Manila takes a day to click. Fourteen million people, jeepneys threading through gridlock, the smell of street food cutting through the heat. It's loud, colourful, and genuinely cheap. Air India flies there from Amsterdam with one stop from €441 return. That's less than most Europeans spend flying within Europe in summer.
✈️ The deal
- From: Amsterdam, Netherlands
- To: Manila, Philippines
- Airline: Air India
- Stops: 1 stop
- Price: €441–€499 return
- When: August–October 2026
Example dates:
25/08/2026 – 22/09/2026
29/08/2026 – 20/09/2026
02/09/2026 – 16/09/2026
09/09/2026 – 23/09/2026
16/09/2026 – 30/09/2026
23/09/2026 – 07/10/2026
07/10/2026 – 21/10/2026
14/10/2026 – 28/10/2026
💰 How far does your money go?
A San Miguel beer at a local bar costs around €1.20. A full plate of sinigang or adobo at a neighbourhood restaurant runs about €3. Street food — skewers, rice dishes, everything in between — starts at €1. The price of a single round at a bar in Amsterdam covers a full evening of eating and drinking here.
☀️ The weather
August to October is Manila's wet season. Temperatures sit between 27°C and 32°C, with daily rain showers that are typically heavy but brief. Mornings are often dry and bright. Pack light clothes and a compact umbrella, and build in some flexibility for getting around when it pours.
🏨 Where to stay
Manila's most practical bases are Makati and Bonifacio Global City (BGC), both well-connected and packed with restaurants and transport options.
Red Planet Makati Avenue — 8.1/10 · From €18/night
No-frills and well-located, a few blocks from Makati's main commercial strips. Good for those who plan to spend most of their time out.
Dusit Thani Manila — 9.0/10 · From €100/night
A long-standing favourite in the heart of Makati. Large pool, reliably strong service, and one of the better breakfast setups in the city.
Raffles Makati — 9.3/10 · From €280/night
All-suite hotel in Ayala Center with butler service, a rooftop pool, and the kind of calm that's hard to find in Manila. The closest the city gets to proper luxury.
🎯 What to do
Manila rewards people who go looking.
Intramuros — The 16th-century walled city built by the Spanish, with cobbled streets, horse-drawn carriages, and Fort Santiago at its centre. One of the most historically layered places in Southeast Asia.
Binondo — The world's oldest Chinatown, a ten-minute drive from Intramuros. Dense with dim sum stalls, herb shops, and some of the best street food in the city.
Ayala Museum — A compact but excellent collection of pre-colonial Philippine gold artifacts and dioramas tracing Filipino history, in the heart of Makati.
BGC food scene — Bonifacio Global City has become Manila's most polished eating and drinking district. From hole-in-the-wall Filipino spots to modern tasting menus, it's the best single area to spend an evening.
🗺️ Where to go from here
Manila is the main gateway into the Philippines. The islands are what most people come for.
Boracay — 1-hour flight. The most famous beach in the Philippines: 4km of white sand, warm flat water, and enough beach bars to fill a week.
Palawan / El Nido — 1.5-hour flight. Dramatic limestone cliffs, lagoons, and snorkelling among some of the clearest water in Southeast Asia. Consistently rated one of the world's best island destinations.
Cebu — 1 hour 15 minutes. Base for canyoneering at Kawasan Falls, whale shark encounters in Oslob, and a more relaxed pace than Manila.
Bohol — 1 hour 30 minutes. Home to the Chocolate Hills and some of the best diving in the country at Balicasag Island.
Siargao — 2-hour flight. The Philippines' surf capital. Cloud 9 is the break everyone knows, but the island has quieter corners and a genuinely laid-back culture.
€441 return gets you to one of the most rewarding destinations in Southeast Asia. A country of 7,000 islands, starting from one city. Check availability before the cheap fares go.

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