Siargao, Philippines Image héros

Cost of Living in Siargao

Philippines
Dernière mise à jour : janvier 2026

Siargao cost overview

Les prix sont indiqués en PHP par défaut (peso philippin). Passez à USD/EUR pour une comparaison rapide, et utilisez le convertisseur ci-dessous pour les principales devises.

Affichage des prix en : PHP ₱
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Siargao is “lifestyle-first”: surf culture, community, and nature are the draw—while power outages and limited healthcare are the trade-off. If your work setup is resilient (Starlink + generator), it can be an incredible base.

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Foire aux questions

Is Siargao the "mini-Bali" of the Philippines or is that hype?

Comparison is fair—Siargao feels like Canggu 6-7 years ago. Rapidly growing digital nomad scene, beautiful cafes, amazing food, surf culture dominant. Known as "Surfing Capital of Philippines" and increasingly "Nomad Capital of Philippines." General Luna is the hub—tourism road packed with restaurants, bars, coworking spaces, beach clubs. Growing expat/digital nomad community, improving infrastructure. However, still more remote and less developed than Bali. If you loved early Canggu vibe, Siargao delivers. If you need current Bali infrastructure, you'll be frustrated. It's paradise but still developing.

Can I actually work remotely here or is internet too unreliable?

Yes, BUT with caveats. Starlink available since Feb 2023—game changer. Fiber in some areas (General Luna best). Average speeds 5-20 Mbps, can be faster with Starlink (100-200 Mbps). Coworking spaces: Coco Space (€120/month, modern, premium, WhatsApp community), Alter Space (€50/month, budget-friendly). Many cafes have Starlink/fiber + generators. However: Power outages still frequent and unpredictable (major issue). Outside General Luna, internet unreliable. Need backup generators/Starlink for stable work. Mobile data: Smart better than Globe. Bottom line: Possible but requires proper setup—verify accommodation has Starlink/fiber + generator backup.

What's the cost of living realistically?

Affordable but pricier than other Philippine destinations. Monthly budget: Singles ₱50,000-70,000 ($850-1,200), Families ₱120,000+ ($2,100+). Long-term rent: ₱20,000-30,000/month ($350-550) for 1-bedroom apartment. Motorbike rental: ₱300-500/day ($6-10), cheaper long-term. Food: local eateries ₱50-200/meal, restaurants ₱200-500, night markets incredibly cheap. Electricity ₱1,500-3,000/month (sometimes not included). General Luna most expensive, other areas cheaper. More expensive than Davao, Bohol, or mainland provincial cities, but still fraction of Western costs. Budget lifestyle possible ₱40,000/month if frugal.

Is Siargao just for surfers or can non-surfers enjoy it?

Non-surfers thrive here! Beyond surfing: island hopping (Naked Island, Daku, Guyam), Sugba Lagoon, Magpupungko Rock Pools, Sohoton Cove, mangrove forests, palm tree roads, stunning beaches, yoga studios, incredible food scene, beach parties, vibrant nightlife. Cloud 9 famous for advanced surfing, but island offers 21+ surf spots including beginner-friendly. Santa Fe quieter, residential vibe for non-party people. Growing co-living spaces, digital nomad events, wellness retreats. Activities: diving, stand-up paddleboarding, motorbike exploring, sunset watching, cafe hopping. Choose Siargao for: tropical island lifestyle, community, natural beauty—not just waves.

What's the digital nomad community actually like?

Strong and growing rapidly. Active WhatsApp/Facebook groups, coworking spaces serve as social hubs, regular digital nomad dinners/events. Mix of surfers, remote workers, entrepreneurs, freelancers. General Luna main hub, Santa Fe growing with quieter residential vibe. Locals extremely friendly, welcoming, English widely spoken. International crowd—Germans, Americans, Europeans, Asians. Easy to make friends, networking opportunities plentiful. However, still smaller than Bali, Chiang Mai—intimate community feel. Best vibe: chill, surf culture, everyone here to enjoy life + work. Less corporate than big cities, more relaxed than typical digital nomad hubs.

Quels sont les principaux inconvénients dont personne ne vous avertit ?

Infrastructure challenges: Power outages frequent/unpredictable (biggest complaint)—disrupts work, AC, everything. Even with generators, uncomfortable at night. Healthcare basic: Serious medical issues require Cebu/Manila—medical evacuation insurance essential. No international schools: Not suitable for families with school-age kids. Rainy season: Nov-Feb can bring 20 rain days/month (though changing recently). Noise pollution: Loud music, barking dogs, roosters at odd hours. Remote location: Getting here requires multiple flights (Manila/Cebu/Davao → Siargao). Developing infrastructure: Roads rough, limited amenities outside General Luna. Tourism crowds: High season (Aug-Nov) brings surfers, can feel crowded.

Who is Siargao actually perfect for?

Ideal for: Digital nomads wanting beach lifestyle (work + surf balance), surfers (world-class waves, Cloud 9 legendary), remote workers with flexible schedules (power outages mean you need flexibility), singles/couples (not family-friendly—no schools), people seeking laid-back vibe (slow island pace), nature lovers (islands, lagoons, forests, beaches), community seekers (tight-knit expat scene), those who prioritize lifestyle over infrastructure (willing to tolerate power cuts for paradise).

Not ideal for: Families with school-age children (no international schools), people needing 100% reliable internet (power outages kill work), those with strict work schedules (infrastructure unpredictable), retirees with health concerns (basic healthcare only), people bothered by noise (loud music/animals common), those expecting first-world infrastructure (still developing island), non-outdoorsy types (island life = nature activities).

Siargao gives you tropical paradise, growing digital nomad community, surf culture, and affordable living—but trades reliable infrastructure and urban conveniences for natural beauty and island lifestyle. Perfect if you can roll with power outages and appreciate the journey.