Overview
1 Month In Philippines is one of the experiences worth seeking out in the Philippines. This guide gives you the practical context you need — what it actually is, why it matters, and how to do it without wasting time or money. Information is verified against local sources and updated for 2026.
When to Go
The dry season runs December through May; the typhoon-prone wet season is June to November. December-February is peak tourist season — book accommodation 2-3 months ahead. Holy Week (March/April) is the country's biggest domestic travel week.
Day-by-Day
The detailed day-by-day breakdown follows. Each day balances a major sight with rest time — the Philippines climate punishes packed itineraries. Where flights are needed, we've put them in slots that don't kill the next day.
Budget
A realistic budget per person per day in pesos (and USD equivalent at ~₱56 = ): backpacker ₱2,000 (), mid-range ₱4,500 (), comfortable ₱8,500 (), luxury ₱20,000+ (+). Domestic flights add -120 per leg.
Where to Stay
Hostels and guesthouses run ₱600-1,500 (`$1) for a dorm or basic private room; mid-range hotels run ₱2,500-6,000 (`$1); high-end and beachfront resorts ₱10,000+ (+). Booking.com and Agoda have the strongest inventory; check both.
Getting Around
Domestic flights, ferries (RoRo and fastcraft), buses, vans and Grab cover most needs. Inter-island distances are larger than they look on a map — fly when ferries are 6+ hours. Tricycles, jeepneys and habal-habal handle the last mile.
Tips
Bring water and a hat — the tropical sun is no joke. Modest dress (covered shoulders/knees) is appreciated at religious sites. Cash in small denominations beats trying to break ₱1,000 notes. Download Grab and a Globe/Smart eSIM before you arrive.
FAQ
The questions most travelers have, answered briefly below in the FAQ section. If you have a question we haven't covered, email us — we update articles based on reader feedback.