Tipping is a meaningful gesture in El Nido — service industry wages in Palawan are modest, and a well-timed tip can make a genuine difference to the people who make your island hopping experience extraordinary. This complete El Nido tipping guide covers how much to tip, who to tip, and the local customs around gratuity in Palawan for 2026.
Is Tipping Expected in El Nido?
Tipping is not legally required and Filipino culture does not have the same mandatory tipping culture as the United States. However, it is warmly appreciated and genuinely impactful. Tourism is the backbone of El Nido’s economy, and many service workers earn below P500/day in base wages. A sincere tip supplements this meaningfully.
Tipping Guide by Service
| Service | Recommended Tip | When to Give | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Island hopping boat crew (shared tour) | P100-200 per person | End of the tour | Split between captain + crew; hand directly |
| Island hopping boat crew (private charter) | P300-600 per boat | End of the charter | Split between captain, mate, and cook/guide |
| Tour guide (land-based) | P100-200 per person | End of tour | Guides at caves, viewpoints, cultural sites |
| Restaurant (sit-down) | P50-100 or 10% of bill | When paying the bill | Not expected but very appreciated |
| Street food vendors | Round up or small coins | When paying | Not expected; rounding up P10-20 is kind |
| Hotel housekeeping | P50-100/day | Daily or at checkout | Leave on pillow or bedside table |
| Trike driver | Round up / P20-50 extra | Arrival at destination | Not expected for short rides; for long trips (Nacpan) P50-100 appreciated |
| Massage therapist | P50-150 per hour | End of session | Standard tip for good service |
| Dive guide / divemaster | P200-400 per day | End of diving day | Critical role — tips are important in dive culture |
| Liveaboard crew | P500-1,000 per person per trip | Last day of trip | Pool tip for whole crew; give to captain to distribute |
| Resort bellboy/porter | P50-100 per service | After carrying bags | Standard hospitality tip |
Boat Crew Tips: The Most Important
Your island hopping boat crew — the captain, first mate, and cook/guide — are the people most responsible for the quality of your El Nido experience. They cook your lunch, navigate safely through the archipelago, help you enter the lagoons, point out marine life, and ensure your safety on the water. They typically earn P300-500/day in base wages regardless of how many tours they run.
- Recommended for shared tours: P100-200 per person in your group. On a boat of 8 guests, this gives the crew P800-1,600 shared — meaningful supplementary income.
- Recommended for private charters: P500-800 for a day charter, split between crew members. For multi-day charters, P500-1,000 per person for the trip.
- When to give: At the end of the tour, before disembarking back at the town pier. A simple “Salamat” (thank you) as you hand the tip makes it personal.
- Give directly: Hand tips directly to crew members rather than to a tour operator desk — this ensures it reaches the right people.
Restaurant Tipping in El Nido
Restaurant tipping is not expected the way it is in the US, but it is genuinely appreciated at tourist-facing restaurants. Service charges are sometimes already included in the bill at higher-end restaurants — check before adding an additional tip.
- Local carinderias: Tipping is not expected. Rounding up is fine.
- Mid-range tourist restaurants (Altrove, Republica, etc.): P50-100, or 10% of the bill for good service.
- Resort restaurants: Check if a service charge is already included (usually 10%). If not, 10% is appropriate.
Practical Tips for Tipping in El Nido
- Carry small bills: P20, P50, and P100 notes are ideal for tipping. Asking for change from a P1,000 note at a beach stall is awkward — come prepared.
- Tip in pesos: Always tip in Philippine Pesos (PHP). Foreign currency tips create inconvenience as recipients need to exchange them.
- A verbal thank you matters: Filipino service culture values sincere acknowledgment. “Salamat” (thank you) or “Magaling ka” (you are excellent) alongside a tip is more meaningful than a silent hand-over.
- Liveaboard crew pool tip: On multi-day liveaboard trips, give your tip to the captain on the last day and ask them to distribute among the crew — they know fair shares better than guests do.
- Do not tip at karaoke bars: Tips to singers at karaoke establishments follow different norms — in the Philippines, this can carry unintended implications. Follow the lead of local customers.
Related: El Nido Budget Travel Guide 2026 | El Nido Local & Community Guide | El Nido Safety Tips




