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Taiwan to Boracay: Visa Free Entry, TWD Budget & 5 Day Itinerary (2026)

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Taiwan Travel Guide

Taiwan to Boracay 2026: Flights, Visa, Budget & Complete Planning Guide

14 min read
Updated May 2026
Boracay, Philippines
60-Second Summary

Taiwan to Boracay in 60 Seconds

Taiwanese passport holders can currently visit Boracay visa free for up to 14 days under a trial programme running through 31 July 2026. That makes right now the easiest window in years to book a Philippine beach holiday. Flights from Taipei Taoyuan to Manila take just 2 hours 15 minutes, and from Manila you connect onward to Caticlan Airport in about an hour. Round trip fares start around TWD 6,500 on Cebu Pacific during the off season, and a full 5 day trip including flights, hotel, food, and activities runs TWD 18,000 to TWD 40,000 depending on your style. The island is tiny, walkable, English speaking, and the Philippine Peso stretches your Taiwan Dollars remarkably far. A full hour beachfront massage costs less than a single bubble tea in Taipei 101.

TWD 6,500+Round Trip Flight
2h 15mTaipei to Manila
14 daysVisa Free (Trial)
Nov-AprBest Season

Why Boracay Beats Kenting, Penghu, and Green Island

Taiwan has beautiful coastlines, but anyone who has stood on White Beach in Boracay understands instantly why travellers fly two hours south. Kenting is the go to domestic beach destination, but its grey sand, murky water during certain seasons, and crowded holiday weekends pale against Boracay’s four kilometres of powder white sand that stays pristine year round. Penghu is gorgeous and uncrowded, but the season is short (April to September) and getting there from Taipei means either a flight to Magong or a long ferry. Green Island has incredible snorkelling, but the island is tiny with limited nightlife and accommodation options. Boracay gives you everything at once: transparent turquoise water shallow enough to wade 50 metres out, a beach that international rankings consistently place in the world’s top five, nightlife clustered along D’Mall that runs until the early hours, and daily costs so low that a couple can eat three beachfront meals and do two activities for what a single nice dinner costs in Da’an District.

The other advantage is infrastructure. Boracay has had decades of international tourism investment, which means English is spoken everywhere, tour operators are professional, hotels range from TWD 600 dorm beds to TWD 15,000 luxury suites, and the entire island is small enough that you never need to rent a scooter or figure out a bus route. You walk. That simplicity is a big part of the appeal for Taiwanese travellers who want a stress free holiday without a car or a language app.

Aerial view of Boracay Island showing the full length of White Beach and turquoise water
Boracay from above. Four kilometres of White Beach, transparent water, and an island small enough to explore entirely on foot.

Every Flight Option from Taipei to Boracay

No airline flies direct from Taiwan to Boracay. Every route connects through Manila (MNL), and the final leg is a short domestic hop to Caticlan Airport (MPH), the gateway that sits just a 10 minute boat ride from the island. The good news is that Taipei to Manila is one of the most competitive routes in Asia, with five carriers offering multiple daily flights and prices that drop sharply if you book early or fly off peak.

Choosing Your Departure Airport

Most travellers will fly from Taipei Taoyuan (TPE), which has the widest selection of airlines and the cheapest fares. If you live in central Taipei and prefer convenience, China Airlines operates a handful of weekly flights from Songshan (TSA), which saves the 45 minute MRT ride to Taoyuan. Travellers in southern Taiwan should check Cebu Pacific and Philippine Airlines flights from Kaohsiung (KHH), which occasionally run direct to Manila and cut your travel time significantly.

Airline Comparison (Round Trip, Taipei to Boracay via Manila)

Airline Route Off Peak Peak Why Choose This
Cebu Pacific TPE to MNL to MPH TWD 6,500-9,000 TWD 11,000-15,000 Lowest fares, frequent seat sales, basic baggage extra
Philippine Airlines TPE to MNL to MPH TWD 8,500-11,500 TWD 13,000-18,000 23 kg bag included, best Manila connection timing, full service
China Airlines TPE/TSA to MNL + PAL onward TWD 9,000-12,500 TWD 14,000-19,000 Mandarin crew, Dynasty Flyer miles, Songshan option
EVA Air TPE to MNL + PAL onward TWD 9,500-13,000 TWD 15,000-20,000 Star Alliance miles, Infinity MileageLands earning, premium service
Starlux TPE to MNL + PAL onward TWD 10,000-13,500 TWD 16,000-22,000 Taiwan’s boutique carrier, A321neo, excellent for couples

Off peak months are May, June, September, and early November. Peak pricing kicks in during Lunar New Year (late January or February), the December holidays, Taiwan’s summer school break in July, and Philippine Holy Week (late March or early April). The single best strategy is to book the Taipei to Manila leg 10 to 12 weeks out, watch for Cebu Pacific flash sales on their app, and book the Manila to Caticlan domestic hop separately through Philippine Airlines for smoother terminal connections at NAIA.

Passengers walking out of Caticlan Airport terminal toward the boat jetty
Caticlan Airport (MPH). From here it is a 5 minute ride to the jetty, then a 10 minute boat to Boracay’s shore.

The Visa Situation: What Taiwanese Travellers Need to Know

This is the section that matters most, because Taiwan’s entry rules for the Philippines are different from most other Asian passports and they are still evolving.

The 14-Day Visa Free Trial

Since 1 July 2025, the Philippines has been running a trial visa free programme for holders of ordinary Taiwanese passports. Under this programme, you can enter the Philippines without a visa and stay for up to 14 days. The trial is currently scheduled to run through 31 July 2026. For a long weekend or a week long beach holiday, 14 days is more than enough. If you are reading this after July 2026, check the Bureau of Immigration Philippines website to see whether the programme has been renewed, because extensions have been discussed but are not guaranteed.

What You Need at Immigration

  • Passport valid for at least 6 months beyond your planned departure from the Philippines.
  • Return or onward flight ticket. Immigration officers check this. A printed or digital booking confirmation works.
  • Hotel booking confirmation. Not always checked, but have it ready on your phone.
  • Completed eTravel registration. This is mandatory for all travellers entering the Philippines. Fill it out free of charge on the official eTravel.gov.ph portal within 72 hours of your flight. It takes about 5 minutes and generates a QR code that immigration scans on arrival.

Staying Longer Than 14 Days

If you want more than two weeks (and Boracay has a way of making you want to stay), you need a sticker visa from the Manila Economic and Cultural Office (MECO) in Taipei before you fly. Processing takes 5 to 7 working days, costs around TWD 3,600, and grants a 59 day stay. Apply early, especially during Lunar New Year season when MECO queues are long.

Matching Taiwan Holidays to Boracay Weather

Boracay’s dry season (Amihan) runs November through April. The wet season (Habagat) runs June through October with heavier rain, rougher seas, and occasional typhoon risk. The best strategy is to align your Taiwan holidays with the dry months. Here is how each major break lines up:

Taiwan Holiday Typical Dates Boracay Weather Verdict
Lunar New Year (春節) Late Jan or early Feb (7-9 days off) Peak dry season, perfect The #1 window. Book flights 12+ weeks ahead. Expect higher prices but flawless weather.
228 Peace Memorial Day Feb 28 (often a 3-4 day weekend) Dry season, excellent Great short trip window. Less crowded than Lunar New Year, similar weather.
Tomb Sweeping + Children’s Day Apr 4-5 (often a 4 day weekend) End of dry season, still sunny Solid. May overlap with Philippine Holy Week so book early.
Dragon Boat Festival (端午節) Late May or early Jun Transition to wet season Risky. Some sunny days but rain is possible. Budget deals available.
Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋節) Sep or Oct Monsoon season Not recommended. Rough seas, activities may be cancelled.
National Day (雙十節) Oct 10 (often a 3 day weekend) Late monsoon season Risky but improving. Amihan begins to return late October.
Christmas / New Year Dec 25 to Jan 1 Peak dry season, perfect Excellent weather. This is high season so prices are higher across the board.

If you have full flexibility, the absolute sweet spot is early November. The Amihan dry winds have just started, hotel prices are still shoulder season rates, the beach is uncrowded, and flights from Taipei are at their cheapest. The second best window is the week after Lunar New Year, when holiday crowds thin out but the weather remains perfect.

The 5-Day Lunar New Year Itinerary

Lunar New Year gives most Taiwanese workers 7 to 9 days off, and a 5 day Boracay trip fits perfectly into that window while leaving a buffer day on each end for travel recovery. Here is the itinerary that works best.

Open air beachfront dining at D'Mall Boracay with fairy lights at sunset
D’Mall at sunset. The open air food and shopping strip that anchors every Boracay itinerary.
Day 1

Land, Settle In, First Sunset

Fly out of Taoyuan on a morning Cebu Pacific or China Airlines flight. You land in Manila by midday, connect to Caticlan in the afternoon, and reach your Boracay hotel by 4 to 5 PM. Do not plan anything elaborate. Drop your bags, change into shorts and sandals, and walk straight to White Beach. Find a beachfront table between Willy’s Rock and D’Mall, order a fresh mango shake, and watch the sunset paint the sky orange and pink. Dinner on the sand. Early night. The holiday starts tomorrow.

Day 2

Island Hopping Day

This is the day everyone remembers. Board a traditional bangka boat in the morning for a full day island hopping tour (TWD 600 to TWD 1,000 per person). You will visit Crystal Cove Island with its caves and tide pools, snorkel over coral gardens in crystal clear water, jump off the platforms at Magic Island, and end the afternoon lounging on Puka Beach on the northern tip of the island. Lunch is grilled fish, rice, and fruit served on the boat. Return to your hotel by 3 PM, nap off the sun, then explore the Station 2 beach path bars for sunset drinks.

Day 3

Water Sports and D’Mall Evening

Morning: pick one adrenaline activity. Parasailing (TWD 800) gives you a bird’s eye view of the entire White Beach coastline. Helmet diving (TWD 700) lets you walk on the seabed and feed fish by hand, with zero swimming ability required. If you want something calmer, book a sunset paraw sailing trip for the late afternoon (TWD 400 to TWD 600) on a traditional outrigger. Evening: eat your way through D’Mall. Start with Filipino chicken inasal, move to Korean BBQ (there is a large Korean community on the island), then finish with halo halo shaved ice or a mango crepe from one of the street vendors.

Day 4

Puka Beach and Mount Luho

Rent an e-trike or take a regular tricycle to Puka Shell Beach on the quieter north end of the island (TWD 60 each way). The sand here is coarser and mixed with tiny shell fragments, and the vibe is the opposite of White Beach: calm, uncrowded, local vendors grilling corn and squid. Spend the morning swimming and relaxing. After lunch, take an ATV tour to Mount Luho (TWD 600), the highest point on Boracay, for a panoramic view of the island that makes every Instagram follower jealous. Back to White Beach for your farewell dinner at one of the beachfront seafood restaurants.

Day 5

Morning Massage, Goodbye

Sleep in. There is no rush. Enjoy a long breakfast with a view of the water, then treat yourself to a beachfront massage (TWD 350 to TWD 700 for a full hour). This alone is worth the trip. Pack up, check out by noon, and take your pre booked transfer back to Caticlan Airport. You will be home in Taipei by late evening, tanned, relaxed, and already checking Cebu Pacific for the next sale.

What Things Cost in TWD

Boracay is remarkably affordable by Taiwanese standards. A night out with dinner, drinks, and an activity costs less than a single omakase dinner in Xinyi District. Here is a realistic daily budget breakdown per person, excluding international flights.

Style Accommodation Food Activities Local Transport Total Per Day
Budget Traveller TWD 600-1,200 TWD 300-500 TWD 400 TWD 100 TWD 1,400-2,200
Comfortable Mid Range TWD 2,000-4,000 TWD 700-1,000 TWD 800 TWD 150 TWD 3,650-5,950
Premium TWD 5,000-10,000 TWD 1,500-2,000 TWD 1,400 TWD 300 TWD 8,200-13,700
Luxury TWD 12,000+ TWD 3,000+ TWD 2,500 TWD 500 TWD 18,000+

For a 5 day, 4 night Lunar New Year trip, a mid range couple should budget TWD 30,000 to TWD 45,000 per person including flights. Budget travellers can do the same trip for TWD 16,000 to TWD 22,000. Going premium with a beachfront suite and private tours lands around TWD 55,000 to TWD 75,000 per person. Compare that to a domestic trip to Kenting during Lunar New Year, where a beachfront hotel alone can cost TWD 8,000 to TWD 12,000 per night with fewer activities and shorter beaches.

Choosing Your Beach Base

White Beach runs north to south and is divided into three stations. Each has a distinct personality, and choosing the right one shapes your entire trip.

The Lind Boracay beachfront resort at Station 1

Station 1: The Quiet Luxury End

TWD 5,000-15,000 / night

The widest stretch of sand, the calmest water, and home to the island’s best resorts: Shangri La, Discovery Shores, and The Lind. Several Station 1 hotels have Mandarin speaking concierge staff during peak season, which is a significant comfort for travellers whose English is limited. The trade off is fewer street food options nearby, so you either eat at the hotel or walk 10 minutes south to D’Mall. Perfect for couples, honeymoons, and families with small children who want calm shallow water.

Browse Station 1 hotels

Beach beds along White Beach Boracay near Station 2

Station 2: Where Everything Happens

TWD 1,800-6,000 / night

Station 2 is the beating heart of the island. D’Mall is right here, packed with restaurants (including Korean BBQ spots, a Filipino fried chicken chain, and late night street food stalls), souvenir shops, dive operators, and bubble tea stands that have popped up specifically for the growing Taiwanese and Chinese tourist wave. You can walk to any activity booking office in minutes. Most first time Taiwanese visitors should stay here because it gives you maximum choice with minimum planning.

Browse Station 2 hotels

Couples walking along the quiet stretch of White Beach near Station 3

Station 3: Budget Friendly and Chill

TWD 600-2,500 / night

The southern end is where backpackers, solo travellers, and longer stay guests gravitate. Guesthouses and dorm beds are abundant, the beach is quieter, and the pace slows down noticeably. You are a 15 minute walk from D’Mall, which most people enjoy as an evening stroll along the sand. Taiwanese backpackers travelling on Working Holiday budgets or gap year trips will find Station 3 the best value on the island.

Browse Station 3 hotels

Best Activities: What to Book First

Boracay packs an impressive number of activities into a tiny island. Here are the highlights ranked by popularity with Taiwanese visitors. All prices are approximate per person in TWD. Book through your hotel concierge or the tour operators clustered along D’Mall. During Lunar New Year, reserve island hopping and parasailing at least a day ahead because they sell out.

Island hopping boat approaching Crystal Cove Island near BoracayTWD 600-1,000
Island HoppingFull day boat tour hitting Crystal Cove, snorkelling reefs, Magic Island, and Puka Beach. Lunch grilled on board. The single must do activity on the island.
Parasailing high above the turquoise waters of White Beach BoracayTWD 700-950
ParasailingFly 100 metres above the coastline for 15 minutes. Solo or tandem options available. The aerial view of White Beach is genuinely breathtaking.
Tourist walking on the seabed during helmet diving in BoracayTWD 600-850
Helmet DivingWalk along the ocean floor wearing a weighted helmet while fish swim around you. No swimming ability needed. Enormously popular with visitors who are nervous about water sports.
ATV riding through trails on the way to Mount Luho viewpoint BoracayTWD 600
ATV to Mount LuhoRide an all terrain vehicle up to Boracay’s highest point (100m) for a 360 degree panoramic view of the island. The best single photo opportunity you will get.
Traditional Filipino paraw sailboat gliding across calm water at sunset in BoracayTWD 400-600
Sunset Paraw SailingGlide across the bay on a traditional double outrigger sailboat while the sun drops below the horizon. The most romantic hour on the island. Bring your camera.
Travellers cliff jumping into turquoise water at Ariel's Point near BoracayTWD 1,200
Ariel’s Point Cliff JumpingFull day trip to a private island with cliff jumps at multiple heights (3m to 15m), unlimited drinks, and a BBQ lunch. For thrill seekers who want more than the beach.
Relaxing beachfront massage setup along White Beach BoracayTWD 350-700
Beachfront MassageLicensed therapists set up along the sand every afternoon. A 60 minute full body massage under the coconut trees for less than the price of a taxi ride across Taipei.
Kitesurfers riding steady winds at Bulabog Beach BoracayTWD 2,400+
Kitesurfing at Bulabog BeachBoracay’s east side catches steady 15 to 25 knot Amihan winds from November to April. Beginner lessons available, and the flat water makes it one of Asia’s best learning spots.

Eating in Boracay: A Taiwanese Foodie’s Guide

Taiwanese travellers tend to be serious about food, and Boracay delivers more variety per square kilometre than you might expect from a small Philippine island. The eating scene clusters around three zones: D’Mall (the widest variety), the Station 1 beachfront restaurants (upscale, reservation recommended at peak times), and the Station 3 local eateries (the cheapest, most authentic Filipino food).

Filipino dishes to try on your first visit: chicken or pork adobo (soy braised meat that Taiwanese palates tend to love immediately), sinigang (a tamarind sour soup that resembles Taiwanese hot and sour flavours), crispy pata (deep fried pork knuckle, served with a vinegar dip), and of course fresh grilled seafood, especially the local talaba (oysters) and garlic butter shrimp. For something sweet, halo halo is the national dessert: shaved ice topped with beans, jellies, ube ice cream, and leche flan. Mango shakes on the beach are another staple, made from Guimaras mangoes that are among the sweetest in the world.

If you start craving familiar flavours, D’Mall has a growing number of spots serving bubble tea, Taiwanese style fried chicken, and beef noodle soup. The Korean BBQ restaurants along Station 2 are excellent and affordable. For a splurge, the beachfront restaurants at Station 1 serve international cuisine including sushi, Mediterranean, and modern Filipino tasting menus. Expect to spend TWD 200 to TWD 400 for a filling local meal with drinks, or TWD 800 to TWD 1,500 for a beachfront dinner with wine.

Boracay beachfront restaurant with tables set on the sand overlooking the ocean at golden hour
Dinner on the sand. Most beachfront restaurants set up tables directly on White Beach in the late afternoon.

Practical Essentials: Money, Data, and Tips

The local currency is the Philippine Peso (PHP). As of early 2026, TWD 1 equals roughly PHP 1.74, or put another way, PHP 100 costs about TWD 57. Bring Taiwan Dollars or US Dollars in cash and exchange them at the money changers in D’Mall, where rates are consistently better than at Caticlan Airport or Manila Airport. ATMs are available in D’Mall and at Station 1 hotels, with withdrawal limits around PHP 10,000 (about TWD 5,750) per transaction and a flat fee of PHP 250 (TWD 145) per withdrawal.

JCB cards are widely accepted at hotels and larger restaurants, which is a real convenience for Taiwanese cardholders. Visa and Mastercard also work at most mid range and up establishments. Smaller shops, tricycle drivers, and beach vendors are cash only.

For mobile data, the simplest option is buying a prepaid Smart or Globe SIM at Caticlan Airport for TWD 200 to TWD 400 with 5 to 25 GB. If your phone supports eSIM, services like Airalo or Holafly let you activate before you leave Taiwan and skip the airport queue. Chunghwa Telecom and Far EasTone offer international roaming, but the per day cost usually exceeds what a local SIM costs for the entire trip.

One important note for LINE users: WhatsApp is the standard messaging app in the Philippines, and most Boracay tour operators and hotels use it for bookings and communication. Download WhatsApp before your trip and have it ready. You can still use LINE for talking to people back home, but WhatsApp is what you will need on the ground.

Plug compatibility is easy. The Philippines uses Type A and Type B flat prong plugs, identical to Taiwan. The voltage is 220V (Taiwan is 110V), but modern phone chargers, laptop adapters, and camera chargers handle both voltages automatically. Check the label on older electronics before plugging them in.

Boracay vs Palawan: Which Philippine Island?

If you are considering a Philippine beach holiday, the two names that come up most are Boracay and Palawan. They are very different trips, and choosing the right one depends on what you want.

Choose Boracay if you want the best white sand beach in the Philippines, a compact walkable island, nightlife and dining variety, easy logistics, and a trip that works beautifully in 4 to 5 days. Boracay is the beach holiday: swim, eat, parasail, party, repeat. It is ideal for couples, groups of friends, and first time visitors to the Philippines.

Choose Palawan if you want dramatic limestone cliffs, hidden lagoons, underground rivers, world class diving, and a more adventurous, nature focused experience. El Nido and Coron are the highlights, but getting around Palawan takes more time and planning. It is a better fit for longer trips of 7 days or more, for experienced travellers who enjoy exploring, and for divers who want to see shipwrecks and pristine reefs.

For Taiwanese travellers with a standard 5 day Lunar New Year window, Boracay is the clear winner on convenience and beach quality. Save Palawan for when you have a full week or more and want to combine island hopping with inland exploration.

Kitesurfers on Bulabog Beach Boracay with steady Amihan winds
Bulabog Beach on the east side of Boracay. From November to April, the steady Amihan winds make this one of Asia’s best kitesurfing locations.
Pro Tip

Book Your Airport Transfer Before You Fly

The journey from Caticlan Airport to your Boracay hotel involves a short vehicle ride, a 10 minute boat crossing, and another vehicle on the island side. If you arrive without a booking, you will be quoted inflated walk up prices and possibly directed to slower shared transport. A pre booked private transfer handles all three legs seamlessly for a fixed price, and your driver meets you at the terminal exit with a name sign. It is the single booking that removes the most stress from your arrival day.

Pre Book Your Airport Transfer

Frequently Asked Questions

Will the Taiwan visa free programme continue after July 2026?

The current trial is scheduled to end 31 July 2026. There have been discussions about making it permanent or extending it further, but nothing is confirmed. If you are reading this after that date, check the Bureau of Immigration Philippines website or the MECO Taipei office for the latest status. If the trial ends, Taiwanese travellers will need to apply for a sticker visa through MECO before travelling.

How do I register on eTravel?

Visit etravel.gov.ph within 72 hours of your flight departure. Fill in your personal details, flight information, and Philippine accommodation address. It is free and takes about 5 minutes. You receive a QR code that immigration will scan when you land in Manila. No app download is needed.

How far in advance should I book for Lunar New Year?

At least 12 weeks ahead for flights and 8 weeks for hotels. Lunar New Year is the single biggest outbound travel window for Taiwanese travellers, and Cebu Pacific and China Airlines seats to Manila sell out quickly. Station 2 hotels with beachfront access also book up fast. The earlier you lock in, the lower your prices.

Is Mandarin spoken on Boracay?

English is the working language across the island and every hotel, restaurant, and tour operator speaks it. Mandarin is increasingly common at larger Station 1 and Station 2 resorts, and some tour operators have Mandarin speaking guides available during peak season. D’Mall signage is primarily English. You will not need Mandarin to get around, but you may hear it spoken by fellow guests.

Can I fly from Kaohsiung to Boracay?

Cebu Pacific and Philippine Airlines occasionally operate direct flights from Kaohsiung (KHH) to Manila. From Manila you connect onward to Caticlan as usual. Check schedules on the airline websites, as these routes do not run daily year round. If no direct KHH to MNL flights are available on your dates, fly Kaohsiung to Taipei and connect from Taoyuan.

Do JCB cards work in Boracay?

Yes. JCB is widely accepted at hotels, larger restaurants, and dive shops across Station 1 and Station 2. Most ATMs on the island also accept JCB for cash withdrawals. Smaller shops, tricycles, and beach vendors are cash only, so carry some Philippine Peso as well.

Is 14 days enough for Boracay?

More than enough. Most visitors stay 4 to 7 days and feel they have experienced everything. The island is small and the main activities can be covered in 3 full days. A 5 day trip is the sweet spot that gives you time to relax without rushing, plus a travel day on each end.

What is the best way to exchange TWD in Boracay?

The money changers inside D’Mall offer the best rates on the island. They accept TWD and USD. Avoid exchanging at Caticlan Airport or Manila Airport where rates are typically 3 to 5 percent worse. Alternatively, withdraw PHP from D’Mall ATMs using your Taiwanese bank card (Visa Debit or JCB), keeping in mind the PHP 250 per transaction fee.

Is Boracay safe during typhoon season?

The typhoon risk window is roughly June through November, with peak risk in September and October. Boracay itself is rarely hit directly, but flights can be delayed or cancelled due to weather across the Philippines. If you travel during these months, purchase travel insurance that covers weather delays and trip cancellation, and have flexible hotel bookings. November typically marks the return of stable weather.

Is Boracay good for families with kids?

Very good. The water on White Beach Station 1 is calm, shallow, and warm year round, making it safe for young children. Helmet diving is available for kids aged 10 and up. Many hotels offer family rooms and connecting suites, and the beachfront walking path means no traffic to worry about. The island is small enough that you are never far from your hotel if little ones need a nap break.

Ready to Plan Your Boracay Trip?

The visa free window is open, the flights are short, and the peso exchange rate is firmly in your favour. Lock in your Cebu Pacific or China Airlines tickets early (especially for Lunar New Year and the 228 long weekend), complete your eTravel registration before you fly, book your Caticlan transfer in advance, and pick a Station 2 hotel for the best first timer experience. If you have questions about hotels, activities, or transfers, WhatsApp us at +63 950 316 6415 and we will help you put together a trip that fits your budget and dates.

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