Budget Palawan 2026: How to Visit El Nido Without Overspending
El Nido has a reputation for being expensive by Philippine standards, and there’s some truth to that. It’s a popular destination, the infrastructure costs are real, and peak season pricing is genuine. But it’s also possible to visit El Nido on a tight budget and still have an extraordinary trip. The key is knowing where the money actually has to go versus where you can cut without sacrificing the experience.
Here’s a realistic budget breakdown for El Nido in 2026, and where every peso gets spent.

What El Nido Actually Costs: The Real Numbers
The single biggest budget decision in El Nido is how you get there and whether you book a package or piece everything together yourself.
Getting to El Nido
Manila to Puerto Princesa (Cebu Pacific, booked early): ₱1,500-₱2,500 one-way. Book 6-8 weeks out and avoid Holy Week and Christmas peak dates. The Cebu Pacific seat sales occasionally push this below ₱1,000, but budget ₱2,000 per sector for realistic planning.
Puerto Princesa to El Nido by shared van: ₱650-₱700 per person one-way. This is the budget option. Show up at San Jose Terminal in Puerto Princesa, wait for the van to fill, and you’re on your way. The 5-6 hour ride is fine, bring a neck pillow and something to watch offline.
Return trip: Same cost in reverse. Budget ₱2,600-₱5,000 for the full land-and-air transport in each direction, depending on flight pricing.
Accommodation in El Nido
Budget accommodation in El Nido starts around ₱600-₱900 for fan rooms in shared guesthouses. Air-conditioned private rooms with bathroom start around ₱1,500-₱2,000. The sweet spot for budget travelers is ₱1,500-₱2,500 for a clean private room with air conditioning in the town center.
Prices spike 30-50% during peak months (December-March) and Holy Week. If you’re traveling on a tight budget, May and November offer significantly lower accommodation rates for the same quality of room.
Island Hopping Tours
The standard shared island hopping tour costs ₱1,200-₱1,500 per person and includes lunch and snorkeling gear. Entry fees (₱350-₱400 per tour) are sometimes included, sometimes separate. Confirm before booking.
You need at least two tour days to see El Nido properly. Budget ₱3,200-₱4,000 for two tours including entry fees.
Food Budget
This is where El Nido is genuinely affordable. You can eat well on ₱400-₱600 per day per person:
- Breakfast at a carenderia or simple cafe: ₱80-₱150
- Lunch (often included on tour days): ₱0 on tour days, ₱100-₱200 on free days
- Dinner at a local seafood restaurant: ₱250-₱400 with a cold beer
The local carenderia stalls (simple Filipino eateries with rice and ready-cooked dishes) consistently offer the best value. ₱100-₱150 gets you a full meal with rice, a protein dish, and a vegetable. Walk one block inland from the main tourist strip and prices drop noticeably.

The Budget Package Option: Often Cheaper Than DIY
Here’s something counterintuitive about El Nido budgeting: for most travelers, a well-priced tour package is cheaper than piecing everything together independently.
CMT’s budget-friendly El Nido packages start at ₱5,450 per person for 4 days and include: van transfer from Puerto Princesa, 3 nights accommodation, daily breakfast, and two island hopping tours with entry fees. Compare that to booking each element separately at rack rates and you’ll often pay more going DIY.
The package wins because: operator accommodation rates are lower than tourist rates, tour slots are pre-booked (avoiding last-minute premiums), and you have one payment for the main trip elements rather than multiple bookings each with fees and coordination costs.

5-Day El Nido Budget Breakdown (Per Person)
| Item | Budget Option | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Manila-PP flight (return) | ₱4,000-₱5,000 | Both directions combined |
| PP-El Nido shared van (return) | ₱1,300-₱1,400 | Both directions |
| Accommodation (4 nights, fan/budget AC) | ₱6,000-₱8,000 | ₱1,500-₱2,000/night |
| Island hopping (2 tours + entry fees) | ₱3,200-₱4,000 | Shared tours |
| Environmental fee | ₱200 | One-time fee |
| Food (4 days, budget) | ₱1,600-₱2,400 | ₱400-₱600/day |
| Miscellaneous (tricycles, snacks, drinks) | ₱500-₱1,000 | – |
| Total (per person) | ₱16,800-₱21,800 | Budget range |

5 Ways to Cut Costs Without Ruining the Trip
1. Travel in shoulder season. May and November offer dry-season quality weather at 20-40% lower prices than peak months. The tours run, the weather is good, and there are fewer other tourists competing for accommodation and boat slots. This is the single most effective budget strategy.
2. Book your flight early. Cebu Pacific and Philippine Airlines ticket prices are highly date-sensitive. The same Manila-Puerto Princesa route can cost ₱1,200 (advance purchase, shoulder season) or ₱5,000 (last-minute, peak season). If your dates are flexible, check prices across a two-week window.
3. Take the shared van, not a private transfer. Private van from Puerto Princesa to El Nido costs ₱3,500-₱5,000 for the vehicle. Shared van is ₱700 per person. If you’re on a budget, take the shared van. It takes the same amount of time on the same road.
4. Eat local. The gap between tourist-facing restaurants and local carenderia in El Nido is meaningful. You can spend ₱400 on dinner at a backpacker restaurant on the main strip, or ₱120 at the carenderia one street back eating the same quality of Filipino food. The kinilaw and grilled fish at the local spots is often better than the tourist-facing versions anyway.
5. Do two tours, not four. El Nido’s four tour routes overlap in terms of the type of experience. Tour A and Tour C together give you the complete El Nido experience. Tour B and D are excellent but incrementally less different from Tours A and C. If you’re budgeting, two tours is the right number. Three is fine. Four is for people who’ve already done two and want to see more.
What’s Not Worth Skimping On
Island hopping quality: don’t try to cut the tour cost by booking the cheapest possible operator. The difference between a good boat crew (safety equipment, knowledgeable guide, quality snorkeling gear) and a budget operator cutting corners is real. Book through a licensed, reviewed operator.
Reef-safe sunscreen: the non-reef-safe kind is cheaper, but rangers confiscate it and it damages the reef you came to see. Not worth the saving.
Travel insurance: getting medically evacuated from El Nido without coverage is financially devastating. Basic travel insurance costs ₱500-₱2,000 for a short trip. It’s not where you cut corners.
FAQ: Budget El Nido Travel
Q: What is the minimum budget for El Nido per day?
In El Nido itself (not counting flights), a comfortable but budget-focused traveler can manage on ₱1,500-₱2,500 per day. This covers budget accommodation (fan room), local food, and miscellaneous costs. Tour days add ₱1,200-₱1,500 for the tour.
Q: Is El Nido worth the cost?
Yes. The scenery is genuinely extraordinary. The cost, particularly when planned well, is reasonable compared to similar-quality destinations in Thailand or Indonesia with the added benefit of far fewer crowds.
Q: What’s the cheapest accommodation in El Nido?
Fan rooms in guesthouses in the town center start around ₱600-₱900. Air-conditioning raises the price to ₱1,500+. During peak season, these prices increase. Book in advance rather than hoping for walk-in availability.
Q: Is it cheaper to book a package or DIY?
For most travelers at a mid-range budget, a package from CMT is competitive with or cheaper than DIY. The accommodation and tour rates available through operators are generally lower than what you’d pay booking independently at tourist prices.
Book an Affordable El Nido Package
CMT’s El Nido packages start at ₱5,450 per person and include accommodation, tours, van transfer, and breakfast. It’s the most cost-effective way to get the full El Nido experience without overpaying for each element separately. Check our El Nido page for current package options and availability.

