PHPANA.PH · Philippines travel intelligence teamPublished June 13, 2026 · 4 min read · Verified skill
Most Philippine beaches are about resorts, cocktails and convenience. Anawangin and Nagsasa are about the opposite: pitch a tent on a wild, roadless cove, fall asleep to the waves, and wake up to volcanic mountains and rows of agoho trees that look uncannily like pines. Reachable only by boat, a few hours from Manila, these Zambales coves are the city's favourite off-grid escape — no signal, no resorts, just you, the sand and the stars. It's the most accessible "wilderness" weekend in the country.
Why go to Anawangin & Nagsasa
This is a different kind of beach trip — adventure and camping over comfort and luxury. The coves were shaped by the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption, which deposited the ash that the agoho trees took root in, giving the surreal pine-forest-by-the-sea look. There's no electricity to speak of, no roads in, and limited signal — which is exactly the appeal. You come to disconnect, camp under the stars, and reset.
Anawangin vs Nagsasa — which cove?
- Anawangin Cove: the closer, more popular one — easier to reach, more campers, basic facilities (toilets, small stores, tent and gear rental). Great for first-timers and weekenders who want company.
- Nagsasa Cove: larger, quieter, more pristine — a longer boat ride that filters out the crowds. More dramatic mountain backdrop, fewer people, a stronger off-grid feel. Worth the extra time if solitude is the goal.
Many do Anawangin for a quick overnight; Nagsasa for the deeper escape.
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Browse tours →What to do
- Camp on the beach — the headline activity. Bring or rent a tent.
- Hike the viewpoint hills behind the coves for sweeping shots of the agoho-fringed beach and mountains.
- Swim, kayak and snorkel in the clear, calm water.
- Island-hop add-ons: Capones Island (with its old lighthouse) and Camara Island are common boat-tour stops on the way in or out.
- Stargaze — with no light pollution, the night sky here is spectacular.
How to get there
It's a manageable adventure from Manila:
- Drive or bus to San Antonio, Zambales (around 3–4 hours from Manila; Victory Liner runs to Iba/Sta. Cruz — alight at San Antonio).
- Tricycle to Pundaquit beach, the boat jump-off.
- Hire a bangka from Pundaquit to Anawangin (~30 min) or Nagsasa (~45–60 min). Boatmen offer packages with Capones/Camara island stops.
Check road-trip timing and fares on our travel tools... actually no flight needed — this is a pure Manila road-and-boat trip, one of its biggest perks.
Where to stay (i.e., camping)
The coves are camping-first. Options:
- Bring your own tent for the full experience, or rent one on-site (₱300–600/night) at Anawangin.
- A few basic open-air huts/kubo can be rented for shade and gear storage.
- Prefer a bed? Stay in a Pundaquit or San Antonio guesthouse and day-trip to the coves by boat. Browse mainland options in our stays search.
Best time to visit
The dry season (November to May) is ideal — calm seas for the boat crossing and dry nights for camping. Avoid the rainy/typhoon months, when boats may not sail and camping turns miserable. Weekends are busy at Anawangin; weekdays and Nagsasa stay quiet. Check the sea state before your boat day.
What to pack
- Tent, mat and sleeping setup (or arrange rental in advance).
- Enough water and food — small stores exist at Anawangin but are limited and pricier; Nagsasa has even less.
- Cash — no card facilities, no ATMs at the coves.
- Headlamp/torch, power bank — no electricity.
- Reef-safe sunscreen, dry bag, rubbish bags — pack out everything you bring in.
FAQ
Is it good for first-time campers?
Anawangin yes — basic facilities and tent rental make it beginner-friendly. Nagsasa is more remote; come a bit more prepared.
Is there phone signal?
Very limited to none — that's the point. Tell someone your plan and download offline maps; keep our offline kit handy.
Can I day-trip instead of camping?
Yes — boat in from Pundaquit, spend the day, and sleep in a San Antonio guesthouse. But camping is the real experience.
How many days?
One overnight is the classic; two nights if you want both coves or Nagsasa's deeper quiet.
Plan your Zambales escape and pair it with nearby North Luzon stops in our trip planner; check conditions on weather & safety first.
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