Explore Palawan

Palawan, often referred to as the "wild west of the Philippines," offers a diving experience that is both thrilling and diverse, attracting adventurers from around the world. The archipelago, comprised of over 1,800 islands, is renowned for its stunning, unspoiled beauty — from pristine white sand beaches to lush jungle interiors. Diving enthusiasts will find an underwater paradise teeming with vibrant marine life, including colorful coral reefs, majestic sea turtles, and a variety of tropical fish. Diving in Palawan is as varied as its landscape. The world-famous Tubbataha Reef is a diver's dream, accessible only by liveaboard trips during its short season from March to June. In Coron, history meets adventure with the opportunity to explore sunken World War II shipwrecks, offering a unique peek into the past. Puerto Princesa, the capital, invites daring cave divers to explore its mysterious underwater caves, while El Nido's calm, shallow reefs are perfect for beginners. For those seeking a comprehensive experience, Palawan's dive resorts and centers provide opportunities for all levels of divers, from novices to technical experts. Whether you're diving from shore, boat, or liveaboard, each dive site promises its own distinct charm. Despite its growing popularity, Palawan remains a relatively uncrowded jewel in the Philippines, making it a perfect getaway for those seeking both adventure and tranquility beneath the waves.

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Dive Activity

Diving in Palawan

It is no understatement to say that Palawan diving offers some of the best diving in the world. Apo Reef is huge and often visited by liveaboards from Palawan. The house reefs surrounding all the diving locations, like Coron, El Nido, and Puerto Princesa, all boast many healthy reef ecosystems, which make for excellent dives. Tubbataha Reef is routinely listed as a bucket list dive, and for good reason — the diversity on the reef is exceptional, and it offers the chance to see some amazing things like tiger sharks and manta rays.

There are some opportunities for cave diving here. Cathedral Cave in Coron has a stunning, sunlit chamber leading to a stalactite-filled room in which you can surface. El Nido has Dilumaca Tunnel to explore. Puerto Princesa offers the chance to dive the longest underwater river system in the world.

Known as the wreck capital of Southeast Asia, the Japanese WWII wrecks in Coron Bay will satisfy the fussiest wreck divers. The wrecks litter the seabed, and most allow penetration in multiple places. There are also several other small wrecks, such as the one on Apo Reef.

One of the only places that can also offer lake diving, Coron has two lakes to try — Barracuda and Kayangan. Barracuda is unique in its extreme halocline, where there can be up to a 10°C/50°F difference in water temperatures between the layers.

Liveaboard diving is popular here due to the large distances between the diving locations. Popular destinations include Coron, El Nido, Puerto Princesa, Tubbataha Reef, and Apo Island. The Tubbataha liveaboards are limited to three months of the year, so can be busy.

Top Wildlife Sightings in Palawan

Palawan, an archipelago known for its exceptional marine biodiversity, offers divers an array of vibrant underwater life. Common reef fish found throughout the healthy reefs include angelfish, groupers, parrotfish, surgeonfish, pufferfish, butterflyfish, and damselfish. These colorful inhabitants are often accompanied by schools of yellowtail snappers, jacks, lunar fusiliers, and giant barracudas, painting a lively underwater tableau.

Diving in Palawan can yield encounters with more elusive creatures such as lionfish, stonefish, and scorpionfish, which camouflage on the reefs. Moray eels and several species of octopus, including the blue-ringed and mimic, find refuge in crevices. Blue spotted rays are frequently seen on sandy bottoms, while whitetip and blacktip reef sharks patrol the waters. Notable seasonal highlights include sightings of eagle rays and marble rays, with Tubbataha Reef offering chances to see manta rays, whale sharks, and even elusive dugongs, depending on the time of year.

Wildlife Sightings are Based on User Generated Content

Green Turtle

1.6k Sightings
J
137
F
130
M
256
A
337
M
134
J
128
J
76
A
46
S
52
O
42
N
97
D
148

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 27

Barracuda

1.2k Sightings
J
55
F
82
M
202
A
268
M
133
J
66
J
52
A
33
S
30
O
55
N
83
D
113

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 200

Moray Eel

656 Sightings
J
26
F
31
M
109
A
207
M
69
J
78
J
30
A
16
S
9
O
8
N
41
D
32

Hawksbill Turtle

589 Sightings
J
61
F
24
M
111
A
87
M
43
J
59
J
29
A
9
S
12
O
19
N
60
D
75

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 600

Wrasse

437 Sightings
J
6
F
1
M
108
A
159
M
83
J
46
J
14
A
5
S
8
O
1
N
2
D
4

Dugong

298 Sightings
J
23
F
41
M
50
A
34
M
26
J
17
J
7
A
9
S
1
O
29
N
34
D
27

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 28

Clownfish

3.4k Sightings
J
302
F
381
M
449
A
584
M
327
J
196
J
153
A
129
S
100
O
185
N
247
D
347

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 12

Lionfish

2.4k Sightings
J
227
F
309
M
356
A
418
M
137
J
117
J
81
A
106
S
74
O
130
N
173
D
258

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 100

Parrotfish

1.8k Sightings
J
114
F
164
M
300
A
394
M
233
J
108
J
68
A
47
S
54
O
56
N
118
D
178

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 130

Pufferfish

1.8k Sightings
J
150
F
186
M
283
A
333
M
153
J
112
J
64
A
70
S
48
O
39
N
134
D
192

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 130

Butterfly Fish

1.7k Sightings
J
125
F
103
M
252
A
384
M
180
J
109
J
87
A
48
S
59
O
100
N
84
D
168

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 90

Angelfish

1.6k Sightings
J
69
F
123
M
266
A
344
M
183
J
119
J
62
A
47
S
62
O
74
N
79
D
132

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 40

Triggerfish

1.5k Sightings
J
73
F
87
M
247
A
363
M
186
J
118
J
68
A
44
S
52
O
41
N
77
D
104

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 8

Bannerfish

1.3k Sightings
J
79
F
102
M
212
A
312
M
139
J
77
J
64
A
61
S
59
O
57
N
70
D
114

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 3000

Nudibranch

1k Sightings
J
91
F
153
M
162
A
224
M
26
J
52
J
51
A
40
S
12
O
57
N
34
D
139

Whitetip Reef Shark

957 Sightings
J
9
F
5
M
211
A
332
M
211
J
144
J
17
A
4
S
6
O
6
N
1
D
11

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 40

Jackfish

816 Sightings
J
33
F
49
M
164
A
260
M
138
J
73
J
18
A
4
S
17
O
8
N
2
D
50

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 150

Sweetlips and Grunts

742 Sightings
J
16
F
18
M
138
A
238
M
95
J
68
J
40
A
4
S
29
O
6
N
15
D
75

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 3

Trumpetfish

714 Sightings
J
44
F
37
M
95
A
174
M
35
J
59
J
47
A
29
S
30
O
11
N
59
D
94

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 110

Snapper

709 Sightings
J
18
F
36
M
116
A
205
M
84
J
77
J
14
A
25
S
19
O
15
N
43
D
57

Grey Reef Shark

574 Sightings
J
2
F
2
M
130
A
235
M
115
J
70
J
11
A
0
S
2
O
2
N
1
D
4

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 80

Stingrays

568 Sightings
J
30
F
44
M
112
A
79
M
21
J
40
J
21
A
36
S
8
O
18
N
65
D
94

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 85

Surgeonfish

556 Sightings
J
6
F
1
M
83
A
215
M
108
J
64
J
17
A
10
S
22
O
4
N
24
D
2

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 350

Damselfish

500 Sightings
J
17
F
0
M
99
A
135
M
87
J
59
J
16
A
12
S
12
O
17
N
12
D
34

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 250

Scorpionfish

472 Sightings
J
30
F
50
M
83
A
108
M
26
J
77
J
25
A
17
S
16
O
3
N
13
D
24

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 90

Goatfish

443 Sightings
J
2
F
15
M
60
A
144
M
48
J
48
J
27
A
3
S
23
O
8
N
36
D
29

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 250

Grouper/Basslets

437 Sightings
J
20
F
23
M
86
A
157
M
48
J
30
J
12
A
8
S
1
O
35
N
2
D
15

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 15

Tuna

420 Sightings
J
0
F
1
M
101
A
170
M
60
J
56
J
11
A
3
S
3
O
1
N
2
D
12

Blacktip Reef Shark

360 Sightings
J
1
F
2
M
73
A
117
M
107
J
32
J
12
A
1
S
0
O
0
N
9
D
6

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 60

Soldierfish

350 Sightings
J
6
F
2
M
66
A
145
M
42
J
42
J
25
A
6
S
6
O
0
N
7
D
3

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 25

Boxfish

278 Sightings
J
0
F
15
M
45
A
82
M
28
J
54
J
4
A
5
S
16
O
1
N
13
D
15

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 80

Emperor

249 Sightings
J
1
F
0
M
52
A
93
M
27
J
48
J
1
A
3
S
0
O
0
N
2
D
22

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 30

Stonefish

192 Sightings
J
13
F
43
M
18
A
37
M
2
J
10
J
15
A
34
S
0
O
1
N
0
D
19

The image shown is a representative illustration and does not depict every individual animal in this category.

Total number of species approx.: 60

Squirrelfish

191 Sightings
J
1
F
0
M
23
A
79
M
21
J
59
J
2
A
0
S
5
O
0
N
1
D
0

The best Months to dive in Palawan

Palawan offers year-round diving opportunities, with conditions varying across the region. The dry season, from December to June, is the most favorable period for diving, characterized by calm seas and predictable conditions. Water temperatures remain consistent throughout the year, averaging around 28°C/82°F. However, exposed sites like Tubbataha can experience cooler temperatures. During this season, visibility is excellent, often exceeding 20 meters/66 feet and occasionally reaching up to 40 meters/131 feet.

The wet season, from July to November, brings increased rainfall—more pronounced in the north, which can experience monsoon-like conditions and occasional typhoons. Despite this, diving remains feasible, especially in the southern regions where rainfall is less intense. Currents are generally mild and consistent year-round, influenced by site and tide conditions. Divers should be mindful of the shorter dive season at Tubbataha, from mid-March to mid-June, when the ocean is calm enough for access.

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