Activity Guide · Updated March 2026

El Nido's Lagoons: The Crown Jewels Explained

TL;DR

El Nido's four main lagoons are the reason millions visit Palawan. Big Lagoon (Tour A) is the iconic kayaking paradise; Small Lagoon (Tour A) is an intimate enclosed pool you access by swimming through a cave; Secret Lagoon (Tour A) is a hidden beach behind a rock opening; Cadlao Lagoon (Tour D) is the uncrowded alternative. All are formed by limestone karst geology — the same process that created Halong Bay. Best times: Big Lagoon before 10:30am (light), Small Lagoon late morning (calmer water). Bring aqua shoes (mandatory), underwater camera, reef-safe sunscreen. Environmental fee ₱400.

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The Limestone Karst System

Before understanding the lagoons, understand the geography. El Nido sits on the Bacuit Archipelago, a collection of limestone islands formed millions of years ago when the area was underwater. As sea levels dropped, these limestone towers were exposed. Water (rainwater, seawater) dissolved the limestone over millennia, carving caves, tunnels, and enclosed pools.

The result: limestone karst — the same dramatic geography that defines Halong Bay (Vietnam), Krabi (Thailand), and Palau. When you look at El Nido's towering cliffs riddled with caves, you're looking at karst in action.

The lagoons are the jewels of this system. Some are partially enclosed (Big Lagoon), others fully enclosed (Small Lagoon), others hidden behind rock openings (Secret Lagoon). Each is formed by a natural pool within this karst landscape.

Big Lagoon (Miniloc Island) — The Iconic One

What It Is

A massive enclosed lagoon on Miniloc Island, roughly 300 meters across, ringed by 300–400 meter limestone cliffs. You access it by boat, entering through a narrow opening (like passing through a natural gateway). Once inside, you're in a lagoon — the water is impossibly clear and shallow (2–5 meters in most areas), turquoise, and protected from ocean swells. It feels otherworldly.

Why It's Special

Kayaking: Most boats include two complimentary kayaks. You paddle across the glassy lagoon, looking up at 300m limestone walls. No motorboats inside; just paddles and silence. It's one of Southeast Asia's best kayaking experiences. The rock formations are dramatic; many have names: the Cathedral (a tall spire), the Twins (two peaks), the Eye (a cave opening that looks like an eye).

Photography: Big Lagoon is the most photographed spot in El Nido. The limestone walls reflect in the water, creating mirror-like compositions. Early morning light (7–9am) is golden; midday (11am–2pm) is harsh and washed out. Arrive early or book sunrise/early tours.

Snorkeling: Snorkeling in Big Lagoon is good but not exceptional. The lagoon is shallow and surrounded by limestone walls, not a reef system. Fish are fewer than open-water snorkel sites. But the setting is breathtaking — you're snorkeling inside a cathedral of rock.

Best Time of Day

8:30–10:30am. Arrive when boats first enter; the light is diffuse and golden, water is calm, and you have the lagoon mostly to yourself before crowds arrive (by noon, 10–15 boats are inside). If you're booking, request the earliest departure time (8:30am sharp, not 9:00am).

Tips

Small Lagoon (Miniloc Island) — The Intimate One

What It Is

A second lagoon on Miniloc Island, smaller and more enclosed than Big Lagoon (roughly 100 meters across). Unlike Big Lagoon, which you enter by boat through a wide opening, Small Lagoon requires you to swim. You approach by boat, then everyone puts on snorkels and swims through a narrow cave opening (about 2 meters high, 5 meters wide, sometimes partially submerged) into the enclosed lagoon. Once inside, you're in a secret pool surrounded by limestone walls, with no boat — just swimmers.

Why It's Special

The experience: Swimming through the cave opening is thrilling. The water is so clear you can see 10 meters ahead. As you emerge inside the lagoon, the cave ceiling opens up and you're in an enclosed pool. It feels like discovering a secret room. The lagoon is pristine, shallow (2–4 meters), and the only sound is the water lapping against limestone.

Solitude: Because accessing Small Lagoon requires swimming and the space is small, fewer tourists visit compared to Big Lagoon. It's intimate.

Photography: Underwater photos are better here than Big Lagoon. The cave opening creates dramatic silhouettes, and the enclosed space means better light composition. Bring an underwater camera.

Best Time of Day

Late morning (10:30am–12:00pm). Morning tides are lower, making the cave opening lower and less water pressure. By late morning, tide is higher and water flow is calmer. Wait until your guide says water conditions are optimal.

What to Bring

Depth & Safety

The cave passage is shallow (1–2 meters), and once inside the lagoon, depth ranges from 2–4 meters. No deep diving; it's safe for swimmers of all levels. Current is minimal; water is calm.

Secret Lagoon (Miniloc Island) — The Hidden Beach

What It Is

A third pool on Miniloc Island (same island as Big and Small Lagoons), hidden behind a low rock opening. Unlike Small Lagoon (which you swim into), Secret Lagoon has a beach. You access it by wading through a narrow rock gap (at high tide, the water comes up to your chest or shoulders; at low tide, it's waist-deep) into a secluded beach cove.

Why It's Special

The wade: Pushing through the rock gap is an adventure. Your guide leads; the passage is stable, not dangerous, but it feels daring — you're squeezing through a narrow opening between limestone walls into a hidden beach beyond.

The beach: Once through, you're on a white sand beach that feels private and untouched. Few tourists reach here; most are content with Big and Small Lagoons. The beach is small (maybe 20 meters), surrounded by 50-meter cliffs, and calm water.

Snorkeling: Snorkeling off Secret Lagoon beach is basic (shallow, not much coral), but the setting is extraordinary — you're snorkeling in a hidden cove.

Best Time of Day

Mid-day to afternoon (12:00pm–3:00pm). High tide makes the rock passage easier to navigate (more water depth means you don't scrape). Low tide narrows the passage and makes it tighter.

Tips

Cadlao Lagoon (Tour D) — The Uncrowded Alternative

What It Is

Cadlao Island's lagoon — more open than Big Lagoon (not as enclosed), but equally beautiful and dramatically quieter. You'll see perhaps 1–2 other boats instead of 10–15 at Big Lagoon. The limestone walls are impressive, and kayaking is available, but the lagoon is less defined and more open to the ocean.

Why It's Special

Solitude: Cadlao Lagoon gets a fraction of Big Lagoon's traffic. If you value peace over "iconic," this is your lagoon.

Kayaking: Kayaking in Cadlao is similar to Big Lagoon — paddle among limestone walls, explore quiet coves, zero motorboats. The experience is less enclosed, more open, but equally serene.

Photography: Less touristy doesn't mean less beautiful. Cadlao has dramatic light and fewer crowds in photos, which some photographers prefer (more authentic, fewer people in backgrounds).

Best Time of Day

Early morning or late afternoon (7:30–9:00am or 2:30–4:00pm). Any time is quiet at Cadlao, but early morning light and late afternoon golden hour are magical.

Access

Cadlao Lagoon is only on Tour D. If you want to visit, you must book Tour D specifically.

Lagoon Comparison Table

LagoonTourMain DrawAccessCrowd LevelBest Time
Big LagoonTour AIconic, kayakingBoat directlyVery busy8:30–10:30am
Small LagoonTour AIntimate cave swimSwim through caveLight10:30am–12pm
Secret LagoonTour AHidden beachWade through gapLight12pm–3pm
Cadlao LagoonTour DQuiet, kayakingBoat directlyVery light7:30–9am or 2:30–4pm
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Lagoon Essentials: What to Bring

Aqua Shoes (Mandatory)

All lagoons require aqua shoes. The seabeds are sharp limestone and coral. Flip-flops and canvas shoes don't protect. Get water shoes with grip soles (₱250–500 at El Nido shops). Once you have them, keep them with you for all water activities.

Underwater Camera

Lagoons are photogenic. A GoPro, waterproof action camera, or even a smartphone in a waterproof case (₱200) will capture memories. Underwater camera footage of swimming through Small Lagoon's cave opening or paddling in Big Lagoon is professional-quality.

Reef-Safe Sunscreen

Palawan bans oxybenzone and octinoxate (chemicals that bleach coral). Use reef-safe SPF 30+ lotion. Bring from home (it's expensive in El Nido) or buy locally. Reapply every 2 hours.

Dry Bag

Keep valuables, extra clothes, and snacks in a dry bag. A lightweight roll-top bag costs ₱300–600 locally. Protects your camera, phone, passport copies, and money.

Snorkel Gear (Your Own vs. Rental)

Rental: Tours include rental gear (mask, snorkel, fins). It works but fits poorly for many people.

Your own: If you own snorkel gear, bring it. Personal mask fit means better visibility and comfort. A basic snorkel set costs ₱500–1,000 in El Nido.

Geology & Photography Tips

Understanding the Light

Limestone reflects light. In Big Lagoon, direct sun creates harsh shadows and glare by noon. Early morning (8:30–9:30am) offers diffuse, golden light — ideal for photography. Late afternoon (3:00–4:30pm) is golden hour, good for sunset colors but water is rougher. Midday (11am–2pm) is harsh but gives the water brilliant turquoise color. Choose your lagoon visit based on lighting goals.

Kayaking as Photography

Kayaking in Big or Cadlao Lagoon is better than snorkeling for unique angles. From a kayak, you're at water level looking up at 300-meter cliffs; you capture scale and drama that water-level snorkelers miss. Bring a GoPro mounted on your kayak.

Cave Entrance Photos

Small Lagoon's cave opening and Secret Lagoon's rock gap are photogenic framed shots. Silhouettes of swimmers emerging into light are stunning. Bring an underwater camera and experiment with backlighting (sun behind the cave opening).

Golden Hour Magic

Limestone glows at sunrise and sunset. If you can swing an early morning boat or late afternoon tour, the light will be exceptional. Cadlao Lagoon at dawn is magical — you'll have it mostly to yourself and light is golden.

Experience El Nido's Lagoons

Book a lagoon tour through Tour A (Big, Small, Secret) or Tour D (Cadlao). All include boat, guide, snorkel gear, lunch.

Book Your Lagoon Tour →

This guide contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend services we've used or thoroughly vetted. This keeps our guides free and independent.

Frequently Asked

Can I visit lagoons without taking a tour?

No. The lagoons are protected marine reserves. You can only access them via authorized tour boats. This protection keeps them pristine.

Is it safe to swim through Small Lagoon's cave?

Yes. The cave passage is short (5–10m), shallow (1–2m), and well-traveled by thousands annually. Your guide monitors safety. If you're uncomfortable, tell your guide — they'll support you or offer to skip it.

What happens if I lose my aqua shoes in the lagoon?

Bring a secure strap or clip. If shoes fall off in water, they're typically recoverable (water is clear, you can see them). Wear shoes with straps, not loose water sandals.

Are the lagoons cold?

No. Water temperature is 26–28°C (79–82°F) year-round. Tropical and comfortable. You might want a rash guard (UV shirt) to prevent sun burn, not for warmth.

Do I need to be a strong swimmer?

No. Lagoons are shallow and calm. All have life jackets available. You don't need to be a strong swimmer; confidence in water and comfort with snorkeling is enough.

Can I kayak in all the lagoons?

Kayaking is emphasized in Tour A (Big Lagoon) and Tour D (Cadlao). Small Lagoon's kayaking is possible but less focused (most visit by swimming). Secret Lagoon doesn't offer kayaking (it's accessed by wading).

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