Mabini is a municipality in Batangas lying on a peninsula overlooking Batangas and Balayan Bays, and considered the birthplace of Philippine's scuba diving industry. Its beach resorts are not far from Manila. Though largely a destination for middle-class locals, it also gets quite a few foreigner visitors, especially divers.
The town of Mabini itself is not on the sea; the main tourist and diving destination is Anilao, part of the municipality but outside the town. This guide includes both.
Fishing was once the major source of income for the region, but tourism is now the main source of municipal revenue. The local government, however, has tried to keep tourism sustainable, so no hotel or restaurant chains are found in the area.
Understand
[edit]Mabini sits on the Calumpan Peninsula, overlooking Balayan and Batangas Bays, and the Maricaban Strait. Mabini derives its name from Apolinario Mabini, a Filipino revolutionary, better known as the "Brain of the Revolution" (Utak ng Himagsikan) and the "Sublime Paralytic" (Dakilang Lumpo). The municipality was formed in 1918; before that it was administered as part of the nearby town Bauan.
Mabini's main destination, Anilao, is the Philippines's birthplace of scuba diving. The proximity of Mabini to Manila proved to be advantageous to the growth of tourism in the area, making it the nearest equivalent to beach and diving spots like Boracay or Puerto Galera (the latter is also near the metro, but you must board fast craft or RoRo ferries from Batangas City). The completion of the STAR Tollway further increased its accessibility, though at the cost of causing traffic jams in already-congested Batangas City and its surrounding metropolis. The peak season is during the after-school vacation between March and May, so, expect resorts to become packed and fully booked.
The diving scene is alive in the Anilao area, but there are many beach resorts and diving spots all around the coast, except to the south of Mount Gulugod Baboy. Municipal services and businesses are concentrated in the east, in the Poblacion and Mainaga area.
Across the Maricaban Strait is Tingloy, a small island town has a handful of some off-the-beaten-track sights. While a separate municipality administratively, Tingloy is treated as part of Mabini in general.
Tourism information
[edit]Tourism information can be found at the small park in the Mabini Crossing triangle, an intersection of Bauan–Mabini Road and Mabini Circumferential Road in barangay Poblacion.
Get in
[edit]By car
[edit]Mabini is two and a half hours away from Manila and about one hour from Batangas City. Travel times can be affected by traffic jams and peak season traffic, so get prepared.
Most visitors from Manila will take the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (STAR) to Batangas City. A bypass road traversing the northern barangays of Batangas City, San Pascual, and Bauan opened 2022, superseding the older and heavily highway (Rte 436) through San Pascual and Bauan.
Alternatively, you can travel down STAR, exit at Lipa, follow Jose P. Laurel Hwy (Rte 4) to the junction in barangay Banaybanay, take Rte 433 through Cuenca and Alitagtag, and then follow Rte 436 from Santa Teresita to Bauan. It can reduce time wasted on traffic, and cut the expense on tolls (₱47 on Lipa, from Santo Tomas toll plaza, as against ₱95 on Batangas City, given a distance-based toll of ₱2.27), but congestion do exist at Lipa, especially on weekdays. Another alternate route is via San Jose and Bauan, but it carries you through narrow roads in inland barangays.
By bus or jeepney
[edit]There are no buses to Mabini; instead, the Batangas-Mabini (BW-05) jeepney route connects most points in town, including the downtown, Anilao, Talaga, and Masasa, from the Grand Terminal where buses arrive. BW-05 also serves as the direct connection with downtown Batangas City; jeepneys depart from the row of hotels near Batangas State University.
From Western Batangas, take the hourly Batman Starexpress buses headed from Nasugbu, get off at Manghinao junction in Bauan, then take the BW-05 jeepney.
Get around
[edit]See
[edit]Do
[edit]Scuba diving
[edit]- See also: Diving in the Philippines
Hiking
[edit]There are hiking tours to Mount Gulugod Baboy, not too far from the seaside resorts. There is one major trail from barangay Bagalangit, which takes one hour to complete. Highlights are camping at the summit and views of Batangas Bay, Metro Batangas and surrounding areas, and Mount Maculot. Tourist information is available at the jump-off point at Bagalangit, and boat rentals for those snorkeling or diving is also available.
Buy
[edit]Eat
[edit]Drink
[edit]Sleep
[edit]- Anilao Outrigger Resort, Solo, Anilao, ☏ +63 2890-6778, fax: +63 2-729-6571. The resort provides complete diving equipment and houses a restaurant and bar. There are about 185 steps down to the resort from the parking lot. Porters will carry your luggage up and down, but you have to climb all of those stairs, which can be strenuous. From ₱2,800.
- 1 Sea's Spring Resort, Mabini Circumferential Road, Mainit (10 kilometers from town proper). Air-conditioned rooms, with cable TV, hot water and views of the beachfront or the mountains. Cottages are also available. There are also an outdoor swimming pool with slides, and natural hot spring baths. From ₱3619.
- 2 Mayumi Resort, Mabini Circumferential Road (12 kilometers from town proper). Small Filipino-themed beach resort. Scuba diving available on site.
Stay safe
[edit]Hospitals and clinics
[edit]- 1 Mabini General Hospital, F. Castillo Street, Poblacion (On the Mabini Crossing area, just beside BDO.). Offers 24-hour emergency service and pharmacy
Connect
[edit]Go next
[edit]Batangas City is the transport hub in the area; travellers will use the city as their jumping off point to the rest of Batangas, or to other beach and diving destinations like Boracay and Puerto Galera.
Another nearby option is Taal, a heritage town just one hour away via Route 436. You may continue further west on the coast, to other seaside resorts in Lemery, Balayan, Calatagan, Lian, and Nasugbu.