
Why Anda Is the Bohol Beach Escape Smart Travelers Choose
Three hours from the airport, a different Bohol begins. Anda is what Panglao was twenty years ago — quieter sand, clearer water, and the sense that you arrived early.
Long-form articles on the towns, rivers and reefs of Bohol that don't make the standard tour. Written from the road — not from a desk in Manila.

Three hours from the airport, a different Bohol begins. Anda is what Panglao was twenty years ago — quieter sand, clearer water, and the sense that you arrived early.

Candijay sits between Anda's beaches and Bohol's interior, and almost no itinerary stops here. That is exactly why you should.

The dolphin-watching boats that leave from Panglao at sunrise often chase the pods. The boats that leave from Pamilacan don't have to.

The Chocolate Hills get the photographs. The Binabaje Hills of Alicia give you the view. The difference matters.

The Loboc night cruise has a buffet, a karaoke speaker, and a route. The Abatan firefly tour has a paddle boat, silence, and trees that pulse with light.

Tour vans give Baclayon twenty minutes — a photo of the church and back on the road. The town deserves an afternoon.

Danao is what happens when a town decides to build its tourism around its land — not bury its land under tourism.

Bohol's coastal highway is a 261-kilometer ring road. Drive it slowly and you collect four centuries of coral-stone churches, a dozen quiet beaches, and most of the island most tourists never see.

Long before tourism, Bohol's identity was musical. The plaza band, the church choir, the rondalla on a Sunday afternoon — it is still everywhere on the island if you know to listen.

After dark, the wharf at Manga in Tagbilaran City turns into Bohol's loudest, freshest seafood scene — and a short walk away, a row of small eateries will sugba, tuwa, and kilaw whatever you point at.

Forty-five minutes from Tagbilaran, a coral-stone church older than most countries sits on a plaza that almost nobody photographs. Dimiao is the south coast's quietest heritage stop.

Every experience we feature on Bohol Backroads is run by a Boholano family, cooperative, or community guide. Here is how we choose them and why we send you directly to them.
We're building this field guide from the road. If you have a tip, correction, suggestion, or question about Bohol, send it our way. We read every message.