El Nido Packing List 2026: Everything You Need for a Palawan Trip

Packing for El Nido requires more thought than your average beach holiday. You’re heading to a remote destination with limited shopping options, a hot tropical climate, extensive time on the water, and activities ranging from island-hopping snorkel tours to jungle hikes and sunset bar crawls. This comprehensive El Nido packing list for 2026 covers everything you need — organised by category, with notes on what’s available locally so you know what to bring from home versus what to buy on arrival.

Luggage: What to Bring

  • Main bag: A soft-sided duffel or backpack (50–70L) is far more practical than a hard-shell suitcase — easier to stow on bangka boats, in tricycles, and in van luggage areas. Hard suitcases are cumbersome on El Nido’s uneven streets and cramped boat storage.
  • Day bag: A small waterproof daypack or dry bag (20–30L) for island-hopping days — your daily essential carrier that can handle water and beach use.
  • Dry bag (10–20L): Mandatory for keeping electronics, cash, and documents safe on boat tours. Available locally (₱200–₱500) but bring a reliable one from home.

Clothing

ItemQuantityNotes
Swimsuits2–3You’ll be in the water daily — multiple swimsuits essential for drying time
UPF 50+ rash guard (long sleeve)1–2Most important sun protection item — beats sunscreen on the water
Quick-dry shorts3–4Synthetic fabric only — cotton is miserable in tropical humidity
Quick-dry t-shirts3–4Lightweight, breathable — bring more than you think
Light coverup/sarong1For town walking, restaurant modesty, and boat shade
Long trousers/lightweight pants1For evening dining, cooler nights, and mosquito protection at dusk
Light rain jacket or poncho1Afternoon showers even in dry season; essential May–October
Underwear5–7Quick-dry fabrics preferred in humidity
Smart-casual top1For nicer restaurants — El Nido is casual but not beachwear-everywhere

Footwear

  • Water shoes or secure sandals (closed-heel) — essential for boat entries, rocky beaches, and snorkel stop wading. Chacos, Tevas, or similar. Flip-flops are not adequate for rocky boat ramps.
  • Flip-flops/thongs — for town walking, pool areas, and evenings.
  • Lightweight hiking shoes/trail runners — if planning the Taraw Cliff hike or jungle walks. The Taraw limestone scramble requires rubber-soled shoes with grip.

Sun Protection (Non-Negotiable)

  • Reef-safe sunscreen, SPF 50+ (large quantity) — bring far more than you think you’ll need. Reef-safe (zinc oxide/titanium dioxide) is mandatory at El Nido’s Marine Protected Area snorkel stops; standard chemical sunscreens are prohibited. Availability in El Nido is limited — bring from home or Manila.
  • UV-protection sunglasses (polarised) — polarised lenses cut glare off water dramatically and protect eyes during full days on the ocean.
  • Wide-brim hat with chin cord — wind on boats blows hats off; chin cords are essential. Baseball caps don’t protect neck or ears adequately.
  • UV lip balm SPF 30+ — easily forgotten, badly needed on open water.

Water & Beach Essentials

  • Reusable water bottle (1L minimum) — refill at your hotel’s filtered water station. Reduces plastic waste and saves ₱200–₱400 over a week of bottled water purchases.
  • Electrolyte sachets or tablets — sweating in 32°C+ heat depletes electrolytes quickly. Nuun tabs or Hydrite sachets (available locally) are game-changers on hot island-hopping days.
  • Personal snorkel mask — tour-provided masks are functional but ill-fitting. Your own mask with a proper seal transforms the snorkelling experience. Buy at El Nido shops (₱500–₱1,500) or bring from home.
  • Underwater camera or GoPro — rentable locally (~₱500–₱700/day) but booking ahead during peak season is advised. Bring a wrist strap — dropped cameras at snorkel depth are unrecoverable.
  • Waterproof phone pouch — cheap (₱100–₱300 locally) insurance for your phone on boat days.

Health & First Aid

  • DEET insect repellent (30–50%) — dengue prevention is essential. Apply at dusk and during jungle walks. Available locally but bring a good supply.
  • Seasickness medication (Dramamine/Bonine) — take 1 hour before boat departures if susceptible. Bring from home — not reliably available in El Nido.
  • Antidiarrhoeal (loperamide) — available locally but bring a supply for peace of mind.
  • Oral rehydration salts — for dehydration, heat exhaustion, and GI illness recovery. Available locally as Hydrite.
  • Antihistamine (oral) — for insect bites, mild allergic reactions, and sedation effect as seasickness backup.
  • Antihistamine cream — for jellyfish stings and bite reactions. Bring from home.
  • Antiseptic cream/Betadine — coral cuts need immediate treatment. Available locally.
  • Plasters/bandages — multiple sizes for coral cuts, blisters, and minor wounds. Available locally.
  • Personal prescription medications — bring a full supply plus extras. Philippine pharmacies may not stock your specific brand or formulation.

Electronics & Power

  • Portable charger/power bank (20,000mAh+) — essential. Power outages occur occasionally in El Nido, and remote resorts may have generator-limited power hours. Keep all devices charged.
  • Universal travel adapter — Philippines uses Type A/B plugs (same as USA); most modern sockets accept flat-pin plugs. A universal adapter covers all scenarios.
  • Waterproof cases for electronics — even “water-resistant” phones are not safe for prolonged sea spray. Dry bag everything on boat days.
  • Camera + extra batteries/memory cards — bring twice what you think you need. Camera shops are limited in El Nido.
  • Headphones — for van transfers (5–6 hours Puerto Princesa to El Nido), boat journeys, and evenings.

Documents & Money

  • Passport — Philippines requires 6 months validity beyond your travel dates.
  • Passport photocopy — keep a copy separate from the original; leave the original in your hotel safe during day activities.
  • Travel insurance documents — have digital and printed copies. Include emergency contact numbers for your insurer.
  • Cash (Philippine Pesos) — withdraw in Manila or Puerto Princesa before El Nido. See our ATM and money guide for amounts. El Nido ATMs can be unreliable.
  • Credit/debit cards — Visa and Mastercard accepted at better hotels. Wise or Revolut debit cards minimise ATM fees.

Miscellaneous Essentials

  • Microfibre towel — fast-drying, compact, essential for beach days when hotel towels aren’t provided for tours.
  • Zip-lock bags (various sizes) — secondary waterproofing inside your dry bag; protect cash, documents, and snacks.
  • Reef-friendly sunscreen stick — easier to apply than lotion on boat tours, less likely to drip in eyes.
  • Small padlock — for hostel lockers and securing bags during transit.
  • Reusable cloth bag — for market shopping; reduces plastic waste and fits in a pocket.
  • Earplugs — for hostel dorms and Filipino New Year celebrations (if visiting over New Year).
  • Spanish phrasebook or Tagalog basics — a few Tagalog phrases (salamat = thank you) go a long way in El Nido’s community.

What to Buy in El Nido (Don’t Bother Packing)

  • Bottled water (₱15–₱20/1.5L) — cheaper to buy locally than transport
  • Snorkel mask — good selection at El Nido shops (₱500–₱1,500)
  • Dry bag — available locally (₱200–₱500); bring a reliable one from home if possible
  • Basic medicines (paracetamol, loperamide, Betadine) — cheaper locally than pharmacy prices in many home countries
  • Cheap flip-flops — replace worn ones for ₱150–₱300 at local shops

Packing for the Season

SeasonAdditional Items
Dry season (Nov–Apr)Extra sunscreen, electrolytes, cooling towel for April heat
Transition (May, Oct–Nov)Light rain jacket, dry bag particularly important
Monsoon (Jun–Sep)Waterproof poncho, extra dry bags, flexible itinerary mindset

For island-hopping specific packing, see our island-hopping what to bring guide. For money planning, see our El Nido ATM and cash guide.

External resources: Haereticus Lab — reef-safe sunscreen certification list | IATA — Philippines travel health requirements

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