The best restaurants in this city for 2026 are led by The Beach Club at Amanpulo. Runners-up by editorial rank: The Lagoon Club at Amanpulo, Cadlao Restaurant, Trattoria Altrov'é, AP Kala Beach Bar.
Every restaurant on the Palawan map, ranked by our editorial team. Filter above by occasion.
$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
New tables. Reservations opened up. The one table the city's dining reviewers are talking about this week.
Amanpulo's second dining room. A pan-Asian programme with the best Asian-specialty kitchen in Palawan.
The first-date pick in Palawan is The Lagoon Club at Amanpulo — Pan-Asian and Filipino, $$$$. The Lagoon Club at Amanpulo is the Palawan first-date room at the Aman register. A pan-Asian programme — Thai, Vietnamese, Japanese, Filipino — that offers variety and creativity without the full-formality of the Beach Club, an open-kitchen setting that makes the meal itself part of the evening's conversation, and the Aman service standard that supports the occasion without ever being intrusive.
For closing a deal or hosting serious clients, The Beach Club at Amanpulo is the default. The Beach Club at Amanpulo is the Palawan proposal dinner at the absolute luxury register. Amanpulo is the Aman-group resort that the luxury-hospitality industry identifies as the reference private-island experience in Southeast Asia; the Beach Club is its signature dining room; and the combination of a private-beach setting, a Mediterranean-Filipino chef-driven programme, and an Aman-standard ser
Our editorial ranking. 5 restaurants, three scores (Food, Ambience, Value), one occasion assignment.
The Amanpulo signature beachfront restaurant. Palawan's most considered Mediterranean-Filipino programme. — Mediterranean and Filipino, $$$$. Best for Proposal.
Amanpulo's second dining room. A pan-Asian programme with the best Asian-specialty kitchen in Palawan. — Pan-Asian and Filipino, $$$$. Best for First Date.
El Nido's most serious independent restaurant. A chef-driven international kitchen on the town's main beach. — International and Filipino, $$$. Best for First Date.
El Nido's Italian institution. A wood-fired-pizza and pasta operation that has anchored the town's dining map for fifteen years. — Italian, $$. Best for Team Dinner.
Lio Beach's anchor bar. El Nido's best beach-bar-and-grill format. — Beach Bar and Grill, $$. Best for First Date.
Palawan's dining identity is shaped by the archipelago's luxury-resort economy — the Amanpulo (on Pamalican Island), the El Nido Resorts (on Lagen, Miniloc, Pangulasian, and Apulit islands), and the Two Seasons and Astoria properties have, over the past thirty years, constructed a fine-dining layer in one of the most remote corners of the Philippines. The result is a dining map that is almost entirely resort-based — the town of El Nido itself has a small number of serious independent restaurants, and Puerto Princesa has a modest middle-tier programme, but the fine-dining register is concentrated at the private-island resorts.
The geography is the main operational constraint. Palawan stretches 450 kilometres north-to-south and the resort dining rooms are distributed across private islands that are accessible only by seaplane or speedboat. Amanpulo's Pamalican Island is reached via a 60-minute charter flight from Manila; the El Nido resort islands are reached by 30- to 45-minute speedboat from El Nido town, which is itself a five-hour drive or a one-hour flight from Puerto Princesa. Dress at the resort restaurants is resort-smart (collared shirts at dinner, no tie required); the town restaurants in El Nido are beach-casual.
The cuisine at the Palawan fine-dining resorts is the international-hotel register — the Amanpulo kitchens run a Mediterranean-and-Filipino programme that the Aman group operates at its Asian resorts, the El Nido resort kitchens run a pan-Asian-and-Filipino programme built around the seafood that the surrounding Sulu Sea supplies, and the independent restaurants in El Nido town present a chef-driven international-and-Filipino cuisine that reflects the town's expatriate-community character. The Filipino regional cuisine — the inasal, the kinilaw (the local ceviche), the kare-kare, the adobo — is the regional-identity thread across all registers.
Practicalities: reservations at the Aman and El Nido Resorts are booked as part of the resort stay and are typically included in the room rate or available as pre-paid dining plans. The independent restaurants in El Nido town require advance booking during the November-May dry season when the town fills with international visitors. Tipping is 10 per cent at the resort restaurants and is increasingly practised in El Nido town; in Puerto Princesa it is less common. Alcohol is freely available; the Filipino rum programme (Don Papa, Tanduay 1854) at the resort bars is a regional specialty worth engaging with. The dry season from November to May is the cultural peak; the wet season from June to October sees reduced service at some resort properties.
For further reading, our Proposal occasion guide, First Date guide, and Birthday guide place Palawan's tables alongside their peers across Southeast Asian luxury resorts. The Methodology page explains how we score.
Cities with overlapping dining DNA.