Most Bohol coverage clusters around Panglao and the Chocolate Hills. These pages cover the rest of the island — the towns, ridges, and coves that reward a slower itinerary.

Bohol's quiet east coast, where the limestone cliffs collapse into deep cave pools and white-sand coves you'll often have to yourself. Anda rewards the traveler who slows down — three nights minimum.

Home to the Cadapdapan Rice Terraces and Can-umantad Falls — the tallest waterfall in Bohol. Candijay is the antidote to the tour-bus Chocolate Hills circuit.

Alicia Panoramic Park is a chain of grass-covered ridges with 360° views of the eastern Bohol countryside — best caught at sunrise or sunset. Far less crowded than Carmen.

A 1.5-km island off Baclayon with no cars, no resorts, and the country's most ethically-run dolphin and whale-watching trips, led by former hunters who became conservation guides.

A heritage town of moss-covered coral-stone churches, hidden waterfalls upriver, and one of Bohol's last working calamansi-belt municipalities. Pairs naturally with a Loboc afternoon.

A tidal river that drains four municipalities into the Bohol Sea — and lights up after dark with one of the country's densest firefly populations. Community-run paddle tours leave from Cortes after sunset and move in near silence through mangrove tunnels.