April is Palawan's most domestically Filipino month. Semana Santa (Holy Week) transforms the island as Filipino families take the country's most important holiday break — El Nido and Puerto Princesa fill with local visitors from Manila and other cities, creating a different, more communal atmosphere than the international peak season. After Holy Week, the dry season lingers a few more weeks before the southwest monsoon arrives in May. Warmest sea temperatures of the year at 28–29°C make the water especially inviting when conditions are calm.
24–32°C (75–90°F)
Air temp
28°C (82°F)
Sea temp
Low–Moderate
Rainfall
High
Crowds
why go
what's on
Semana Santa — Holy Week
Week before Easter (March or April, date varies)Filipino Holy Week is deeply observed — Good Friday is quiet and introspective, Easter Sunday is joyful. In Puerto Princesa and El Nido, local churches hold processions and dawn masses. The week sees the largest influx of domestic Filipino tourists of the year.
travel tips
Holy Week in El Nido requires booking accommodation 3–4 months ahead — every guesthouse and resort fills completely. Prices rise 30–50% for the Holy Week window.
Good Friday sees some tour operators take the day off or reduce services. Check with your guesthouse the day before about tour availability.
If visiting after Holy Week ends, you'll find El Nido dramatically quieter — one of the year's best quiet-and-good-weather windows before May rains arrive.
common questions
Early to mid-April is still excellent dry season weather — warm water, good visibility, and generally calm seas. The complication is Holy Week: if your visit coincides with Semana Santa, plan for significantly more domestic Filipino visitors and higher prices. Post-Holy Week April is a brief window of near-perfect conditions and low crowds.
Early April is still reliably dry and sunny. By late April, the first signs of the southwest monsoon occasionally appear — brief afternoon showers, slight sea chop. The transition is gradual rather than sudden. El Nido's west-facing beaches are the first to feel increasing swell from the southwest.
Holy Week in El Nido combines religious observance with beach holiday atmosphere. Filipino families mix with international tourists. Island hopping continues, but Good Friday is quieter. Vendors sell traditional Filipino holiday food, and the local church holds processions through El Nido's main street. A genuine and authentic cultural experience.
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