Isla
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ManilaCatanduanes
Multi-modal · 4–5 days

Manila ↔ Catanduanes

Puraran is the second-best break in the Philippines. The duopoly bills it like it is the first.

Indicative estimate·fares not yet web-verified
Direct
₱6,500
Isla
₱4,454
Saves
₱2,046

Manila ↔ Catanduanes

Direct round-trip· Cebu Pacific seasonal-only
Manila
Virac
₱19,000 · 1.5h flying
Via Tabaco port· the locals' route
Manila
Legazpi/Tabaco
Mt Mayon
Cagsawa ruins
Daraga Church
Virac
Puraran beach
Bato Church
Puraran
Majestics break
Twin Rock
₱4,200 · RT
The Bicol loop· fly Legazpi in, bus + ferry to Catanduanes, back via Naga
Manila
Legazpi
Virac
Naga
Manila
₱5,800 · RT
+Naga and Donsol added to the trip

₱19,000 to surf Puraran direct.
₱4,200 to surf Puraran and see Bicol.
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
Aug
Ibalong FestivalFestival
Legazpi · late Aug

Bicolano epic heroes parade through the streets beneath Mayon's perfect cone.

Aug
Majestic Surfing CupSurf
Catanduanes · Jul 31–Aug 3 (2025 ed.)

Sanctioned surf contest over the famous right-hand 'Majestics' barrel at Puraran Beach.

source ↗
Oct
Catandungan FestivalCulture
Catanduanes · late Oct

The island province's founding celebration — and Puraran's surf is firing.

all yr
Puraran 'Majestics' breakSurf
Catanduanes · peak swell Sep–Oct

Catanduanes' world-class right-hand reef barrel and surf-capital hangout in Baras.

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.

Manila

The classics · old-school & beloved
Restaurant
To 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.

422 Tomas Pinpin St., Binondo, Manila (newer mall branches exist; the Binondo room is the original)source ↗
Bakery
Eng Bee Tin Chinese Deli

Try 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.

628 Ongpin St., Binondo, Manilasource ↗
Carinderia
New Po Heng Lumpia House

Try 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).

621 Carvajal St., Binondo, Manila — roughly 8:30am to 7pmsource ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Bar
The Curator

Try Speakeasy craft cocktails

Specialty café by day, hidden cocktail bar by night — on Asia's 50 Best Bars.

Legazpi Village, Makatisource ↗
Café
Yardstick Coffee

Try Single-origin pour-overs + Flavor Bar

Homegrown Makati roastery that helped launch Philippine third-wave coffee.

Legazpi Village, Makatisource ↗
Café
Commune

Try Barako (Liberica) + Filipino comfort food

Poblacion café-roaster built around 100% Philippine coffee from local farmers.

Poblacion, Makatisource ↗
Show 33 more in Manila
Carinderia
Estero 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.

Beside the estero off Ongpin St., Binondo, Manilasource ↗
Restaurant
Sincerity Café & Restaurant

Try 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.

497 Yuchengco St., Binondo, Manila — daily 9am to 9pmsource ↗
Café
Café 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.

650 Ongpin St., Binondo, Manilasource ↗
Maker
Excelente Ham

Try 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.

155-157 Carlos Palanca St. (formerly Echague), Quiapo, Manilasource ↗
Carinderia
Globe Lumpia House

Try 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.

Gonzalo Puyat St. (Raon), Quiapo, Manilasource ↗
Market
Quinta Market

Try 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.

Carlos Palanca St., Quiapo, Manila — beside the Pasig Riversource ↗
Restaurant
Aristocrat Restaurant

Try 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.

432 San Andres cor. Roxas Blvd., Malate, Manila — open latesource ↗
Bakery
Panaderia Dimas-Alang

Try 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.

Plaza area, Pasig City, Metro Manila — open 24/7source ↗
Shop
Plaza Miranda religious-craft & sampaguita vendors

Try 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.

Plaza Miranda, fronting Quiapo Church, Manilasource ↗
Bar
Bibio

Try 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.

5659 Don Pedro St, Poblacion, Makati; 4pm-late (weekend lunch)source ↗
Restaurant
June Eatery

Try 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.

Burgos Circle, BGC, Taguig; cafe 9am-3pm, bistro 6pm onwardsource ↗
Bar
Bombvinos Bodega

Try 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.

Unit 3, Zone Sports Center, 7224 Malugay St, Bel-Air, Makati; daily, latesource ↗
Restaurant
Liyab

Try 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.

Roof deck, W Highstreet Bldg, BGC, Taguig; Tue-Sun, two seatings (5:30/8:30pm)source ↗
Restaurant
Inatô

Try 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.

The Alley at Karrivin, Chino Roces, Makati; reservation-only countersource ↗
Restaurant
Kása Palma

Try 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.

6042 R. Palma St, Poblacion, Makati; eveningssource ↗
Restaurant
Toyo Eatery

Try 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.

The Alley at Karrivin, Chino Roces Ave Ext, Makati; reservation-onlysource ↗
Restaurant
Metiz

Try 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.

Karrivin Plaza, Chino Roces Ave Ext, Makati; reservation-onlysource ↗
Bakery
Panaderya Toyo

Try 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.

Takeout window, Karrivin Plaza, Chino Roces Ave Ext, Makati; reopened May 2026source ↗
Shop
BRGY

Try 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.

7/F, One Corporate Center, Arnaiz Ave, Makati; opened Aug 2025source ↗
Maker
Bumi and Ashe

Try 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.

3 General Romulo Ave, Cubao Expo, Quezon City (plus a Makati outpost)source ↗
Shop
HUB: Make Lab

Try ~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.

First United Bldg, 413 Escolta St, Binondo, Manila; daily ~11am-8pmsource ↗
Maker
Tahanan Pottery Shop & Studio

Try 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.

27 Sct. Tobias St cor. Sct. Lozano, Quezon City; Mon-Wed, Fri-Sat 9am-6pmsource ↗
Shop
Solidaridad Bookshop

Try 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.

531 Padre Faura St, Ermita, Manila; Tue-Sat 10am-5pmsource ↗
Shop
Spatio

Try 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.

2F-4F, Opus Mall, Bridgetowne, Quezon City; reopened Jul 2025source ↗
Shop
Common Room PH

Try 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.

325 De La Rosa St, Katipunan, Quezon City (plus mall branches)source ↗
Bar
Gaea

Try 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.

G/F Gallery 7 Design Center, 191 A. Mabini St, San Juan; daily 7am til ~1am (2am weekends)source ↗
Bar
OTO

Try 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.

Felipe St, Poblacion, Makati; eveningssource ↗
Bar
Agimat at Ugat Foraging Bar and Kitchen

Try 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.

5972 Alfonso cor. Fermina St, Poblacion, Makati; eveningssource ↗
Bar
Cork Elite

Try 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.

Rooftop, W Bldg, BGC, Taguig; main room Mon-Sat 6-9:30pm (opened to public Aug 2025)source ↗
Bar
Mono by Phono

Try 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.

9654 Pililla St, Makati (unmarked); ~8pm-3am, closed Monsource ↗
Café
The Den

Try 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.

G/F First United Bldg (in HUB: Make Lab), 413 Escolta St, Binondo, Manila; ~10am-6/7pmsource ↗
Brand
Casa Juan MNL

Try 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.

Metro Manila (online + stockists at Kultura, Tesoros)source ↗
Shop
Everything's Fine PH

Try 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.

Unit G8, Prince Tower, 14 Tordesillas, Makatisource ↗

Catanduanes

The classics · old-school & beloved
Restaurant
Sea Breeze Restaurant

Try Lobster and crab (szechuan, grilled, sa gata), grilled blue marlin, kinunot

The mainstay by the Virac pier — rows of seaside cabanas, fast service, and the default spot locals bring visitors for a proper Catanduanes seafood feed pulled straight from the surrounding waters, at famously gentle prices.

Pier Site, Salvacion, Virac, Catanduanessource ↗
Market
Virac Public Market

Try Fresh pancit Bato noodles, sinantolan, linubak, island seafood

The island's belly — stalls heaped with the day's catch, fresh pancit Bato noodles, and the local delicacies (sinantolan, linubak, latik) that don't travel off-island. Where everyday Catandunganon money circulates, far from any tourist stall.

Virac town center, Catanduanessource ↗
Restaurant
Blossom's Restaurant

Try Halo-halo, sizzling blue marlin steak, home-style Filipino dishes

Home of Virac's well-loved halo-halo since the 1980s — a longtime town-center spot locals quietly rate, modest and affordable, stocked with home-style dishes and a sizzling blue marlin steak worth the detour.

Quezon Ave., Salvacion, Virac, Catanduanessource ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Restaurant
Kemji Resort & Restaurant

Try Home-style plates, garden setting

Locally loved garden restaurant minutes from Virac airport.

Virac · <5 min from airportsource ↗
Café
Dakila' Cafe

Try Locally sourced coffee with freshly baked pastries in an industrial-rustic space

A cozy industrial café in Virac pairing locally sourced coffee with house-baked pastries, wooden furnishings and local artwork.

Gogon Sirangan, Virac, Catanduanes; daily 10am-9pmsource ↗
Café
Oyana Cafe

Try Island-inflected specialty drinks made with locally sourced Catanduanes ingredients

A Virac café on Salvacion St leaning into Catanduanes' coffee culture, with locally sourced ingredients, art pieces and lingering cozy corners.

Salvacion St., Virac, Catanduanessource ↗
Show 1 more in Catanduanes
Maker
Baras abaca weaving community (Apanti production house)

Try Pinukpok (pounded abaca cloth), sinamay, shawls and throws

Where the island's pinukpok story really lives — in Paniquihan, Baras, the Apanti production house has women hand-pounding and weaving abaca on looms since DOST helped scale the craft commercially in 1996, supplying cloth fine enough for couture designers.

Paniquihan, Baras, Catanduanessource ↗

Legazpi

The classics · old-school & beloved
Restaurant
Waway's Restaurant

Try Eat-all-you-can Bicol Express, laing, pinangat, bopis, kare-kare, seafood

The grandfather of Bicolano eat-all-you-can — it started as pushcart vendor Laura Cristobal and has fed Albay since 1967, where families load up on the full spicy-coconut repertoire at budget prices in a yellow house that still looks like somebody's home.

317 Peñaranda St., Legazpi Citysource ↗
Restaurant
Socorro's Lakeside Restaurant and Grill

Try Live pinangat-making, Bicolano dishes, Mayon-and-lake view

Worth it for the pinangat demo alone — cooks wrap taro pouches fresh in nipa cottages along the walkway while Mayon mirrors in Sumlang Lake behind them. Authentic Bicolano plates, a bamboo raft to glide on, and pasalubong you watch being made.

Brgy. Sumlang, Camalig, Albaysource ↗
Shop
Camalig Tourism & Pasalubong Center

Try Authentic Camalig pinangat and Albay delicacies

Ground zero for real pinangat — the town that claims the nation's best taro-leaf pouches gathers its home producers here, so your pasalubong money goes straight to Camalig families instead of a Manila middleman.

Barangay 2, Camalig, Albay (outside Legazpi)source ↗
The new wave · modern & tasteful
Restaurant
1st Colonial Grill

Try Sili Ice Cream + pili flavors

The Albay institution that invented Sili (chili) Ice Cream.

Legazpi & Daragasource ↗
Restaurant
Waway's

Try Bicol Express, laing, pinangat

Third-generation Bicolano buffet house serving regional fare since 1967.

Legazpi City (buffet only)source ↗
Restaurant
Small Talk Café

Try Pasta Pinangat (pinangat used like pesto) and a spicy 'red hot lava' sili ice cream

Chef Bernadette Factora's pioneering Bicolano-fusion restaurant in a converted Legazpi home, turning regional staples into modern pasta dishes since 1999.

51 Doña Aurora St., Legazpi City; daily ~11am-10pmsource ↗
Show 3 more in Legazpi
Maker
Dad's Special Pinangat

Try Made-to-order Camalig pinangat, chilled to travel; bottled Bicol Express

A Camalig home producer that turned a family recipe into a roadside enterprise — now with lines out front along the National Highway, selling chilled pinangat (with chili or without) and bottled Bicol Express to take home. A living trade, not a museum piece.

National Highway, Camalig, Albaysource ↗
Restaurant
Balay Cena Una

Try Regional Bicolano specialties (Chicken Tinutungan, Lumpiang Kandinga) in a candle-lit ancestral house

A 1913 bahay-na-bato said to be Daraga's oldest house, restored in 2005 into an atmospheric heritage restaurant serving refined Bicolano cuisine among antiques and wooden interiors.

F. Lotivio St., Bagumbayan, Daraga (Albay); Mon-Sat 11am-10pm, Sun buffetsource ↗
Café
Assemblr Cafe

Try Locally sourced specialty espresso and craft brews in a shipping-container space (with a quirky IKEA/Swedish meatball side)

A design-conscious specialty coffee and community hub with shipping-container walls, hosting open mics, acoustic sets and art shows in Legazpi.

Imelda Roces Ave., Brgy. Gogon, Legazpi; ~8am-9pmsource ↗

There’s more to Catanduanes than the route.

Get to know Catanduanes

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

Catanduanes has the biggest year-on-year mispricing on the Manila round-trip ledger. The direct route to Virac is operated seasonally by Cebu Pacific and the duopoly knows the surf-trip traveler will accept the markup. Round-trip direct fares peak at ₱19,000 and rarely dip below ₱14,000 even off-peak.

The bus-and-ferry alternative through Tabaco port costs ₱4,200 round-trip. Almost no one outside Bicol knows this route exists.

Via Tabaco port — the locals' route

DLTBCo overnight bus Cubao to Tabaco (₱950, 10 hours). Sleep on the bus. Wake up in Bicol, catch the morning Regina Shipping ferry to San Andres (₱200, 3 hours). Tricycle or van to Puraran (₱400, 1.5 hours). Surf for three days. Same route home. ₱4,200 round-trip transport.

Eat at the Tabaco port canteen on the way through both times. The bistek tagalog at the third stall is the best ₱90 in the province.

The Bicol loop — for the photogenic version

Fly Cebu Pacific to Legazpi (~₱1,800), take photos of Mayon and Cagsawa, ferry across to Catanduanes, surf, ferry back, bus to Naga (~₱400), one night, then DLTBCo back to Manila. ₱5,800 transport. You add Mayon and Naga to the trip for ₱1,600 more than the back-and-forth.

Honest constraints

Catanduanes is the most weather-sensitive route in our launch list. The Tabaco–San Andres ferry cancels during typhoons (5–8 days/year on average). Surf season is August through March; off-season is flat. We mark this route verified: medium confidence because the direct flight schedule changes more than any other on our list.

Two audiences. Same destination.

When you get there.

Young + exploring

Surf, food, late nights, photogenic stops.

  • Majestics break at Puraran — left-hander, big August–March, mellow rest of year
  • Twin Rock Beach Resort — board rental ₱500/day, easier learner break than Majestics
  • Bato Church bell tower at sunset — old Spanish stone, walkable from Virac
  • Sleep at Puraran Surf Beach Resort huts (₱800/night), wake up next to the break

Families

Shallow swim, eagle centers, walkable downtowns.

  • Maribina Falls — easy walk, swimmable basin, no rope swings or jumps
  • Bato Church and Virac town walk — Spanish-era stone, kid-paced
  • Mt Mayon viewing from Cagsawa on the way in — short, photogenic, no climbing
  • Catanduanes Midtown Inn in Virac for the family — clean, walkable, ₱2,400/night