\!DOCTYPE html>
The definitive guide to Siargao's finest tables — ranked for every occasion, from first dates to deal-closing dinners.
Every table ranked, verdicts written, occasions assigned. Use the occasion filter above to narrow by your dining purpose.
$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
Siargao is the Philippines' surfing capital — a teardrop-shaped island in the Philippine Sea that caught its first international wave riders in the 1990s and has spent thirty years building a hospitality culture around the specific values of the surf world: fresh, local, unpretentious, and deeply connected to the sea that defines daily life here. The Cloud 9 break, one of the great reef tubes in Asia, is the island's most famous export. The dining culture is its best-kept secret.
The kitchen here is built on the sea. Kinilaw — the Filipino version of ceviche, made with the freshest catch and acid-cured with coconut vinegar and calamansi — is the emblematic dish: alive, bright, indigenous, impossible to fake with anything less than same-day fish. The fishermen dock daily at the General Luna pier, and the best restaurants have standing agreements to take the finest specimens before anyone else can.
The island's international population — surfers, digital nomads, Italian restaurateurs, Spanish beach-bar operators — has layered its own culinary contributions onto the Filipino base. Kermit Siargao serves Napoli pizza and handmade pasta with the same sourcing discipline that the kinilaw restaurants apply to their fish. Bravo brings Spanish paella to a beachfront that would not be out of place in Valencia.
General Luna is the hub: the main town and beach where most restaurants concentrate. Most restaurants operate walk-in or simple phone bookings, but the best spots fill during surf season (September to November) and holiday weekends. Come with time. Eat slowly. The island rewards unhurried engagement.
Explore more: dining by occasion • all cities • dining guides
Reservations in Siargao follow standard etiquette. The fine-dining picks above book 2-4 weeks ahead for weekend evenings; mid-tier neighbourhood restaurants accept 1-2 weeks; casual options often allow walk-ins if you arrive at 7pm or earlier. The peak season for Siargao dining mirrors the city's broader tourism rhythm — weekends and high-season holidays are tighter than mid-week and off-peak. Booking through the restaurant directly is faster than third-party platforms for the venues that maintain their own reservations.
Tipping in Siargao follows the local custom: 10-15% on the pre-tax total is standard, with 18-20% reserved for genuinely exceptional service. Many fine-dining venues now include a service charge automatically — check the bill before adding more. Card payment is universally accepted at the venues above; cash is welcomed but rarely required.
Siargao's dining scene operates year-round, but the best windows depend on your goals. Spring (March-May) and autumn (September-October) typically offer the best balance of weather, ingredient seasonality, and reservation availability. Summer brings tourist density at the harbour-side and central restaurants; the locals' favourite venues stay calmer in their own neighbourhoods. Winter is quieter but the heartier seasonal cooking — long-cooked meats, root vegetables, fortified wines — comes into its own.
The major calendar events to plan around: locally-relevant food festivals, a city restaurant week if Siargao runs one, and the international tourist holidays. The serious dining venues maintain their service quality across all seasons; the mid-tier options can dip during peak tourist periods when the staff is stretched thin.
Every dining city has a structural reason for its restaurant culture, and Siargao is no exception. The combination of local ingredient sourcing, the city's broader cultural orientation, the international cuisine integration, and the regulatory environment around food and beverage all shape what shows up on the plate. The restaurants we've ranked above are the ones that handle these structural elements with the most care — kitchens that know where their suppliers are, sommeliers who understand the regional wine context, and dining rooms calibrated to the city's actual pace rather than imported templates.
For visitors planning a single dining-driven trip to Siargao, our recommendation is to balance the splurge tier with the mid-tier neighbourhood discoveries that show what the city actually eats day-to-day. The casual options work for arrival nights, late-evening drinks, or the moments when the conversation matters more than the cuisine.