El Nido
Philippines
Pai
Thailand
El Nido
Pai
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
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.
Pai
Pai is a small, low-crime town where violent incidents against tourists are very rare. The main safety concerns are environmental and self-imposed: burning season air quality is a genuine health hazard, motorbike accidents on mountain roads kill and seriously injure tourists every year, and the winding approach road demands real riding skill. Treat the "Pai tattoo" (road rash from motorbike falls) as a warning β if you see half the backpackers in town bandaged, that tells you something.
β Ratings
π€οΈ 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.
Pai
Pai sits at around 800 meters elevation in a mountain valley, giving it a noticeably cooler and more pleasant climate than Chiang Mai year-round. Mornings can be genuinely chilly in the cool season and humidity is lower than the Thai lowlands. There are three distinct seasons β and one period, February through April, that should be avoided entirely due to catastrophic air quality from agricultural burning.
π 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.
Pai
Pai's town center is small enough to walk in 15 minutes end to end, but the best attractions β hot springs, canyon, waterfalls, viewpoints, bamboo bridges, and cave β are spread across a 15-30 km radius and require independent transport. A motorbike is essentially mandatory for a full Pai experience. There is no Grab, no metered taxi service, and songthaews are rare. If you can't or won't ride a motorbike, negotiate with a driver for full-day songthaew hire.
Walkability: Pai's town center β the Walking Street, river area, and surrounding blocks of guesthouses and cafes β is entirely walkable. However, every major attraction except the town itself requires a motorbike or hired vehicle. The town is not designed for car traffic and has no public transport network.
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 Pai if...
you want a Northern Thai backpacker mountain town β dawn balloons, hot springs, and rice paddies (avoid the Feb-April burning season)