PHPANA.PH · Philippines travel teamPublished June 19, 2026 · 5 min read
# Puka Beach Travel Guide
slug: puka-beach name: Puka Beach region: Aklan code: MPH tagline: Boracay's wild north shore — shells, no sun beds types: beach, nature hero: /img/puka-beach-boracay-north-shore.webp seoTitle: Puka Beach Guide 2026 — Boracay's Quiet North Shore (54 chars) seoDesc: Puka Beach is Boracay's undeveloped north shore — 2 km of natural sand, no sun-bed touts, fewer crowds. Day trip guide, how to get there, best time.
intro: Puka Beach runs for about 2 km along the northern tip of Boracay, separated from the White Beach strip by 30 minutes on a tricycle. The sand here is coarser than the talc of White Beach — mixed with the crushed puka shells that give the beach its name — and the shoreline is completely undeveloped except for a handful of simple restaurants. No sun-bed rental crews, no jet ski operators, no bar staff flagging you down. Just a wide open beach facing north toward Panay Strait.
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bestTime: October to May when the water is calm and clear. June to September the northern swell picks up and swimming can be rough — the same Habagat wind that messes up White Beach is stronger on the exposed north shore. For sunrise walks, November to March is best; the sky is clear and the beach catches the early light directly.
gettingThere: Take a tricycle from anywhere on White Beach and ask for "Puka Beach" — the fare is PHP 150–200 per trip (negotiate first). The ride takes 25–35 minutes north through Boracay's interior road past Bulabog and the Fairways and Bluewater resort area. Some tours from White Beach Station 2 include Puka as a stop for PHP 300–500; these are slower but let you ride with other travelers.
todo:
- Walk the Full Beach: The 2 km stretch from the main tricycle drop-off at the south end to the rocky north point takes about 25 minutes at a leisurely pace. The north end is the most isolated and the puka shell deposits are densest there — crouching down you can actually see the shells mixed into the sand.
- Swim in Calm Season: From November to May the water at Puka is warm (28–30°C), clear to 3–4 m visibility, and gentle enough for easy swimming. The gradient is gradual — about knee-deep for 30 m offshore, which is ideal for non-swimmers or families.
- Collect Puka Shells: Puka shells (Conus shell fragments smoothed by wave action) are still found here, though the best specimens are becoming rarer with beach tourism pressure. Take a few — not handfuls — and no live shells.
- Eat at the Beachside Karinderias: Four or five simple open-air restaurants sit at the main access point. Fresh grilled fish, pork BBQ, and cold drinks run PHP 200–400 per person — roughly half the price of equivalent food on White Beach. Lemon grass shakes and fresh buko juice are the local signatures.
- Visit Diniwid Beach: A short walk or tricycle hop southwest of Puka lies Diniwid — a smaller, crescent-shaped cove with finer sand and a couple of boutique resorts. It is calmer than Puka and less visited than White Beach; the best of both worlds for a quiet swim.
- Sunrise at Puka: The beach faces north to northeast, which means the first morning light hits it directly. Arrive by 5:30 AM (tricycle drivers are used to early bookings) for near-solitude and pink sky over the water. By 9 AM the day-trip crowds begin.
faq:
- Q: Is Puka Beach worth the trip from White Beach?
A: Yes, easily. The round-trip by tricycle is PHP 300–400 and takes under an hour total. If you are spending more than two days in Boracay, Puka gives you a completely different experience from the commercial strip — less noise, fewer people, and a better sense of the island's natural character.
- Q: Can I swim at Puka Beach safely?
A: In calm season (November to May) yes — the water is shallow, warm, and gentle. From June to September the north-facing orientation makes it the first beach to catch ocean swells. Waves can be 1–2 m and there are no lifeguards; exercise caution or just walk the beach rather than swim.
- Q: Are there any facilities at Puka Beach?
A: Minimal, which is the point. There are no sun-bed rentals, no motorized water sports, and no permanent structures on the beach itself. The small cluster of restaurants at the main access road has toilets (PHP 10–20), basic first aid, and cold drinks. No ATM within walking distance — bring cash.
- Q: How does Puka compare to Diniwid Beach nearby?
A: Puka is wider, wilder, and more exposed — better for walking and the shell-hunting experience. Diniwid is a smaller, more sheltered cove with calmer water year-round and a few boutique resorts. The two complement each other; many visitors do both in one half-day trip north.
firstTimer: visa: Same 30-day on-arrival visa as the rest of Boracay; no separate registration for north-shore beaches. currency: Bring PHP cash to Puka — the karinderias do not accept cards, and there are no ATMs in the north zone. health: Bring your own water bottle from White Beach; the restaurants sell bottled water but at a premium; no shade except at the restaurant end of the beach so pack sun protection. money: Cash only at Puka; withdraw in White Beach before the tricycle trip north. safety: During swell season (June–September) the beach is safe to walk but not to swim — watch for sudden shore-break waves even on days that look calm from shore.