How much does this breakfast cost in the Philippines?

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Published 2023-01-21
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All Comments (21)
  • @Jeanelleats
    Have you ever had a silog dish before? It stands for: "si"-sinangag (garlic fried rice) "log" - itlog (egg) Add your choice of meat in the front (longganisa), and you get "longsilog"
  • I feel like a lot of people forget that the prices are relative to the income level of the country. It’s fun for those of us who make a higher currency of income to go to places where everything is very cheap to us but at the same time it can be nearly impossible for people from those locations to travel to other places where the prices are relative to local incomes of that area
  • @eiami3450
    Unfortunately, if you're an average worker in the Philippines, those meals are expensive 😓 Some areas and/or jobs have a minimum wage of about Php. 500 per day (this is what I can remember) and some areas and/or jobs pay an even lower minimum than that
  • For foreigners it's cheap, but if you're from the Philippines, then it's considered as "expensive" for a meal.
  • @grumpycarl529
    The mango shake cost 145php?! The lugaw(Congee) 148php?! Those are some expensive food. If you eat at a karinderia you'll get 2 dishes 1 rice and a drink (soda/juice) for 150php. That is really expensive😭
  • @nyxcole
    nah. i think if you live here in the Philippines you will definitely prefer home cooked food than eating out. especially if you start paying with peso and not dollars. And that mango shake is absolutely overpriced.
  • Not really, especially if you're working here in the Philippines. And btw onions here has OUTRAGEOUS prices rn. 😭😭😭
  • @pampeii_
    Let's all please remember that this is from the context of someone living abroad experiencing food from a developing country. As a local, this mango shake is up there on the mid upper tier of prices.
  • @touya0525
    my jaw dropped when i saw the prices for the foods you guys bought because that’s very expensive, especially the mango shake 😟 i remember paying only 50-60 pesos for a tocilog back then ,,
  • @a.a.6789
    If you got money in the local currency you would cook bestie.
  • Those prices are proportional to the wages of the people living in the country! You should work THERE to FEEL the price.
  • @nerilabayog
    If you earn in PH Peso, you'd think differently. But anyway, I hope you enjoy your stay here in the PH!
  • @cplova333
    i like how all the filipinos are saying that your meal is actually very expensive
  • @BOREDOM6969
    As a Filipino, I am horrified with the price per serving here, but hopefully the food tastes good 😭
  • @ctran1955
    I don’t even live in the Philippines and can tell that’s overpriced. It makes me nervous being a tourist in these places bc I don’t want to contribute to increasing prices that are unfair to the residents who live there.
  • Well just because it’s not a lot in US dollars doesn’t mean it isn’t a lot in Philippine money it’s just because the dollar is worth a lot in the Philippines
  • As a Filipino in the Philippines, those are very expensive for most of us. ₱100+ foods are literally a luxury to most of us who can't afford it. I mean look at the prices of onions right now in the the Philippines, it's really bad in here right now.
  • The prices are lower because the people there get much lower salaries. Most of the people who live there can't afford to go out much. It's the same as in every other country.
  • We need to remember that inflation and currency differences exist.... If converted to dollars sure it's going to be cheap especially if you compare it to how much it can cost in the US. But lets remember that dollars has a bigger currency than peso so for a lot of people that lives in America ofcourse the prices would be "cheap*
  • @inquisitor596
    Unless you’re making Western money while living in the Philippines, you will be eating rice and tomato most days 😂