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What a Philippines trip really costs

The Philippines can be a shoestring backpacker paradise or a barefoot-luxury escape — often on the same island. Logging your spend as you go keeps the budget honest, but it helps to know the real numbers first. Below are realistic peso ranges from recent on-the-ground travel, so you can set a daily budget that actually holds up.

What things cost, by category

Honest ranges in Philippine pesos (₱). Prices vary by island and season — touristy spots like Boracay and El Nido sit at the high end.

CategoryBudgetMid-rangeComfort
🍜 Meals₱60–150 (carinderia / street food)₱200–450 (casual restaurant)₱600–1,500+ (tourist resto / hotel)
🚐 Local transport₱13–50 (jeepney / tricycle)₱150–400 (Grab around town)₱2,000+ (private van / driver / day)
✈️ Domestic flight₱1,500–3,500 (off-peak, hand carry)₱3,500–6,000 (with baggage)₱7,000–12,000+ (peak / last minute)
⛵ Island-hopping tour₱1,200–1,800 (shared boat + lunch)₱1,800–2,800 (popular tours)₱8,000–20,000+ (private boat)
🛏️ Accommodation / night₱500–1,200 (dorm / fan room)₱1,800–4,500 (mid-range hotel)₱6,000–20,000+ (resort / villa)

≈ ₱56 = US$1 (rates move — check live conversion at booking).

Sample daily budgets

Per person, per day, excluding international flights. Pick the tier closest to your style as a starting point in the tracker above.

Shoestring

Backpacker

₱2,000–3,500 / day

  • Dorms or basic fan rooms
  • Street food & carinderias
  • Jeepneys, tricycles & ferries
  • Shared island-hopping tours
  • A few cold beers, free beaches
Treat yourself

Comfort

₱10,000+ / day

  • Resorts, beachfront & villas
  • Restaurant dining, cocktails
  • Private boats & drivers
  • Spa, diving, premium tours
  • Flexible, fly-when-you-like trip

Money tips for the islands

Carry cash on small islands. Cards are widely accepted in cities and resorts, but many small islands (Coron back-streets, parts of Siargao, remote Palawan) are cash-only. Stock up on pesos before you leave a city.
Mind ATM fees & limits. Most ATMs charge ₱200–250 per withdrawal and cap around ₱10,000–20,000. Withdraw larger amounts less often, and have a backup card — machines run dry on busy islands.
Cards & e-wallets. Visa/Mastercard work at hotels, malls and Grab. GCash is the local e-wallet but usually needs a local number. Tell your bank you're travelling to avoid blocks.
Tipping is appreciated, not required. Round up or leave 5–10% for good service. Many restaurants add a 10% service charge — check the bill before adding more.

Budgeting questions, answered

How much does a trip to the Philippines cost per day?

Budget backpackers get by on around ₱2,000–3,500 a day, mid-range travellers spend roughly ₱4,000–8,000, and a comfortable resort-style trip starts around ₱10,000+ per day. Domestic flights and private island-hopping boats are the items that push budgets up fastest.

Is the Philippines cheap to travel?

Compared to most of the world, yes — food, local transport and basic stays are very affordable. The cost that surprises people is inter-island travel: ferries are cheap but slow, and domestic flights, while not expensive by global standards, add up when you visit several islands.

Should I carry cash or use cards?

Both. Use cards in cities, malls, resorts and for Grab, but always carry enough pesos for small islands, jeepneys, tricycles, market food and entrance fees, which are often cash-only. ATMs are common in towns but scarce on remote islands.

What is the biggest hidden cost?

Getting between islands. Each domestic flight, fast-craft ferry, airport transfer and island-hopping tour is a separate line item, and they accumulate quickly on a multi-island trip. Budgeting transport leg-by-leg (and tracking it here) keeps surprises away.

Travelling as a group? Split it smarter.

Share costs evenly, unlock group rates on stays and tours, and plan the whole trip in one place.