Eastern Visayas Travel Guide: Leyte, Samar and Beyond
Eastern Visayas (Region VIII) is perhaps the most historically layered region in the Philippines. General MacArthur waded ashore at Red Beach in Leyte in 1944, fulfilling his promise to return and triggering the largest naval battle in history. Before that, Magellan died here in 1521 on the island of Mactan (technically Eastern Visayas-adjacent). And the region was ground zero for Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) in 2013 - the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded to make landfall - which transformed Tacloban and much of Leyte in ways still visible today. Alongside all this history is some of the Philippines' most impressive natural scenery: pristine surf breaks in Samar, spectacular caves, and one of the country's most beautiful remote coastlines.
Tacloban City (Leyte)
Tacloban is the regional capital and the gateway to Eastern Visayas. The city has rebuilt significantly since Haiyan and has a genuine, unhurried character that larger cities lack. The Santo Nino Shrine and Heritage Museum - actually the former vacation home of Imelda Marcos, who was born in Leyte - is a fascinating and slightly surreal look at Marcos-era excess (open to visitors, 100 PHP). The Leyte Landing Memorial at Red Beach in Palo (10 minutes from Tacloban) marks the spot where MacArthur waded ashore on October 20, 1944 - large bronze statues recreate the famous moment. The Leyte Gulf Battle of Surigao Strait Memorial in Abuyog is further south but marks the naval battle site.
Sohoton Natural Bridge National Park (Samar)
The most spectacular natural attraction in Eastern Visayas is the Sohoton Cliffs in Basey, Western Samar - accessible by boat from Tacloban via the San Juanico Strait or overland to Basey (2 hours). The park features a natural stone bridge 7 meters wide and 15 meters tall spanning a river gorge, cathedral-sized limestone caves (the Panhulugan Cave can hold thousands of people), and a network of tidal lagoons and underground rivers. This is one of the Philippines' most impressive cave-and-river systems and sees almost no international tourists.





