Asia / Philippines
Boracay
Four kilometres of powder-white sand face west into blazing sunsets, with paraw sails, reef water, and island energy after dark.
Where to stay
Hotels rated 8+ near Boracay
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Country guide built around the Philippines’ most famous beach island.
Why It Is Beautiful
Four kilometres of powder-fine White Beach face west into the Sulu Sea — so the sunsets are a feature, not an accident. Boracay was closed for a six-month environmental rehabilitation in 2018 (no overnight tourism, sewer system rebuilt) and the post-rehab island is meaningfully tidier: the beachfront is car-free, the laneways behind it have proper drainage, and a cap on daily arrivals limits the worst high-season crush.
Practical Travel Notes
When to go
December–May: dry season, easy west-coast swimming, peak crowds at Christmas, Chinese New Year and Easter.
June–October: wet season — short violent afternoon storms, half-price rooms, transfer to Bulabog Beach on the east side for kitesurfing.
Sweet spot: late January–early March.
Getting there
Two airports serve Boracay: Caticlan (MPH) is closer — ten minutes to the ferry pier — and Kalibo (KLO) is an hour and a half away but takes wide-body international flights and is cheaper from Manila. From the pier it is a 15-minute outrigger ferry (P50–100) across to Cagban or Tabon on Boracay, then a tricycle to your hotel zone.
Where to stay
Station 1: Widest beach, smartest hotels (Discovery Shores, Henann Regency).
Station 2: D’Mall, mid-range hotels, busiest nightlife and restaurants.
Station 3: Quieter, more local, better value (Frendz, Mad Monkey for hostels).
Bulabog (east side): Kitesurf and windsurf base November–April; otherwise quiet.
Diniwid and Punta Bunga: North of Station 1, secluded coves with boutique hotels (Shangri-La, Nami).
What to do
Sunset cocktails on White Beach — the universal ritual.
Island hop by paraw (the local outrigger sailboat) to Puka Beach, Crystal Cove and Magic Island cliff-jumps.
Snorkel or dive at Crocodile Island and Yapak Wall — strong drift, big fish.
Kitesurf at Bulabog with an IKO-certified school (Hangin and Funboard run good courses).
Stand-up paddleboard at sunrise from Diniwid — the only time the water is mirror-flat.
Entry and practicalities for the Philippines (2026)
Visa: Most Western and ASEAN passports get 30 days visa-free, extendable in-country.
eTravel: Mandatory online registration via etravel.gov.ph within 72 hours of arrival (and again on departure). Immigration checks the QR code on entry. From the archive: “they check to make sure you’re registered.”
Onward ticket: Airlines (especially low-cost like Jetstar and Cebu Pacific) do check for proof of onward travel. Book a refundable or throwaway ticket if you don’t have one.
Money: Cash is king on Boracay — there are ATMs at D’Mall but they cap at P10,000 per withdrawal with steep fees. Bring pesos.
SIM/eSIM: Globe and Smart prepaid SIMs at the airport for around P500 for 7 days of data; Airalo eSIM works well too (one archive traveller paid USD 4.50 for 1 GB).
Getting around: Grab works in Manila and Cebu, not Boracay. On the island use tricycles (around P150 between stations); the central road is one-way and traffic-controlled.
Environmental fee: Boracay charges a P300 environmental fee on arrival; carry pesos at the pier.
Where Boracay fits in a Philippines trip
Manila (1–2 days): a brisk dose of urban Asia. Intramuros tour by motorbike side-car was a highlight in the archive (around P340/hr).
Boracay (3–4 days): beach reset.
Cebu and Bohol (3–4 days): Chocolate Hills, whale-shark snorkelling at Oslob (ethically contested) or Donsol (better), waterfalls.
Palawan — El Nido or Coron (4–5 days): see chapter 10.