Our Honest Experience with Balabac Island Tours – Kamp Malaya (4D3N Joiners Package)




We’ve booked Balabac Island Tours – Kamp Malaya twice now — two separate trips, two separate seasons — and both times the experience was consistent, organized, and smoother than trying to DIY Balabac.

As of 2026, their 4 Days & 3 Nights Joiners Package is priced at:

₱13,799 per head

This is their current joiners rate (shared setup), and for what’s included — especially considering how remote Balabac is — it’s actually competitive.

Let me walk you through what this package really feels like beyond the brochure description.

17

Why We Chose Them — Twice

Balabac is not the kind of place where you want to “figure it out when you get there.”

There are:

  • No commercial terminals
  • No public tourist ferries
  • Limited signal
  • Privately owned islands that require permits
  • Weather-dependent sea crossings

The first time we went, we didn’t want to gamble on logistics. The second time, we went back because the first trip ran smoothly.

That consistency matters in a place like Balabac.

They handled:

  • The 3 AM pickup
  • The 6-hour van ride coordination
  • Port registration
  • Boat scheduling
  • Island permits
  • Food logistics
  • Basecamp setup

And in Balabac, that’s 80% of the battle.

The ₱13,799 (2026) 4D3N Joiners Package — What It Actually Covers

At ₱13,799 per head, you’re essentially paying for a fully coordinated expedition across land and sea.

For the price it might sound like it is, but keep in mid that it’s not luxury travel.
It’s organized remote travel.

Let’s break it down properly.

Roundtrip Shared AC Van Transfers

(Puerto Princesa City – Buliluyan Port – Puerto Princesa City)

This part alone saves you serious stress.

Pickup is around 2:30–3:00 AM from your hotel in Puerto Princesa. Yes, it’s painfully early — but that’s necessary to make the sea crossing safely before afternoon winds.

The van ride:

  • 5–6 hours south
  • Mostly paved roads
  • One major stop for breakfast and restroom
  • Shared with other joiners

On both of our trips, pickups were punctual. Drivers knew the route well. No unnecessary stops. No drama.

After four days in Balabac, you’ll take the same route back north — arriving around 2:00–3:00 PM in Puerto Princesa.

And after camping for days, that air-conditioned van feels like a reward.

Roundtrip Shared Boat Transfers

(Buliluyan Port – Balabac – Buliluyan Port)

This includes:

  • Passenger boat from port to first island
  • Tourist boat used for island hopping
  • Return sea transfer on Day 4

These are traditional bangkas. They are stable but basic.

There are no speedboats slicing through waves. Travel time depends on sea conditions.

What we appreciated:

  • The crew was experienced
  • Life vests were provided
  • They adjusted departure times based on weather

Balabac seas can be unpredictable. You want boatmen who’ve done this hundreds of times.

Full Board Meals (Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner)

Once you reach basecamp, food is taken care of.

Meals are simple, hearty Filipino-style dishes. Expect:

  • Fresh grilled fish
  • Shrimp or squid when available
  • Pork or chicken dishes
  • Vegetables
  • Rice every meal
  • Fresh fruit occasionally

After hours of swimming and island hopping, the food hits differently.

It’s not plated for Instagram.
It’s cooked to fill hungry travelers.

Important note:
If you have allergies (seafood, pork, crabs, shrimp), tell them early. They do adjust — but only if informed beforehand.

Accommodation: Sicsican Island Basecamp

This is where expectations matter. Your accommodation is on Sicsican Island, inside camping tents with complete bedding.

And when they say complete bedding, they mean:

  • Proper mattress
  • Pillow
  • Blanket
  • Tent with zip enclosure

It’s camping — but organized.

There are shared bathrooms. Water is limited but usable. Electricity is usually generator-powered at night for charging.

On our second trip, we were more mentally prepared — and honestly enjoyed it more.

At night, you hear waves. Sometimes wind. Sometimes nothing at all.

No traffic.
No notifications.
No city noise.

It’s raw — but that’s part of why Balabac still feels untouched.

Onok Island Day Tour (Highlight of the Trip)

Yes, Onok Island is included. And this matters.

Onok is privately owned and strictly regulated. You can’t just show up.

This island is famous for:

  • Long powder-white sandbars
  • Shallow turquoise lagoons
  • Giant clams
  • Turtle sightings

The first time we stepped onto Onok, it genuinely didn’t look real.

The water gradients are insane — pale aqua fading into deep blue.

If you want, you can stay overnight on Onok for an additional fee. Some travelers say that waking up there before day-trippers arrive is worth every extra peso.

Environmental Fee + All Entrance Fees

Balabac isn’t one open beach. Each island may require:

  • Environmental fees
  • Private land access permission
  • Marine sanctuary fees

These are already included.

That’s a major advantage of booking with a licensed operator.

Local Tour Guide + Life Vest

Guides coordinate:

  • Tide schedules
  • Safe snorkeling zones
  • Weather adjustments
  • Time management

On both trips, the guides were hands-on and familiar with the islands.

Life vests are provided for transfers and snorkeling stops.

The 4-Day Itinerary (With Real Context)

🌴 Day 1 – The Long Travel Day

2:30–3:00 AM pickup.
5–6 hour van ride.
Boat to Bancalaan Island (meetup with guide).

Island hopping begins the same day.

Stops include:

  • Tangkahan Island
  • Patawan Island
  • Arrival at Sicsican basecamp

By 5:00 PM, you’re setting up camp.

You’re exhausted — but already surrounded by ridiculous water clarity.

Dinner feels earned.

Day 2 – Onok & Starfish Sandbar

Breakfast at camp.

Then:

  • Starfish Sandbar
  • Onok Island
  • Nasubata Reef (snorkeling)

This is usually the most photogenic day.

Onok delivers.
The sandbars stretch endlessly.
Snorkeling is vibrant when visibility is good.

Back to camp by 5 PM.
Dinner.
Stories.
Early sleep.

Day 3 – Southern Balabac Highlights

Stops include:

  • Mansalangan Sandbar
  • Punta Sebaring
  • Rufos Coral Garden

By this point, you’re in rhythm.

Wake.
Boat.
Swim.
Eat.
Repeat.

Balabac has a way of slowing you down whether you like it or not.

Day 4 – Return to Mainland

6:00 AM departure to Buliluyan Port. Van ride back north.

Arrival in Puerto Princesa mid-afternoon.

You’ll be tired — but now you’re mentally reset.

Important Reminders (Don’t Skip This)

  • Arrive in Puerto Princesa one day before your tour.
  • Book your return flight a day after the tour ends.
  • Day 1 breakfast is not included.
  • Day 4 lunch and dinner are not included.
  • No ATM machines in Balabac.
  • ₱1,000 deposit is non-refundable if you cancel.

Weather always has the final say.

If the LGU cancels before departure, refunds or reschedules apply for unused services.
If the tour is cut short after starting, no refund.

That’s the reality of remote island operations.

Is the Experience Worth ₱13,799?

KAMP MALAYA REVIEW

After booking them twice, here’s our honest take: If you value convenience in a place this remote — yes. Plus according to the other tourists we’ve talked to, the package price was almost the cheapest (since booking with Kamp Malaya means you’re booking direct to Sicsican Island’s owner).

Could you possibly DIY Balabac cheaper? Nope! When you’re travelling by the seas without a big boat, it’s better to know that you’re in good hands than take any risk from unauthorized operators.

Balabac is already a long journey. You don’t need logistical chaos on top of that.

With Kamp Malaya, what you see is what you get:
Structured.
Organized.
Remote.
Raw.

And when you’re standing on a sandbar in the middle of nowhere, the 3 AM wake-up call on the first day suddenly feels very small.