← Back to Compare

El Nido vs Hakone

Which destination is right for your next trip?

El Nido

El Nido

Philippines

Hakone

Hakone

Japan

El Nido

Safety: 70/100Pop: ~45K (municipality)Asia/Manila

Hakone

Safety: 92/100Pop: ~11K (town); ~70K (visitor capacity)Asia/Tokyo

πŸ’° Budget

budget
El Nido: $40-65Hakone: $80-120
mid-range
El Nido: $90-180Hakone: $180-280
luxury
El Nido: $400+Hakone: $400+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

El Nido70/100Safety Scoreβœ“92/100Hakone

El Nido

El Nido is a relatively safe destination by Southeast Asian standards for typical tourist activities. The biggest genuine risks are environmental rather than criminal: typhoons during the wet season, boat safety on the bay, and the physical hazards of snorkeling over sharp limestone in remote locations. Petty theft exists in the town center but is uncommon on the islands. The remote location means any serious medical emergency requires evacuation to Puerto Princesa or Manila, so travel insurance is not optional here β€” it is genuinely necessary.

Hakone

Hakone is among the safest travel destinations in the world. Japan's exceptionally low crime rates apply fully here β€” petty theft, scams, and harassment are vanishingly rare. The primary safety considerations are natural rather than human: volcanic gas at Owakudani can cause periodic closures, earthquakes are a background reality, and the mountain weather can change rapidly. Visitors with tattoos should be aware that most public baths prohibit them, though private in-room baths (kashikiri) are widely available.

⭐ Ratings

El Nido5/5βœ“English Friendly3/5Hakone
El Nido2/5Walkabilityβœ“4/5Hakone
El Nido1/5Public Transitβœ“5/5Hakone
El Nido3/5Food Sceneβœ“4/5Hakone
El Nido3/5βœ“Nightlife1/5Hakone
El Nido1/5Cultural Sitesβœ“4/5Hakone
El Nido5/5Nature Access5/5Hakone
El Nido2/5WiFi Reliabilityβœ“5/5Hakone

🌀️ Weather

El Nido

El Nido has a tropical climate with two distinct seasons rather than four: a dry season from November to May and a wet season from June to October. The Philippines' Pacific typhoon belt makes July through October genuinely hazardous β€” not just uncomfortable. Water temperature stays warm year-round at 26-29Β°C, and diving is possible in any month for those who plan around weather windows. The dry season is overwhelmingly the better time to visit, with the shoulder months of November and May offering excellent conditions with lower crowds.

Cool Dry Season (November - February)25-30Β°C
Hot Dry Season (March - May)28-33Β°C
Wet Season (June - August)26-31Β°C
Typhoon Season (July - October)26-31Β°C

Hakone

Hakone has a mountain temperate climate, noticeably cooler and wetter than Tokyo year-round due to its elevation (500-700 m in most resort areas). Summers are pleasantly mild compared to the city's oppressive heat. Winters bring occasional snow and the clearest Mount Fuji views. Autumn foliage (koyo) in November is spectacular. Rainfall is relatively high due to orographic lift from Pacific weather systems β€” a clear day for Fuji views is genuinely special and not guaranteed.

Spring (March - May)5-20Β°C
Summer (June - August)18-28Β°C
Autumn (September - November)8-22Β°C
Winter (December - February)0-8Β°C

πŸš‡ Getting Around

El Nido

El Nido town is small enough to walk end-to-end in 15 minutes, but the surrounding area β€” from Nacpan Beach in the north to Las Cabanas and Corong-Corong in the south β€” requires transport. There are no taxis in the conventional sense and no Grab (Southeast Asia's Uber) coverage. Tricycles and motorbike rentals cover local needs; bangka boats are the only way to reach any island. The town's single main road is paved; roads north to Nacpan are rough in sections.

Walkability: The town center is walkable and compact. The main beach strip, restaurants, tour booking offices, and accommodation are concentrated within a 10-minute walk. The walk south to Marimegmeg/Las Cabanas (30 min on a coastal path) is scenic but rough in sections. Beyond town, all distances require transport β€” Nacpan is 15 km of rough road and impractical to walk.

Tricycles (Motorbike + Sidecar) β€” PHP 50-100 (~$0.90-1.80) within town; PHP 150-200 to Las Cabanas or Corong-Corong
Motorbike Rental β€” PHP 350-500 (~$6.50-9) per day including petrol for short trips
Shared Vans to Nacpan & Corong-Corong β€” PHP 150-300 (~$2.75-5.50) per person one way depending on destination

Hakone

The Hakone Free Pass is the essential tool for getting around. A 2-day pass (Β₯6,100 from Shinjuku including Odakyu round-trip) or 3-day pass (Β₯6,500) covers virtually all transport within Hakone: the Tozan railway, Tozan cable car, Hakone Ropeway gondola, sightseeing ships on Lake Ashi, and Tozan bus routes. Most visitors plan their itinerary around the classic loop: Hakone-Yumoto β†’ Gora by Tozan train β†’ Sounzan by cable car β†’ Togendai by ropeway β†’ Moto-Hakone by pirate ship β†’ back by bus.

Walkability: Within individual resort towns like Hakone-Yumoto, Gora, and Moto-Hakone, walking is easy and pleasant. The distances between the main attractions of the circuit require the pass-covered transport. The old Tokaido road between Moto-Hakone and Hakone-machi is a beautiful 8 km forest walk along the original Edo-period highway.

Hakone Tozan Switchback Railway β€” Β₯420 (Yumoto–Gora) β€” covered by Hakone Free Pass
Hakone Ropeway β€” Β₯1,500 one-way β€” covered by Hakone Free Pass
Hakone Tozan Cable Car β€” Β₯430 β€” covered by Hakone Free Pass

The Verdict

Choose El Nido if...

you want Palawan's limestone-karst Bacuit Bay β€” Tours A-D island-hopping to lagoons, hidden beaches, and coral reefs

Choose Hakone if...

you want Tokyo's onsen escape β€” ryokan + kaiseki nights, Mt. Fuji views from Lake Ashi, Owakudani black eggs, and the Hakone Free Pass loop