeaTry Natural-wine-only list plus signature cocktails; brunch-to-late-night hotel-lobby ambiance
An all-day San Juan lounge styled like a luxury hotel lobby, with a natural-producers-only wine list and a serious cocktail program — design-led, day-to-night drinking done with polish.
BarOTOTry Vinyl-only curated sets at conversation-friendly volume with a tight cocktail program; jazz, soul, house, disco listening nights
Manila's original vinyl-only listening bar — a chevron-walled Poblacion room built around a floor-to-ceiling record wall, a custom horn-loaded rig and a curated (never-request) selector booth.
BarAgimat at Ugat Foraging Bar and KitchenTry Folklore-named, locally-foraged cocktails with rituals; seasonal menu that changes roughly every 50 days as the team forages a new region
A two-floor foraging bar where each drink arrives with a Filipino folk ritual, built on foraged local ingredients and indigenous spirits — the country's first foraging resto-bar and its boldest concept-driven mixology.
BarCork EliteTry Chef Gino Catalon's tasting menu (5- or 7-course) — pandan sourdough with Davao honey, native chicken sinigang, wagyu short ribs with tinawon rice
A formerly members-only rooftop wine bar in BGC, now opening its main room to the public with a Filipino-flavor tasting menu.
BarMono by PhonoTry Bring-your-own-vinyl nights on a hi-fi analog rig; curated spirits
A speakeasy hi-fi listening bar hidden in an aging Makati townhouse, built around vinyl, a high-end sound rig and community vinyl nights.
CaféThe DenTry Specialty coffee in a design-led, exhibition-filled space (historically sourcing Kalsada Coffee)
An artist-run cafe inside the heritage First United Building in Escolta, where rotating art exhibits frame coffee and a casual menu.
BrandCasa Juan MNLTry Heritage-inspired Filipino tableware and ceramics, including a Rajo Laurel 'Philippine Fashion Dinnerware' line
A fine-Filipino homeware label that collaborates with local artists and artisans (and designer Rajo Laurel) on heritage-inspired ceramics and tableware.
ShopEverything's Fine PHTry A single hand-picked wall of Filipino and LGBTQ+ titles, including books from its own indie press, with rotating local art
A small independent Makati bookshop, gallery, and press (since 2019) devoted to Filipino and queer authors, doubling as a curated retail space and a publisher of homegrown writing.
Boracay
MarketD'Talipapa MarketTry 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.
CarinderiaMerly's BBQTry 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.
CarinderiaJasper's Tapsilog & RestaurantTry 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.
RestaurantNonie'sTry Farm-to-table brunch, bread baked daily
Sustainability-driven brunch sourcing ~90% from small Visayan family farms.
CaféCafé MarujaTry Specialty coffee + soufflé pancakes
Nostalgic beachfront café serving ethically sourced Filipino coffee.
CaféBlackfish Coffee BarTry Isla Coffee (cinnamon mocha)
A hidden Station 1 specialty bar opened by two flight attendants.
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MakerPuka Shell Beach artisansTry 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.
MakerAti VillageTry 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.
RestaurantSubo BoracayTry 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.
CaféThe Black Attic CafeTry 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.
Caticlan
MarketCaticlan Jetty-area Public Market / TalipapaTry Fresh seafood paluto and affordable carinderia meals
The unglamorous market beside the boat terminal where porters, boatmen and budget travelers grab cheap fresh meals and pasalubong. Fish, fruit and carinderia ulam at mainland prices — the last spot before Boracay's island tax, with the spend staying in working Malay hands.
MakerHandicrafts of Aklan Multipurpose Cooperative (HAMPCO)Try Hand-loomed piña (pineapple fiber) cloth
A Kalibo weaving cooperative upholding Aklan's UNESCO-listed piña handloom tradition — fibers hand-scraped from pineapple leaves and woven on wooden looms. Buying piña direct from a co-op like this puts money straight into the weavers' hands.
MakerRaquel's Piña Cloth ProductsTry Handwoven piña and piña-seda fabric
A Balete weaving house led by NCCA-recognized Cultural Master Raquel, who sold her livestock to set up a haeab-ean at home and now leads a whole community of scrapers, knotters and weavers. This is the genuine grassroots of the country's most prized textile — not a factory.
MakerBandiola Piña WeavingTry Handwoven piña and eco-fiber blends
A family weaving operation in Balete where the painstaking piña process — knotting fibers thread by thread by hand — passes down within the household. A small home-based weaver keeping Aklan's fiber heritage alive, documented by the national fiber authority.
ShopAti-Atihan community of Aklan (Kalibo)Try Ati-Atihan street food, tuba, and tribal craft
Inland from Caticlan, Kalibo throws the original Ati-Atihan every January — drumbeats, soot-blackened revelers, and 'Hala Bira!' for the Santo Niño and the Ati. Sampling the street food, native tuba and tribal crafts here is heritage tourism that feeds the community directly.
There’s more to Boracay than the route.
Get to know Boracay →Want this route bookable in one tap? Get the heads-up:
Boracay has its own airport — Caticlan (MPH), a single 950-metre strip that only small jets can use. When demand peaks over the holidays, those scarce slots get expensive fast: we have watched the round-trip from Manila climb toward ₱14,000. That’s the spike to route around.
The hedge is Kalibo (KLO), a bigger, more competitive airport about two hours from the Caticlan jetty. Fly there (~₱4,200 round-trip on AirAsia or Cebu Pacific), take a ₱300 van to the pier, and catch the same boat across. All-in around ₱4,800 — and it barely moves with the season.
The honest call
Most of the year, fly direct to Caticlan: it’s cheaper-enough and two hours quicker. But on a long weekend, a holiday, or a late booking — when Caticlan spikes — the Kalibo route can save you thousands. Isla’s job is to flag which is which on your dates, not to pretend one always wins.
The boat and the fees are the same either way
Whichever airport you use, you finish at the Caticlan jetty and pay the same pump-boat fare, terminal and environmental fees (~₱500). So the only real difference is the flight and the transfer — which is exactly where the Kalibo play wins when the strip is full.
When you get there.
Young + exploring
Surf, food, late nights, photogenic stops.
- Love Boracay over Labor Day weekend — beach music and DJ parties on White Beach
- Epic at D'Mall for the late dancefloor, after a Station 2 sunset
- The Boracay PubCrawl to find the good bars without the guesswork
- Paraw sailing at golden hour, then Puka Beach away from the crowds
Families
Shallow swim, eagle centers, walkable downtowns.
- White Beach Station 1 — powder sand, calm shallow water
- Puka Shell Beach for a quieter, breezier afternoon
- Helmet diving and a glass-bottom boat the kids will remember
- Sunset paraw sail — gentle, scenic, photogenic
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.
- Manila→Caticlan direct — fare rangeweb verify · Jun 7, 2026Typical RT ~₱6,300; spikes toward ₱14,000 on peak/holiday dates (Caticlan is a 950m strip).
- Manila→Kalibo (KLO) — round-tripweb verify · Jun 7, 2026AirAsia/Cebu Pacific; typical RT ~₱4,200, more competitive than Caticlan.
- Kalibo→Caticlan jetty — land transferoperator site · Jun 7, 2026Shared van ₱250–400 or Ceres bus ₱100–250, ~1.5–2h to the jetty.