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Iloilo City, officially the City of Iloilo (; ; ), is a highly urbanized city in the
Western Visayas Western Visayas (; ; ) is an Regions of the Philippines, administrative region in the Philippines, numerically designated as Region VI. The region comprises the islands of Panay and Guimaras Island, Guimaras. It consists of five Provinces of the ...
region In geography, regions, otherwise referred to as areas, zones, lands or territories, are portions of the Earth's surface that are broadly divided by physical characteristics (physical geography), human impact characteristics (human geography), and ...
of the Philippines, located on the southeastern coast of the island of Panay. According to the 2020 census, Iloilo City has a population of 457,626 people, making it the most populous city in Western Visayas. For the Metro Iloilo–Guimaras, metropolitan area, the total population is 1,007,945 people. The city is a Merger (politics), conglomeration of former towns, now organized into Districts of Iloilo City, seven geographical or administrative districts: City Proper, Iloilo City, the City Proper, Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, Molo, Iloilo City, Molo, Mandurriao, La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz, Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo, and Lapuz, Iloilo City, Lapuz.City to recognize Lapuz as separate district from La Paz
. Thenewstoday.info (December 22, 2008). Retrieved on November 7, 2011.
It is the largest city and capital of Iloilo, where the city is geographically situated and grouped under the Philippine Statistics Authority, but remains politically independent in terms of government and administration. In addition, it is the center of the Iloilo–Guimaras metropolitan area, as well as the regional center of the Western Visayas region. The city serves as the regional hub for trade, commerce, industry, education, religion, healthcare, tourism, culture, and culinary arts. In 1566, the Spanish settled in Iloilo, establishing it as the second Spanish colonial center in the Philippines after Cebu City, Cebu. The city was bestowed with the honorific title '''La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad (Most Loyal and Noble City) by List of Spanish regents, Queen Regent Maria Christina of Austria, Maria Cristina of Spain in recognition of its loyalty to the Spanish crown during the Philippine Revolution.'''' Iloilo City served as the last capital of the captaincy general of the Spanish East Indies before the Philippines was ceded to the United States in 1898 through the Treaty of Paris (1898), Treaty of Paris.The end of the Spanish Empire in Iloilo
. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
The city was also the capital of the short-lived Federal State of the Visayas, a revolutionary state in the central Philippines that aimed to promote Federalism in the Philippines, federalism in the country. At the turn of the 20th century, Iloilo City was second only to Manila in economic importance in the Philippines, with its Port of Iloilo, port open to international trade. Iloilo City is among the fastest-developing cities in the Philippines, experiencing significant annual growth since the redevelopment of the Mandurriao Airport, old airport in Mandurriao. The Information technology, IT-BPO Industry, BPM industry in the city continues to thrive and remains in high demand. It has been recognized as a top location for outsourcing expansion outside Metro Manila and is the third-largest hub for the industry in the country.


Etymology

The name "Iloilo" is derived from the older name "Irong-irong" (Philippine Spanish: ''Ilong̃-ílong̃'') meaning "nose-like", referring to the promontory between two rivers (Iloilo River, Iloilo and Batiano River, Batiano) where the Fort San Pedro (Iloilo), Fort San Pedro and the 17th-century Spanish port were located.


History


Early history

The earliest written reference to Iloilo appears in Yuan dynasty, Yuan Dynasty records from the 1300s, identifying Oton—west of Iloilo City—as in Philippine Hokkien, Hokkien zh, t=, poj=A-tân, l=, c=啞陳, s=, p=, a bustling trade outpost in the Visayas. Although, little is known historically about the region prior to the arrival of the Spanish, Jesuit missionary Francisco Ignacio Alcina, in his 1668 work ''Historia natural del sitio, fertilidad y calidad de las Islas e Indios de Bisayas'', identifies the Hiligaynon people originated from Leyte, aligning with Bisayan languages, linguistic subgrouping of the Hiligaynon language. However, local legends, notably the epic ''Maragtas'' by Pedro Monteclaro (published 1907), offer a different origin story. It describes how ten datus, led by Datu Puti, fled Borneo to escape the tyrant Sultan Makatunaw, arriving in Panay and purchasing its lowlands from the Ati people, Ati king Marikudo with a golden ''salakot'' and a necklace for his queen, Maniwan-tiwan. The transaction, followed by a pact of friendship, is said to have inspired the Dinagyang, Dinagyang Festival. Though once widely accepted and included in school textbooks, ''Maragtas'' (along with the ''Code of Kalantiaw'') is now considered a 20th-century hoax, a view solidified by historian William Henry Scott (historian), William Henry Scott’s 1968 critique, upheld by experts like Gregorio Zaide and Teodoro Agoncillo. A 2019 thesis by Talaguit cites an earlier version of the story by Augustinian Friar Rev. Fr. Tomas Santaren (1902), based on manuscripts he obtained in Iloilo after 1858. Though Santaren’s account supports Monteclaro’s, the manuscripts, written in romanized Hiligaynon during the colonial era, likely reflect oral folklore rather than pre-colonial history. Thus, while ''Maragtas'' may reflect elements of local folk history, it is unlikely to be a pre-colonial document and is not regarded as authentic history but rather a blend of tradition and invention.


Spanish period

Under Philip II of Spain, Philip II in 1565, Miguel López de Legazpi, tasked with expanding Spanish dominion in the Philippines, sent his grandson Felipe de Salcedo, alongside Augustinian missionaries such as Martín de Rada, to explore the Visayas for resources. Landing on Panay, they established a temporary settlement in Dumangas, Araut, to secure food supplies amid scarcity in Cebu. By 1566, a more permanent foothold emerged between Ogtong (Oton) and La Villa Rica de Arevalo, formalized when Oton was established as a colonial outpost in 1572 under Legazpi’s command. This made Oton the second official Spanish settlement in the archipelago after Cebu. The city was founded by 80 pure Spaniards from Europe. In 1586, it welcomed another 20 European Spanish Households and the garrison was reinforced by 30 Spanish and Mexican soldiers. This was reinforced by a consecutive number of 66, 50, 169, and then another 169 Mexican settlement in the Philippines, Mexican soldiers from Latin America during the years 1603, 1636, 1670, and 1672. Later in the 1700s, Iloilo was home to 166 Spanish Filipino families and 29,723 native families.ESTADISMO DE LAS ISLAS FILIPINAS TOMO SEGUNDO By Joaquín Martínez de Zúñiga (Original Spanish)
/ref> The people of Panay, unlike the neutral Cebuano people, Cebuanos or the partially Islamized Tagalog people, Tagalogs of Manila who resisted Spanish rule, embraced the Iberians as allies. At the time, Panay was embroiled in a struggle against Muslim forces from the Bruneian Empire, Sultanate of Brunei and its vassals, the Sultanate of Sulu and the Kingdom of Maynila, which Spanish Governor-General Francisco de Sande described as kin to the local populace. The alliance proved pivotal, as Panay natives supplied a significant portion of the mercenary forces used to subdue Manila’s rulers, who were tied to Brunei. The rapid adoption of Christianity among the Hiligaynon people, Panaynons facilitated their integration into the Spanish colonial framework. Before Spanish contact, Visayan groups, including those from Panay, were notorious for their piracy and slave-raiding expeditions, known locally as ''panggubat''. The raids, often launched after harvests or during specific months like February to April, targeted coastal and inland settlements across the archipelago, striking fear into neighboring regions. Under Spanish influence, Christianization and Hispanization transformed these fierce raiders into disciplined soldiers and farmers, marking a significant cultural shift. In 1581, recurrent attacks by Moro people, Moro pirates and Dutch colonial empire, Dutch and English privateers forced Gonzalo Ronquillo de Peñalosa, Gonzalo Ronquillo de Peñaloza, the Spanish governor, to relocate the colonial center from Ogtong approximately eastward to La Villa Rica de Arevalo. Named in honor of Ronquillo’s hometown in Ávila, Spain, Arevalo became a hub for Spanish and Mexican settlers, who built residences and fortifications. Chinese traders, vital to the colony’s economy, established a commercial district in the nearby Parián, parian of Molo, Iloilo City, Molo, supplying goods to the growing settlement. In 1700, escalating raids, particularly from Dutch forces and Moro pirates, necessitated another move to Iloilo City Proper, Irong-Irong, a village with a natural and strategic river-mouth location against raids. There, the Spanish erected the Fortificación de Nuestra Señora del Rosario en el Puerto de Yloylo, now known as Fort San Pedro (Iloilo), Fort San Pedro, to protect the burgeoning port. Over time, Irong-Irong’s name evolved into Iloilo, and the site quickly rose as the administrative and economic center of the province. Iloilo’s demographic and economic landscape expanded with the arrival of Chinese migrants, who fueled local industries, and Latin Americans, Latin American soldiers, who manned its defenses. In the late 18th century, the city became a center for large-scale textile production and was once referred to as the "textile capital" of the Philippines. Artisans wove sinamay, piña, and Jusi (fabric), jusi fabrics, which were traded in Manila and exported to international markets. The industry thrived until the mid-19th century, when competition from inexpensive British textiles and the shift to sugar production diminished its prominence. The opening of Iloilo’s Port of Iloilo, port to global trade in 1855 marked a turning point, driven by British vice-consul Nicholas Loney, who provided loans, built warehouses, and introduced modern sugar-farming techniques. The resulting sugar boom, centered on haciendas developed by Iloilo’s elite on Negros, transformed the city, attracting foreign consulates, banks, and recreational facilities while elevating the status of its upper middle class. On October 5, 1889, a royal decree recognized Iloilo’s commercial and industrial ascent by granting it city status, formalized with the establishment of the ayuntamiento in 1890 under Governor-General Valeriano Weyler. Due to the steadfast loyalty of the Ilonggos, particularly evident during conflicts with neighboring Muslim polities and later revolutionary movements, Iloilo was honored with the perpetual title of '''La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad (Most Loyal and Noble City). The distinction, bestowed by a Royal Decree signed on March 1, 1898, by Queen regent of Spain, Queen Regent Maria Christina of Austria, Maria Cristina, underscored the city’s favored status under Spanish rule.The actual words of the Royal Decree says: "A propuesta del Ministro de Ultramar, y teniendo en cuenta el creciente desarrollo que en la industria y el commercio ha alcanzado la cabecera de la provincia de Ilo-Ilo, la más importante de las islas de Filipinas, despues de la de Manila; En nombre de mi Augusto Hijo el Rey D. Alfonso XIII, y como Reina Regente del Reino, Vengo en conceder el titulo de la Ciudad á la cebecera de Ilo-Ilo, en dichas islas. Dado en San Sebastian á cinco de Octubre de mil ochocientos ochenta y nueve. Maria Cristina" Cf. ''Decreto Real de la Reina Regente Maria Cristina'' (5 Octubre 1889) en ''Gazeta de Madrid'', N. 298, 25 Octubre 1889, p. 238. Over time, Iloilo became known as the 'Queen's Favored City in the South,' or simply 'Queen’s City in the South,' being the second-most significant Spanish port after Manila and its southern location relative to the capital. Throughout the late colonial era, Iloilo rivaled Manila in importance, serving as a key economic and military hub. During the Philippine Revolution, Iloilo initially remained loyal to Spain. The city’s elite organized a 500-strong battalion of native volunteers, divided into two companies under predominantly Spanish officers, which departed for Manila on January 16, 1897. The force distinguished itself in combat against Emilio Aguinaldo’s Katipunan rebels in Cavite,Cf. Policarpio F. Hernadez, ''Iloilo, the Most Noble City: History and Development (1566–1898)'', p. 147. returning to Iloilo in April 1898 after the Pact of Biak-na-Bato amid public celebrations. Following Spain’s defeat in the Spanish–American War in 1898, Iloilo briefly served as the capital of the Spanish East Indies under Governor-General Diego de los Ríos, Diego de los Rios. As revolutionary fervor spread, Aguinaldo dispatched Tagalog forces to Panay, and by October 1898, General Martín Teófilo Delgado, Martín Delgado had secured most of the island, save for Iloilo, Jaro, La Paz, and Molo. On December 25, 1898, fifteen days after the Treaty of Paris (1898), Treaty of Paris ceded the Philippines to the United States, Spanish troops surrendered at Plaza Alfonso XII, now Plaza Libertad, to Delgado’s forces, marking Iloilo as Spain’s final bastion in Asia and the Pacific.


American period

Following the Spanish withdrawal, revolutionary forces entered Iloilo with fanfare, establishing a provisional government. On January 17, 1899, Raymundo Melliza, a prominent figure from Molo’s elite, was elected mayor, ushering in a brief period of local rule. American forces arrived in 1900, downgrading Iloilo from a city to a township amid the transition to U.S. control. In 1903, Act No. 719 reorganized the region, incorporating the municipalities of Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz, Mandurriao, and Molo, Iloilo City, Molo into the jurisdiction of Iloilo. Pavia, Iloilo, Pavia joined briefly in 1905 under Act No. 1333 but was separated in 1907 alongside Jaro, which became an independent municipality in 1908 via Executive Order No. 64. La Paz regained its autonomy in 1920 through Executive Order No. 70, signed in 1919. The arrival of American Protestant missionaries in Iloilo, one of the first Philippine cities they reached after the 1898 Treaty of Paris, marked a significant shift in the region's religious and institutional landscape. With U.S. government support and amid prevailing anti-Catholic sentiments, these missionaries established enduring institutions: Central Philippine University in 1905, founded through a grant from philanthropist John D. Rockefeller as the first Baptist and second American and Protestant university in Asia; Iloilo Mission Hospital in 1901, the first American and Protestant-founded hospital in the Philippines; Jaro Evangelical Church in 1900, the first Baptist church in the country and the first Protestant church outside Manila; the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches, the oldest Baptist church union in the Philippines; and the CPU College of Theology, the nation's first Baptist theological seminary and the first Protestant seminary outside Manila. American administration brought significant infrastructure improvements in the city. Early projects included the construction of Baluarte and Arroyo streets, the extension of Delgado Street to Valeria, and the development of Fuentes and Jalandoni streets, reaching what is now the University of the Philippines Visayas campus. Quezon and Mabini streets were paved and lined with sidewalks, while streetlights illuminated the city by 1921. In 1926, authorities began widening key thoroughfares such as General Luna Street, General Luna, J.M. Basa Street, J.M. Basa, and Ledesma. A notable milestone came in 1927 with the inauguration of the improved Valeria-Ledesma street, formerly Weyler. Commonwealth Act No. 57, enacted in 1936, restored Iloilo’s city status, swiftly amended by Act No. 158 to annex La Paz and Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo. The re-established city was inaugurated on August 25, 1937. Jaro’s incorporation followed in 1941 under Commonwealth Act No. 604, with President Manuel L. Quezon issuing Proclamation No. 663 on January 7, setting January 16 as the effective date. File:Straat in Iloilo City, Panay island, Western Visayas, in de Philippijnen, KITLV 1402348.tiff, J.M. Basa Street, widely known as Calle Real, Iloilo, Calle Real, in the 1920s. File:Zeilschepen aan de kade van Iloilo City, Western Visayas, in de Philippijnen, KITLV 1402351.tiff, Sailing ships at the Muelle Loney Street, Muelle Loney wharf, circa 1920s to 1930s. File:The National geographic magazine (Page 494) BHL40563491.jpg, A market in Iloilo, in the 1910s. File:Ledesma St. Iloilo, KITLV 1402347.tiff, View of Ledesma Street from Plazoleta Gay, a road junction, in the 1920s.


Japanese occupation period

By 1942, the Japanese had invaded Panay, and the economy came to a standstill. During World War II, Iloilo was controlled by several Japanese battalions. Japan's ultimate goal was to entrench itself deeply in the Philippines so that, at the close of the war, it could occupy the country just as the Spanish and the Americans had years before. The Japanese built "Comfort station (sex), comfort stations" in Iloilo in 1942, where they imprisoned Filipino "comfort women" who were routinely gang-raped, brutalized, and murdered for entertainment. Nevertheless, during the Japanese occupation, Macario Peralta Jr. freed most of Panay (with few exceptions) from Japanese imperialism. As a result, allied guerrillas from other provinces, including Romblon, Palawan, Marinduque, and portions of Masbate and Mindoro, considered Panay, the "Primus inter pares" in their alliance network.Lapham, R., and Norling, B., 1996, Lapham's Raiders, Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, When Iloilo was liberated by Filipino and American forces from Japanese military occupation on March 25, 1945, the remnants of these battalions were held in Jaro Plaza, which was used as a makeshift detention facility.


Post-war and independence era

The aftermath of World War II left Iloilo’s infrastructure heavily damaged. The situation worsened in 1966 when a 1966 Iloilo City fire, massive fire destroyed nearly three-quarters of the city’s downtown area, further crippling its economy. Compounding these challenges were ongoing conflicts between labor unions in the port area, the decline of the sugar industry, and a deteriorating peace and order situation in the countryside. These factors prompted many Ilonggos to seek better opportunities elsewhere, leading to a significant exodus to cities like Bacolod, Cebu, and Manila. The migration contributed to Iloilo’s decline as a central economic hub in the Philippines. While rural agricultural areas continued to support the local economy, the loss of investors and skilled workers slowed Iloilo’s progress. For years, the city’s economy grew at a moderate pace, struggling to regain its former prominence. Change came slowly. The construction of a Iloilo Fish Port Complex, fishing port and a new international sea port marked the beginning of Iloilo’s recovery. These infrastructure projects attracted commercial business firms, which began investing in the city one by one. The gradual influx of investment spurred Iloilo’s eventual economic revival, setting the stage for its resurgence as a key player in the region. Iloilo became a highly urbanized city on December 22, 1979, by virtue of Batas Pambansa Blg. 51. As a result of the new status, its residents effectively lost their eligibility to vote for provincial officials.


Martial law era

The late 1960s marked the beginning of a period of unrest in the Philippines, driven by the economic fallout from Ferdinand Marcos’ debt-driven projects. The projects, aimed at securing his re-election in 1969, led to a 1969 Philippine balance of payments crisis, balance of payments crisis and soaring inflation. By the time of his second inauguration on December 30, 1969, the peso had begun to crash, sparking widespread social unrest. While major protests erupted in Manila, Iloilo City also became a center of resistance. Students from Central Philippine University and the nearby Western Institute of Technology (Philippines), Western Institute of Technology in La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz played a pivotal role in organizing the protests. They formed the Federation of Ilonggo Students (FIST), with leaders like Vic Beloria, Renato Ganchero, Virgil Ortigas, and the brothers Napoleon and Rolando Lorca. These activists would later be forced into hiding after Marcos declared martial law in 1972. Many of them lost their lives resisting the dictatorship and were honored as martyrs, with their names inscribed on the Bantayog ng mga Bayani (Heroes’ Memorial). Another prominent student activist, Edmundo Legislador of the University of the Philippines Iloilo, was similarly honored for his role in the resistance. The declaration of martial law in 1972 marked the beginning of a 14-year period of authoritarian rule characterized by widespread Human rights abuses of the Marcos dictatorship, human rights abuses. According to documentation by Amnesty International and Task Force Detainees of the Philippines, the Marcos regime was responsible for 3,257 Extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances in the Philippines, extrajudicial killings, 35,000 cases of torture, and 70,000 incarcerations. Iloilo was not spared from the repression, as it became home to one of the key detention centers for political prisoners, the Camp Delgado. Among the prominent figures detained at Camp Delgado was Rodolfo Lagoc, a labor lawyer who was held without charges for six months. Another detainee was Coronacion “Walingwaling” Chiva, a World War II heroine whose legendary status largely protected her from harm during her detention. Other activists, such as Luing Posa-Dominado and Judy Taguiwalo, were subjected to torture, manhandling, and sexual assault. For their bravery and sacrifices, Lagoc, Chiva, and Posa-Dominado were later honored on the Wall of Remembrance at the Bantayog ng mga Bayani. Taguiwalo, who survived the ordeal, went on to serve as Secretary of the Department of Social Welfare and Development.


Late 20th and early 21st centuries

At the turn of the 21st century, Iloilo experienced a significant economic boom, driven by major infrastructure projects and investments. The acquisition of the Mandurriao Airport, old Iloilo Airport in Mandurriao district and the construction of the Iloilo Diversion Road spurred urban development, attracting major businesses and real estate developers to the area. The investments transformed Iloilo into one of the fastest-growing economies in the Philippines. In 2008, Lapuz, Iloilo City, Lapuz gained its district status after separating from La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz as a sub-district, making it the seventh district of Iloilo City. The resolution was passed to enable Lapuz to have its own dedicated police station and fire station. The city’s power distribution system underwent a major change in 2019. MORE Electric and Power Corporation (MORE Power), owned by Spanish-Filipino billionaire Enrique K. Razon, took over operations from the long-standing Panay Electric Company (PECO). MORE Power introduced modern power services, including the installation of an underground cabling system, starting with Calle Real, Iloilo, Calle Real in Iloilo City Proper, downtown Iloilo City. In 2024, the Port of Iloilo, Iloilo Commercial Port Complex was granted to International Container Terminal Services, International Container Terminal Services, Inc. (ICTSI) for development and management. Renamed the Visayas Container Terminal, the project aimed to modernize the facility and expand its international connectivity, further enhance trade and economic growth in the central Philippines.


Geography

Iloilo City is situated on the southern shores of Panay, facing the Iloilo Strait and Guimaras to its south and east. The location forms a natural harbor and a safe anchorage for ships. The city is bordered by the municipality of Oton to the west, Pavia, Iloilo, Pavia to the north, and Leganes, Iloilo, Leganes to the northeast. Across the Iloilo Strait, along its eastern and southern coastlines, lie the towns of Buenavista, Guimaras, Buenavista and Jordan, Guimaras, Jordan in the island-province of Guimaras. The city occupies a flat alluvial plain, largely reclaimed from swampy areas due to urbanization and industrialization from the late 19th century to the present. Several rivers traverse the city, including the Iloilo, Batiano River, Batiano, Jaro, and Dungon Creek. The Iloilo River, an estuary, separates the districts of City Proper, Molo, and Arevalo from the rest of the city. The Jaro River, meanwhile, is fed by its tributaries, the Aganan and Tigum rivers. Recently, the Jaro Floodway was developed as a new escape channel to divert floodwaters from these two rivers into the Iloilo Strait. Iloilo City lies from Manila, from Roxas City, from Kalibo, and from San Jose de Buenavista. It spans a total land area of . The city is divided into seven geographical districts: Iloilo City Proper, the City Proper, Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, Molo, Iloilo City, Molo, Mandurriao, La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz, Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo, and Lapuz, Iloilo City, Lapuz. All districts, except Lapuz, were once independent towns; Lapuz was a sub-district of La Paz until it gained separate status in 2008. Each district features its own town center, equipped with a plaza, a Roman Catholic church, a fire station, a police station, and a public market. City Proper serves as the commercial hub and the political center of both the city and Iloilo Province, Iloilo province, as well as the regional government center of
Western Visayas Western Visayas (; ; ) is an Regions of the Philippines, administrative region in the Philippines, numerically designated as Region VI. The region comprises the islands of Panay and Guimaras Island, Guimaras. It consists of five Provinces of the ...
. Iloilo City anchors the only List of metropolitan areas in the Philippines, officially recognized metropolitan area in Western Visayas. The Metro Iloilo–Guimaras, metropolitan area encompasses Iloilo City and the surrounding municipalities of Leganes, Pavia, Santa Barbara, Iloilo, Santa Barbara, Cabatuan, Iloilo, Cabatuan, San Miguel, Iloilo, San Miguel, and Oton, along with the island-province of Guimaras and its five municipalities: Sibunag, San Lorenzo, Guimaras, San Lorenzo, Nueva Valencia, Buenavista, and Jordan.


Barangays and districts

Iloilo City constitutes one Iloilo City's at-large congressional district, at-large congressional district and is divided into Districts of Iloilo City, seven administrative districts, each of which is subdivided into barangays, with a total of 180 barangays across the city.


Climate

Iloilo City has a tropical wet and dry climate according to the Köppen climate classification system, with a pronounced wet season from June through November; then a dry season from December to May.


Cityscape

Iloilo City’s geographical and architectural features have significantly influenced its centuries-long role as a trading hub, blending colonial heritage with modern development. Situated on a plain along the southeastern coast of Panay, the city is bordered by the Iloilo Strait and the island of Guimaras, which together form a natural harbor. The Iloilo River, Iloilo and Batiano River, Batiano rivers flow through its districts, eventually emptying into the strait, while bicycle paths, ornamental trees, parks, gardens, and open spaces contribute to its well-planned urban landscape. The city is a conglomerate of former towns, including the once-independent city of Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, with each district maintaining its distinct character. Civic centers in each district often feature Spanish colonial layouts, characterized by plazas, churches, and municipal halls. Modern developments are strategically concentrated in Mandurriao, ensuring the preservation of the city’s skyline, heritage zones, and environment, while also extending into neighboring towns within its Metro Iloilo–Guimaras, metropolitan area.


Architecture

Iloilo City’s urban planning and architecture reflect a blend of Spanish and American colonial influences. In 1930, Juan M. Arellano, Juan Arellano designed a schematic plan inspired by Ebenezer Howard’s "Garden city movement, Garden City" concept, shaping the city’s layout as an amalgamation of former towns, each centered around plazas surrounded by churches and administrative halls. The Spanish colonial sugar boom left a legacy of 240 mansions, 30 of which are grand, built by elite Ilonggo families. The city is recognized for preserving and restoring heritage structures, boasting the most restored heritage sites outside Metro Manila. In the Iloilo City Proper, City Proper, Calle Real, Iloilo, Calle Real, stretching from Plazoleta Gay to Plaza Libertad, is lined with Neoclassical architecture, neoclassical and Art Deco, art deco buildings similar to Manila’s Escolta Street, Escolta. Among these are American-era landmarks such as the Aduana de Iloilo and the old Iloilo City Hall, both designed by Juan Arellano. The first Spanish settlement in the city, La Villa Rica de Arevalo, retains heritage structures like Camiña Balay Nga Bato, Camiña Balay nga Bato and the Convento de Arevalo, showcasing bahay na bato-style architecture. Jaro, once a separate city until the 1940s, features Beaux-Arts architecture, Beaux-Arts grand mansions like the Lopez Heritage House and Lizares Mansion, alongside the Art Deco Old Jaro Municipal Hall, Jaro Municipal Hall and the Romanesque Revival architecture, Romanesque Revival-style Jaro Cathedral with its separate Jaro Belfry, belfry. Molo, known for its Parián, Chinese heritage, is home to the Gothic Revival architecture, Gothic-style Molo Church and the restored Art Deco Molo Mansion, now a popular tourist attraction. In recent decades, Iloilo’s economic growth has spurred modern architectural developments, including the Iloilo Convention Center designed by William Coscolluela, whose modern facade is inspired by the Dinagyang and Paraw Regatta Festival, Paraw Regatta festivals. District plazas and other historic structures have also been restored, while plans are underway to reconstruct Fort San Pedro (Iloilo), Fort San Pedro, a ruined military defense structure originally built in the 1600s, and the Iloilo Central Market, a public market with an Art Deco facade. File:Calle Real, Iloilo City 2.jpg, Eusebio Villanueva Building File:Javellana Bldg., Iloilo City, Aug 2024.jpg, Javellana Building File:Edificio Elizalde y Cia (JM Basa-Ortiz, Iloilo City; 01-21-2023).jpg, Elizalde Building File:Old Customs Building Iloilo - 8765446875.jpg, Iloilo Customs House


Eco-innovation

Iloilo City stands out as a model of sustainable urban development, blending green initiatives, recreational spaces, and smart city innovations. Recognized with the 2017 Clean Air City Award and the 2020 ASEAN Clean Tourist City Award, the city has implemented policies such as banning plastic straws, mandating wastewater treatment along the Iloilo River, and enforcing biodegradable waste segregation. The Iloilo Batiano River Development Project, a two-time Galing Pook Award winner (2018 and 2022), showcases replicable environmental practices, while tree-planting programs and expanded mangrove forests enhance biodiversity and reduce the city’s carbon footprint.Mobility Awards 2021 awardees
. Retrieved 08-10-2023.
The Iloilo River Esplanade, the Philippines’ longest linear park, exemplifies the city’s commitment to green spaces. Designed by Filipino architect Paulo Alcazaren, it features 22 of the country’s 35 endemic mangrove species, serving as a vital marine breeding ground. Historic plazas with ornamental gardens, the revitalized Sunburst Park, the Iloilo Freedom Grandstand, Freedom Grandstand at Muelle Loney Street, Muelle Loney with mini-gardens, and the landscaped Iloilo Provincial Capitol complex—home to the National Museum Western Visayas. Additionally, all of the city’s plazas—Plaza Libertad, Jaro Plaza, Molo Plaza, La Paz Plaza (Iloilo), La Paz Plaza, Mandurriao Plaza, and Arevalo Plaza—have also undergone rehabilitation. Iloilo is also advancing as a smart city, integrating technology to improve livability and sustainability. Initiatives include free public Wi-Fi, electric public transport vehicles, flood-prevention pumping stations, and air quality monitoring systems that meet international standards. Taxis use Automotive navigation system, navigation systems, and barangays employ Closed-circuit television, CCTV for traffic and safety management. The city’s bike-friendly programs, such as the I-Bike Program, have earned awards like the 2018 Most Bike-Friendly City citation and Gold Awards in the 2021 and 2022 National Bike Day Bike Lane Awards. In 2024, Iloilo was ranked 6th among the world’s top 18 fitness-friendly cities by Headline Bulletin.


Demographics

According to the 2020 Philippine census, Iloilo City has a population of 456,626, making it the List of cities in the Philippines, 25th most populous city in the Philippines and the fourth most populous city in the Visayas. The population consists of 224,203 males (49.1%) and 232,423 females (50.9%). It has a population density of .


Language

Hiligaynon language, Hiligaynon is the predominant language spoken in Iloilo City. Philippine English, English serves as the primary language for business and education. Other local languages, such as Karay-a language, Karay-a (also known as Kinaray-a or the outdated term Haraya), are spoken by a minority from certain parts of Iloilo province. Spanish language in the Philippines, Spanish, once widely used during the colonial era and into the 1980s, is now fading, though a broken Spanish creole persists among a few families of Spanish descent and elderly sugar barons; who concentrate around the districts of Jaro and Arevalo where the Spaniards and Mexicans historically settled. Chinese, specifically the dialect of Hokkien is often spoken in the district of Molo, Iloilo City, Molo, the city's Chinatown whereas Indian Hindi language, Hindi can be found in Mandurriao. Hiligaynon, part of the Visayan language family within the Malayo-Polynesian languages, is prevalent across Panay, Guimaras, and Negros islands. It is also the main language in Soccsksargen, Mindanao, where most residents trace their ancestry to Hiligaynon speakers. Due to Iloilo’s 300-year history as a Spanish colony, Hiligaynon incorporates numerous Spanish loanwords, such as ''guerra'' (war), ''puerta'' (door), ''golpe'' (strike), ''aguanta'' (endure), ''puerto'' (port), ''calle'' (street), and ''edificio'' (building). The language is concentrated in the provinces of Iloilo, Guimaras, and Negros Occidental. In Iloilo and Negros Occidental, it is often referred to as "Ilonggo" (), a term that also denotes the ethnolinguistic group and cultural identity of native Hiligaynon speakers in Iloilo. The distinction between "Hiligaynon" and "Ilonggo" remains ambiguous, with many locals describing Hiligaynon as the language and Ilonggo as the identity or culture tied to Iloilo.


Religion

Iloilo City is a significant religious center in the Philippines, shaped by 300 years of Spanish colonization that established a predominantly Roman Catholic, Catholic population. Over 90 percent of residents adhere to the Roman Catholic Church, with Protestant denominations (5 percent), Iglesia ni Cristo (2 percent), and the Philippine Independent Church or Aglipayans (1 percent)—a form of Episcopal Anglo-Catholicism—representing notable minorities. Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro has long been a hub of Christian institutions. The Spanish introduced Roman Catholicism, establishing the Archdiocese of Jaro, while American colonial rule brought Protestantism, leading to the founding of key institutions. The Jaro Metropolitan Cathedral, designated a National Shrine—the second in Visayas and Mindanao and the first Marian-dedicated shrine outside Luzon—is the seat of the Archdiocese of Jaro and a focal point for devotion to Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Jaro, Our Lady of Candles, the patroness of Western Visayas and Romblon, alongside Saint Elizabeth of Hungary. The archdiocese, one of the country’s oldest and largest, began as a parish in 1587, covering Cabatuan, Iloilo, Cabatuan, and Maasin, Iloilo, Maasin. It became a diocese in 1865 under Pope Pius IX, with jurisdiction over suffragan bishops in Mindoro, Palawan, Zamboanga City, Zamboanga, Iloilo Province, Negros Oriental, Guimaras, San Jose de Buenavista, Capiz, Bacolod, San Carlos, Negros Occidental, San Carlos, and Kabankalan. Elevated to a metropolitan archdiocese by Pope Pius XII, it later ceded territory to form the dioceses of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zamboanga, Zamboanga (1910), Roman Catholic Diocese of Bacolod, Bacolod (1932), Mindoro (1936), Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Capiz, Capiz (1951), and the Territorial Prelature of San Jose de Antique (1962), though the latter remains partially under its purview. The Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage in La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz serves as the episcopal seat of the List of dioceses of the Philippine Independent Church, Diocese of Iloilo for the Iglesia Filipina Independiente (Aglipayan Church). Protestantism, introduced by Americans after the 1898 Treaty of Paris, grew due to Iloilo’s economic prominence in the early 1900s and the religious freedom upheld by the American colonial government. Presbyterianism, Presbyterians established the Iloilo Mission Hospital in 1901, the first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines. Baptists founded the Jaro Evangelical Church in 1900—the first Baptist and second Protestant church in the country after Central United Methodist Church (Manila), Manila’s Central United Methodist Church—the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches, and Central Philippine University in 1905, funded by John D. Rockefeller, marking it as the first Baptist and second American university in Asia. Seventh-day Adventists, arriving later outside the early Protestant comity agreement, established the Jaro Adventist Center, the first organized Adventist church outside Manila. Other Christian groups, such as Iglesia ni Cristo and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Philippines, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, have a presence, alongside non-Christian communities including Muslims from southern Philippines, Sikhs from Indian immigrants, and Taoism, Taoists and Buddhism, Buddhists from Chinese immigrants. File:Jaro Cathedral 2022-07-06.jpg, Jaro Cathedral is the seat of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Jaro. File:San Jose Placer Church, Iloilo City, Aug 2024.jpg, San Jose Church (Iloilo), San Jose Church is regarded as the first ever church in Iloilo City. File:Molo Church (Molo, Iloilo City; 04-03-2024).jpg, Molo Church is the only Gothic-style church outside Metro Manila. File:Villa Arevalo Church.JPG, Arevalo Church is home to the Santo Niño de Arévalo, Santo Niño de Arevalo, the third oldest image of the Holy Child in the Philippines.


Economy

Iloilo City has the second-largest economy in the Visayas, after Cebu City, with a gross domestic product (GDP) of ₱160.28 billion in 2023, and the second-fastest growth among List of cities in the Philippines, highly urbanized cities (HUCs) in the Philippines. It serves as the economic hub of Western Visayas for trade, commerce, finance, technology, medical tourism, hospitality, real estate, tourism, education, and industry. Key sectors include port management, telecommunications, utilities, banking, retail, real estate, tourism, and business process outsourcing (BPO). Historically, Iloilo’s economy thrived during the Spanish colonial period, when sugar was its primary export. The opening of its port to international trade in 1855 fueled a sugar boom, generating immense wealth and establishing affluent families—such as Lacson, Locsin, Ledesma, Montinola, and López family of Iloilo, Lopez—who built many haciendas in the city. It positioned Iloilo as the Philippines’ second-most important economic center after Manila. However, post-World War II, the sugar industry declined, diminishing the city’s economic stature.A resurgence began in the early 21st century, catalyzed by the opening of the Iloilo International Airport in 2007, which replaced the Mandurriao Airport, old Mandurriao airport. It spurred development, including Megaworld, Megaworld Corporation’s transformation of the decommissioned airport site into a Central business district, business park. This, alongside investments from other developers in the nearby area, revitalized the economy. Iloilo City also boasts one of the country’s busiest ports. The city ranks third in bank savings deposits and accounts in the country and is home to one of the highest GDP per capita. It has the lowest crime rate and corruption levels nationwide, the highest life expectancy in Visayas and Mindanao, a significant middle-class population, tops the national happiness index, and is recognized as the most business-friendly city in the Philippines. The service sector dominates with an 87.7 percent GDP share, led by wholesale and retail trade (contributing 2.3 percentage points to growth), alongside banking and IT-BPO, while industry accounts for 9.9 percent and agriculture, forestry, and fishing 2.4 percent. Key industries include accommodation and food services (48.3 percent growth) and transportation and storage (18.9 percent). The banking sector, tracing back to the Spanish-era sugar boom when Banco Español-Filipino (now Bank of the Philippine Islands) and Philippine National Bank opened their first branches outside Manila, ranks third nationally in deposits, fueled by Overseas Filipino Worker, OFW remittances, local industries, and Information technology, IT-Outsourcing, BPO growth; it hosts LifeBank (Philippines), LifeBank MFI, the country’s third-largest microfinance institution, and Queen City Development Bank, both headquartered in the city. The IT-BPO and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) sectors thrive, leveraging high literacy and English proficiency, with Megaworld’s Iloilo Business Park hosting firms like Transcom Asia, StarTek, and Reed Elsevier, etc., supported by annual IT graduates from various universities in the city.


Tourism

Tourism significantly boosts Iloilo’s economy, with the city serving as the gateway to Western Visayas. Festivals like Dinagyang Festival, Dinagyang, Kasadyahan, Paraw Regatta (Asia’s oldest sailing event), and the Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Jaro, Feast of Our Lady of the Candles draw millions of visitors annually. Tourism slogans such as "Where the Past is Always Present" are coupled with the city's numerous centuries-old houses and buildings that coexist with its modern architecture. Attractions include heritage landmarks, museums, art galleries, parks, and a vibrant nightlife centered at Smallville Business Complex, Smallville Complex. Iloilo’s Spanish-era heritage is showcased through its centuries-old churches, historic buildings, and mansions of prominent families. The city is also a gastronomic hub, renowned for dishes like Batchoy, La Paz batchoy, pancit Molo, Cansi, kansi, laswa, Kadyos, baboy, kag langka, KBL (kadyos, baboy kag langka), chicken inasal, tinuom, and Kadyos, manok, kag ubad, KMU (kadyos, manok, kag ubad). In 2018, Iloilo recorded 1,242,087 tourist arrivals—the highest in Western Visayas—including 1,154,550 domestic visitors, 70,787 foreigners, and 16,750 overseas workers. This rose by 11.59 percent in 2019,Iloilo province's 2019 tourist arrivals up 11.59%
. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
reaching approximately 1.39 million, and hit 1.4 million in 2020 despite COVID-19 pandemic, global challenges.2020 target: 1.4M tourist arrivals in Iloilo City
. Retrieved February 23, 2022.


Shopping and retail

Iloilo City is the shopping hub of Western Visayas since colonial times and has experienced a retail boom in the post-independence era. Hoskyn's Department Store, opened in 1877 on Calle Real, Iloilo, Calle Real, was the Philippines’ first department store, introducing fixed pricing and offering diverse goods from English wool to machinery.. Retrieved October 30, 2018.Calle Real, Iloilo City's heritage street, restored
. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
Acquired by the Que family post-World War II, it became Washington Supermart. Marymart Shopping Center opened in 1972, followed by SM Delgado in 1979—the first SM outside Manila—and The Atrium in 1993, a hotel-retail mix. Modern malls includes SM City Iloilo, opened in 1999, which is the city's largest mall, Robinsons Iloilo, Robinsons Jaro, Gaisano Capital La Paz, Gaisano Capital Iloilo City Center, and Megaworld’s Festive Walk Mall, Festive Walk Iloilo and Festive Walk Parade—the latter the country’s longest dining strip.Megaworld set to open Festive Walk Mall in Iloilo
. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
Iloilo realty scene takes a festive walk
. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
Additional shopping centers include CityMall Tagbak, CityMall Parola, Jaro Town Square, GT Mall Molo, City Times Square, and The Shops at Atria by Ayala Malls. Upcoming mall developments include SM City Jaro, Sta. Lucia Mall, and Atria Gardens. Beyond the city center, malls on Iloilo City’s outskirts cater to growing suburban demand. Vista Mall Iloilo, part of the 500-hectare Vista Estate township, is located in Oton. Other malls, including Robinsons Pavia, GT Plaza Pavia, and CityMall Ungka, are situated in Pavia, Iloilo, Pavia.


Culture

Culture and tradition play a significant role in shaping Iloilo City’s heritage. Home to numerous cultural institutions, including national museums, heritage houses, and mansions, Iloilo is sometimes referred to as the "museum city" and "city of mansions."


Museums

Iloilo City hosts a wide variety of museums that cover ancient and contemporary art, cultural and economic history, and science. Artifacts predating the Spanish era—such as pottery, porcelain, gold, and plates—unearthed across Iloilo are displayed in these museums, alongside works by notable Filipino artists with roots in the region. The Western Visayas Regional Museum of the National Museum of the Philippines, housed in the restored former Iloilo Provincial Jail, showcasing artifacts from different parts of the region. Its regional headquarters is located in the refurbished old Jaro Municipal Hall. Other museums feature memorabilia of prominent figures and families, artworks, and artifacts. Among the notable museums in Iloilo City are Museo Iloilo, the first government-built museum outside Manila, and the Museum of Philippine Economic History, housed in a restored building once owned by Ynchausti y Compañía, Ynchausti y Compania. The museum narrates the evolution of the Philippine economy and features 13 galleries with artifacts such as looms from Miagao, Miag-ao, T'nalak, T’nalak from Mindanao, and gold accessories from Pampanga. The Museum of Philippine Maritime History, located at the Iloilo Customs House, showcases the history of maritime trade in the Philippines. The Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art (ILOMOCA) at Casa de Emperador in Iloilo Business Park is Megaworld, Megaworld Corporation’s first museum project and the first in Visayas and Mindanao dedicated to modern and contemporary art.1st Contemporary Art Museum in VisMin opens in Iloilo City
. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
It includes five exhibit rooms, such as The Hulot Exhibit, featuring works by local and international artists like Salvador Dalí, Marc Chagall, and Joan Miró.Megaworld's Iloilo Business Park Adds Art to the Township
. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
Other significant institutions include the Central Philippine University Library, Henry Luce III Museum and Library at Central Philippine University, which houses the region’s largest library and collections like the Meyer Asian Collection, Second World War documents, and UNESCO-Memory of the World Programme, inscribed Hinilawod Epics, Hinilawod Epic Chant recordings.Hinilawod Records of Jocano inscribe in the UNESCO MOWCAP
Retrieved 06-08-2024.
Other museums located within universities include the University of San Agustin Museum, University of the Philippines Visayas, UPV Art Gallery, John B. Lacson Foundation Maritime University, John B. Lacson Foundation Museum of Maritime Culture and Craft, and Rosendo Mejica Museum. Heritage house museums, such as Camiña Balay Nga Bato, a 19th-century ancestral home in Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo, and Casa Mariquit, Iloilo’s oldest-existing heritage house in Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, are preserved ancestral houses. Other unique museums include the Agatona 1927 Museum Café, a heritage mansion transformed into a museum café, and the Brandy Museum (Philippines), Brandy Museum, the first and only museum in the Philippines dedicated to brandy, showcasing the histories of five brands under Emperador, Inc.


Festivals

Iloilo’s cultural celebrations are deeply influenced by Hispanic traditions and are sometimes referred to as the "festival capital" in the Philippines. The Dinagyang Festival, held every fourth Sunday of January, honors the Santo Niño de Cebú, Santo Niño de Cebu, is one of the largest and most popular festivals in the Philippines, while the Kasadyahan Festival, the preceding Saturday, features a competition of regional festivals. The Jaro Fiesta or the Feast of Our Lady of the Candles, held February 2, is the largest Marian festival outside Luzon, honoring the Virgin of Candelaria, patron of
Western Visayas Western Visayas (; ; ) is an Regions of the Philippines, administrative region in the Philippines, numerically designated as Region VI. The region comprises the islands of Panay and Guimaras Island, Guimaras. It consists of five Provinces of the ...
, Negros Occidental, and Romblon, with pageantry, a carnival queen from wealthy Spanish-Filipino families, cockfighting at Iloilo Coliseum, and an agro-industrial fair at Jaro Plaza. The Iloilo Chinese Lunar New Year, celebrating the city’s centuries-old Chinese community, is the largest such celebration outside Manila’s Binondo, rooted in Molo, Iloilo City, Molo’s history as the second-oldest Chinatown after Binondo. The Festival of Lights and Music at Central Philippine University, the region’s longest-running university-based Christmas festival since 1991, illuminates its Jaro campus from December to January 6 with lights, carnival rides, and bazaars. The Paraw Regatta Festival, Paraw Regatta in February, Asia’s oldest traditional sailing event, includes competitions and festivities in Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo. Recent additions like the Iloilo Summer Arts Festival (April–May since 2020) and the Iloilo Arts Festival (December since 2021) highlight Ilonggo visual and performing arts.Iloilo Summer Arts Festival 2020 launched
. Retrieved December 13, 2021.


Arts

Iloilo’s local government promotes the city as the "art capital" by transforming public spaces into canvases for murals and paintings depicting its history and culture, with support from local artists and real estate developers. A notable example is the 3D mural of Dinagyang warriors at Iloilo River Esplanade.


Entertainment

Teatro Malhabour, recognized as the first cinema or movie house outside Manila, opened on July 3, 1908, in Iloilo. The city also houses other prominent cinema houses including Cine Palace, the oldest still-existing and operating movie theater in Iloilo, and the now-defunct Cine Eagle, both built in 1928 and located on Calle Real, Iloilo, Calle Real. Modern cinemas in the city screen a wide array of present-day films, both national and international. The Film Development Council of the Philippines has also established a cinematheque theater in the city. The annual Iloilo Film Festival, held during Dinagyang, features a plethora of films screened during the festival. The Iloilo Convention Center is hosting international and local musical, band, and solo performances or concerts. The Rose Memorial Auditorium at Central Philippine University, the region’s largest theater, hosts events like the Bombo Radyo Philippines, Bombo Music Festival and is designated as a Cultural Center of the Philippines, Cultural Center of the Philippines Regional Art Center.Bombo Music Festival 2018 Updates
. Retrieved.
Universities in Iloilo has also established cultural and art groups gaining recognition for performances held nationally and internationally, some of which are sponsored by national cultural government agencies. The University of San Agustin has established the USA Troubadours, while Central Philippine University is home to the CPU Bahandi Singers, the CPU Handbell Choir (the first 8-octave handbell choir in the Philippines), and the CPU Sari-Saot Dance Troupe.


Cuisine

Iloilo City is recognized as a UNESCO City of Gastronomy, Creative City of Gastronomy and is widely regarded as the "Food Haven of the Philippines." Its cuisine has Eastern and Western influences, shaped by the city’s central location and its historical role as a major port. Over three centuries of Spanish colonization have deeply influenced Ilonggo cuisine, introducing dishes shared with other Hispanic-influenced countries, such as Menudo (stew), menudo, afritada, lechon, Philippine adobo, adobo, and estofadong baboy. Rooted in Asian traditions, rice remains a staple, typically served plain alongside these dishes. The city is renowned for dishes like La Paz Batchoy, La Paz batchoy, pancit Molo, Cansi, kansi, Kadyos, baboy, kag langka, KBL (kadyos, baboy kag langka), Kadyos, manok, kag ubad, KMU (kadyos, manok kag ubad), chicken inasal, tinuom, and laswa. A diverse range of restaurants in Iloilo also offers international cuisines, such as Italian cuisine, Italian, American cuisine, American, Japanese cuisine, Japanese, Chinese cuisine, Chinese, Vietnamese cuisine, Vietnamese, German cuisine, German, and Thai cuisine, Thai, while the growth of luxury hotels has introduced high-end buffets and exclusive dining experiences. Iloilo City is also the birthplace of Mang Inasal, the country’s first fast-food chain serving chicken inasal, founded in 2003 by Edgar Sia. From its origins in Iloilo, Mang Inasal has expanded nationwide.Mang Inasal: History
. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
Spanish influence also introduced baking traditions to Iloilo, leading to the establishment of historic bakeries still operating today, including Panaderia ni Paa, established in the 1900s, and Deocampo: The Original Barquillos, founded in the 1800s, both located in Jaro, as well as Panaderia de Molo, also founded in the 1800s, in Molo. The bakeries are known for sweet delicacies such as barquillos, thin rolled cookies, and biscocho, hardened baked bread slices coated with milk and margarine.


Sports

The Iloilo City Sports Office oversees sports activities in Iloilo City, organizing competitions among its Districts of Iloilo City, seven districts. The Iloilo City Inter-District Basketball Tournament includes teams from Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo, Molo, Iloilo City, Molo, Mandurriao, Iloilo City Proper, City Proper, La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz, Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, and Lapuz, Iloilo City, Lapuz. The Iloilo City Basketball Club (ICBC) organizes basketball for organizations and companies in the city. The Iloilo Sports Complex in La Paz has a 7,000-seat stadium, an Olympic-size swimming pool, a running track, a football field, and courts for volleyball, basketball, tennis, and badminton, with an indoor gymnasium. The Iloilo City Sports Center at Jalandoni Memorial National High School in Lapuz, began development in 2021 for the Iloilo City Sports Academy. Iloilo City has three professional sports teams. Kaya F.C.–Iloilo competes in the Philippines Football League (PFL), AFC Champions League Elite, AFC Champions League, and AFC Champions League Two, AFC Cup, using the Iloilo Sports Complex as its home venue. D'Navigators Iloilo competes in the Spikers' Turf. Kaya F.C.–Iloilo (women), Kaya Women's Futbol competes in the PFF Women's League, PFF Women’s League.


Media

Iloilo City’s media include English tabloids like Panay News, Daily Guardian (Iloilo), The Daily Guardian, News Express, and SunStar Iloilo, Sunstar Iloilo, with Hublas of Panay News as the sole Hiligaynon language, Hiligaynon tabloid, and Cream Magazine, a glossy lifestyle publication since 1989. Bombo Radyo Philippines, one of the largest radio network stations, was founded in Iloilo City in 1966. Television began with DYAF-TV in 1964, evolving into ABS-CBN’s TV Patrol Panay on Channel 10 by 1998; GMA Network, GMA’s TV-6 Iloilo (now Channel 7) started in 1967, upgrading in 1998; and other stations like People's Television Network, PTV (1992), Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation, IBC (1977), GMA News TV (2010), and TV5 (Philippine TV network), TV5 Iloilo (2012). Radio Mindanao Network, RMN’s BEAM TV 26, relaunched in 2010 with digital broadcasting by 2012.


Government

Iloilo City serves as both the regional capital of Western Visayas and the provincial capital of Iloilo province, Iloilo Province, functioning as a key economic center in the Philippines. Classified as a first-income-class, highly urbanized city (HUC), it hosts regional and provincial offices of national government agencies and operates independently from the province of Iloilo, meaning its residents cannot vote for provincial officials. The city is governed by the Mayor of Iloilo City, the chief executive, assisted by a vice mayor, and represented by a Iloilo City's at-large congressional district, lone congressman in the House of Representatives of the Philippines, House of Representatives. The Iloilo City Council, a 15-member legislative body, is elected during general elections alongside the mayor and vice mayor, convening monthly at Iloilo City Hall in sessions open to the public, with decisions typically prepared by various boards and committees.THE ILOILO CITY COUNCIL
. Retrieved April 25, 2019.
The city is subdivided into 180 barangays, each led by a barangay captain elected in national barangay elections, and each of the Districts of Iloilo City, city's seven districts has a district president elected from among its barangay captains for the Association of Barangay Captains (ABC). In 1955, Rodolfo Ganzon became the first popularly elected mayor, notable for authoring the Iloilo City Freedom Law, which restored residents’ rights to elect their mayor, vice mayor, and 10 councilors across the seven districts.


Infrastructure


Transportation


Land

Major roads in Iloilo City include Benigno S. Aquino Jr. Avenue (Diversion Road), McArthur Drive, General Luna Street, Avanceña Street, E. Lopez Street, Pres. Corazon C. Aquino Avenue (Circumferential Road 1), Iznart Street, and Muelle Loney Street. Benigno S. Aquino Jr. Avenue, an eight-lane main road with a protected bike lane and two-lane service road, connects Iloilo City to Pavia, Iloilo, Pavia, Santa Barbara, Iloilo, Santa Barbara, and Iloilo International Airport. Passenger jeepneys—distinctive for their sleek, sedan-like "passad" design—white metered taxis, and tricycles dominate city travel, with jeepneys serving fixed routes on major and secondary roads and tricycles covering community streets. Large passad jeepneys, buses, and mini-shuttle vans link Iloilo City to the broader province, Panay, and beyond via Roll-on/roll-off, roll-on, roll-off (RO-RO) ferry services of the Strong Republic Nautical Highway, reaching Metro Manila, Mindoro, Batangas, Cebu, Negros (island), Negros and Mindanao.Iloilo City is among the first cities to adopt mini-bus-like modern public utility jeepneys (PUJs) in contrast to the national phase-out of older jeepneys under President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration.Modern jeepneys to ply 3 new Iloilo routes
. Retrieved October 26, 2018.
'Modernized' jeeps start plying Iloilo routes.
Retrieved October 26, 2018.
In March 2019, the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) launched a Premium Point-to-Point Bus Service, Premium Point-to-Point (P2P) Bus Service, offering express routes to airports in Iloilo International Airport, Cabatuan, Kalibo International Airport, Kalibo, and Godofredo P. Ramos Airport, Caticlan (Boracay). A bus rapid transit (BRT) system is also being proposed for travel between Iloilo City and the Iloilo International Airport, international airport, as well as other parts in the Metro Iloilo–Guimaras, metropolitan area. There are six integrated transport system (ITS) terminals in the city: the Iloilo North ITS Terminal (North Ceres Bus Terminal) in Tagbak, Jaro, Iloilo City, Jaro, serves northwestern Iloilo, Passi City, and northwestern Panay (Capiz, Aklan, Boracay); the Iloilo Central Line ITS Terminal (Pavia People's Terminal) in Ungka, Jaro, connects central Iloilo; the Aleosan ITS Terminal in Hibao-an, Mandurriao, links upland areas like San Miguel, Iloilo, San Miguel, Alimodian, and Leon, Iloilo, Leon (including Bucari); the Iloilo South ITS Terminal (South Ceres Bus Terminal) in Mohon, Arevalo, Iloilo City, Arevalo, covers southern Iloilo and Antique (province), Antique; the Iloilo North Coast ITS Terminal in Ticud, La Paz, Iloilo City, La Paz, reaches northern coastal towns like Carles, Iloilo, Carles (Sicogon, Sicogon Island, Islas de Gigantes); and the Festive Walk Transport Hub in Mandurriao, within Iloilo Business Park, provides a modern transit point for passengers within the city and nearby areas. Iloilo City is widely known as the "Bicycling Capital of the Philippines" through the collaborative efforts of local and national governments, as well as stakeholders, to promote bike-friendly infrastructure. The city boasts nearly of bicycle lanes, with the longest along Iloilo Diversion Road, Diversion Road. Most sections of the Iloilo River Esplanade also serve as dedicated bicycle lanes. In 2019, the Dutch government partnered with Iloilo City to improve its cycling infrastructure.


Air

Iloilo International Airport, the fifth-busiest in the Philippines, is the major airport serving Iloilo City. It is northwest of the city in Cabatuan, Iloilo, Cabatuan on a site. It was opened to commercial traffic on June 14, 2007, replacing the Mandurriao Airport, old Iloilo Airport in Mandurriao. The new airport inherited its IATA and ICAO airport codes. It is linked to the city through Senator Benigno S. Aquino Jr. Avenue, Benigno S. Aquino Jr. Avenue and served by metered taxis, airport shuttle vans, multicabs, and P2P buses. The privatization of the airport is in the pipeline, with Filipino billionaire Manny Villar’s Prime Asset Venture Incorporated (PAVI) as the proponent with the largest proposed budget at ₱20 billion.


Sea

The Port of Iloilo, a primary seaport in the central Philippines, is located on Panay’s south coast along the Panay Gulf. It comprises several major facilities, including the Iloilo Commercial Port Complex (ICPC), which occupies 20.8 hectares of reclaimed land. In 2024, International Container Terminal Services, International Container Terminal Services, Inc. (ICTSI) secured a 25-year deal to develop and manage the ICPC, renaming it the Visayas Container Terminal (VCT). The Iloilo Domestic Port Complex (IDPC), near Fort San Pedro (Iloilo), Fort San Pedro, handles ferries to other islands. Muelle Loney, opened in 1855, now accommodates smaller ships and fast ferries to nearby islands. The Port of Iloilo ranks third in ship visits (11,853), fourth in cargo volume (491,719 million metric tons), and fourth in passenger traffic (2.4 million) annually. The ferry port in Parola, City Proper, uses small boats to connect to Guimaras. Roll-on/roll-off, Roll-on, roll-off (RO-RO) ferries also serve nearby islands. The Iloilo Fish Port Complex (IFPC) in City Proper, spanning 21 hectares, is the main fish trading hub in the Visayas, supplying stores, hotels, and markets locally and internationally. In March 2022, it received ₱570 million to develop a fish plant, canning area, and new energy source.


Rail

The railway system on the island of Panay, operated by Panay Railways, originally ran from Muelle Loney Street, Muelle Loney Wharf along the Iloilo River to Roxas City in Capiz. It operated for nearly 80 years, beginning in 1907, but ceased operations in the 1980s due to mounting losses and cash flow problems. Since its closure, there have been multiple proposals to revive the railway system. In 2022, Panay Railways announced its openness to foreign ownership as part of efforts to reconstruct its former train lines. The proposed revival aims to reconnect major cities in Panay, including Iloilo City, Roxas City, and potentially extend the system to Caticlan (Boracay) in Malay, Aklan.


Utilities

Iloilo City gets its power from two big plants in Ingore, La Paz. The Panay Power Corporation runs a 72 megawatts (MW) diesel fuel power plant, and the Panay Energy Development Corporation (PEDC) runs a 164 MW coal power plant. PEDC also plans for a third coal plant to the existing 164 MW setup, which will make an extra 150 MW, bringing the total to 404 MW for Panay and Guimaras islands. For a long time, the Panay Electric Company (PECO) handled power distribution in Iloilo City since 1923, making it one of the oldest private electric power companies in the Philippines. However, in 2019, MORE Electric and Power Corporation (MORE Power), owned by Spanish-Filipino billionaire Enrique K. Razon, has taken over and became the new sole power distribution company in the city. Since then, it introduced modern power services in the city, including the installation of an underground cabling system. Metro Pacific Iloilo Water (MPIW) is the city’s sole water supplier. It was established as a joint venture of Metro Pacific Water (MPW) and Metro Iloilo Water District (MIWD) to improve clean water supply for Iloilo City and as well as the whole Iloilo metropolitan area.MPIC-led firm takes over Iloilo water distribution
. Retrieved October 17, 2020.
In 2025, MPW began construction of the Iloilo Desalination Plant, which is set to become the largest desalination facility in the Philippines. The city has also begun constructing a new integrated solid waste management facility in Ingore, La Paz as the sanitary landfill in Calahunan, Mandurriao, which has served Iloilo City for years, is nearing the end of its lifespan and is expected to reach full capacity by 2026.


Healthcare

The Iloilo City Health Office, in collaboration with the Department of Health (Philippines), Department of Health (DOH), oversees the planning and implementation of city government healthcare programs, including free immunizations for children targeting seven major diseases: smallpox, diphtheria, tetanus, yellow fever, whooping cough, polio, and measles. The city operates health centers in its barangays under the City Health Office’s supervision. Three government-run hospitals serve the city: West Visayas State University Medical Center (WVSUMC), Western Visayas Medical Center (WVMC), and the under-construction Iloilo City Hospital (ICH). WVSUMC, commonly known as Don Benito, managed by West Visayas State University, primarily caters to indigent patients and hosts DOH auxiliary centers like the WVSU/DOH Regional Cancer Center, with a 10-story WVSU/DOH Regional Lung and Heart Center in development. WVMC, the region’s largest referral public hospital operated by the DOH, features a six-story heart and lung specialty building, a three-story dialysis unit, a two-story main building with administrative and emergency services, and a five-to-six-story annex. ICH, under construction in San Pedro, Molo, is a city government initiative to meet the healthcare needs of indigent residents, comprising a five-story main hall, a medical arts building, and the USWAG Iloilo City Molecular Laboratory. Some of the private and church-affiliated hospitals in the city are Iloilo Mission Hospital, CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital (IMH), founded in 1901 by Presbyterian missionary Joseph Andrew Hall as the first Protestant and American hospital in the Philippines, pioneered nursing education with the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses in 1906 (now Central Philippine University College of Nursing), producing the country’s first nursing graduates and top board performers. It serves as CPU’s university hospital. St. Paul’s Hospital Iloilo (SPH Iloilo), established in 1911 by French Catholic missionaries with American Catholic support, is the oldest Daughters of Saint Paul of Chartres hospital in the Philippines and an affiliate of St. Paul University Iloilo. Both are heritage healthcare institutions. Other private facilities include The Medical City, The Medical City-Iloilo (TMC Iloilo), the first TMC hospital in Visayas and Mindanao, and Healthway QualiMed Hospital Iloilo (HQHI), formerly QualiMed Hospital Iloilo, the first Ayala Corporation hospital outside Luzon, both equipped with state-of-the-art technology. Additional private hospitals are Metro Iloilo Hospital and Medical Center (MIHMC), Medicus Medical Center (MMC), Iloilo Doctors’ Hospital (IDH), Medicus Cancer Institute (MCI), Asia Pacific Medical Center–Iloilo (APMC Iloilo), Seamen’s AMEOSUP Hospital, and the under-construction Supercare Medical Services/Center. Notable maternity centers include the La Paz Maternity and Reproductive Health Center (LMRHC) and CPU Birthing Center.


Education

Iloilo City serves as the primary educational hub of the Western Visayas region, with the city and province of Iloilo collectively hosting ten prominent universities. The city itself is home to eight higher education institutions. * Central Philippine University (1905) was established in through the efforts of American Baptists, supported by a grant from American industrialist and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller. It holds the distinction of being the first Baptist-founded university and the second American and Protestant-established university in the Philippines and Asia. Recognized as a leading institution in Western Visayas,Commission on Higher Education [Business and Administration and Related
Retrieved September 27, 2015.
CPU has earned accolades from the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) and is consistently listed in top Asian and global university rankings by Quacquarelli Symonds, Times Higher Education, and AppliedHE (2023). The university has been designated by the Commission on Higher Education (Philippines) as National Centers of Excellence in Agriculture and Business Administration and National Centers of Development in Chemical Engineering, Electronics Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Teacher Education. Its Central Philippine University – College of Nursing, nursing school, founded in 1906 as the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses, is the first nursing school in the Philippines; Central Philippine University Republic, CPU Republic, first student government in Southeast Asia; the Central Philippine University – College of Agriculture, Resources and Environmental Sciences, CPU College of Agriculture, Resources, and Environmental Sciences, the first government-recognized agricultural school outside Luzon; and its university hospital, Iloilo Mission Hospital, the country’s first American and Protestant hospital. * The University of San Agustin (1904) was founded by Spanish Augustinians. It is the first Augustinian university in Asia and the Pacific and achieved university status in March 1953, marking it as the first university in Western Visayas. * St. Paul University Iloilo (1946) was established by American Catholics with assistance from the French Sisters of Saint Paul of Chartres, Sisters of St. Paul of Chartres, and operates as part of the St. Paul University System * University of Iloilo (1947) was initially founded by the López family of Iloilo, Lopez family and is now managed by the PHINMA Education Network * John B. Lacson Foundation Maritime University (1948) was established by Juan Bautista Lacson and is the first maritime university in the Philippines. Three government-owned universities operate in Iloilo City: * University of the Philippines Visayas (1947) is an autonomous unit of the University of the Philippines System, maintaining a satellite campus in Iloilo City where the old Iloilo City Hall now serves as its administration building and art gallery, with its main campus in Miagao, Miag-ao, Iloilo, and has been designated by CHED as a Center of Excellence in Chemistry * West Visayas State University (1902) was formally established under the guidance of American Thomasites within the Philippine Normal School, Philippine Normal School system, and is recognized by CHED as a Center of Excellence in Teacher Education and a Center of Development in Nursing * Iloilo Science and Technology University (1905) was founded as a trade school by Americans succeeding a Spanish-era arts and trade school, holding a CHED Center of Development in Teacher Education. Beyond these, a new campus of National University (Philippines), National University (1900) is under construction next to SM City Iloilo in Mandurriao. The Ateneo Graduate School of Business, part of Ateneo de Manila University (1859), operates a satellite campus at Ateneo de Iloilo (1958), offering a Master of Business Administration (MBA) program as a step toward establishing a full university. Philippine Christian University (1946) and Guimaras State University (1964) also maintain smaller extension programs in the city. The Iloilo City Community College (ICCC), administered by the city government in collaboration with CHED. Additionally, Iloilo City hosts numerous private colleges and schools, including Iloilo Doctors' College (1972), Westbridge School for Boys (PAREF), St. Therese – MTC Colleges, Western Institute of Technology (Philippines), Western Institute of Technology (1964), and religious institutions such as Ateneo de Iloilo, Angelicum School Iloilo (1978), and Colegio de San Jose (1872)—the oldest girls’ school in Western Visayas. Religious training centers like St. Joseph Regional Seminary, St. Vincent Ferrer Seminary (1869), and Mill Hill Formation House. The Department of Education (Philippines), Department of Education – Division of Iloilo City oversees 88 private schools and 52 public schools.


Notable people


Sister cities

Iloilo City is twinned with:


International

* Stockton, California, Stockton, United States, 1956 * Hågat, Guam, Hågat, Guam, 1994 * Qingdao, China, 2000 * Guigang, China, 2004 * Guangxi, China, 2010 * Huaibei, China, 2012 * Dededo, Guam, 2012 * Palembang, Indonesia, 2016 * Quanzhou, China, 2020 * Wuhan, China, 2021 * Dobong District, Dobong-Gu, South Korea, 2024


Domestic

*General Santos, South Cotabato, 1980 *South Cotabato, 1980 *Quezon City, Metro Manila, 1994 *Marikina City, Metro Manila, 1994 *Mandaue, Cebu, 2007 *Bacolod, Negros Occidental, 2010 *Rosario, Batangas, Rosario, Batangas, 2011 *San Juan, Metro Manila, San Juan, Metro Manila, 2013 *Tacurong, Sultan Kudarat, 2014 *Koronadal, South Cotabato, 2014


Friendship cities

Iloilo City also has friendly relations with: * Seattle, United States, 1980 * Icheon, South Korea, 1995 * Brisbane, Australia, 2000 * Tongyeong, South Korea, 2003 * Hsinchu, Taiwan, 2004 * Bilbao, Spain, 2007 * Kaoshiung, Taiwan, 2007 * Daly City, United States, 2011 *Makati, Metro Manila *Puerto Princesa, Palawan *Taguig City, Metro Manila *Tagum, Davao del Norte


See also

* Iloilo City Proper * Metro Iloilo–Guimaras * Iloilo Province


Notes


References


External links

*
Iloilo Travel Website
* [ Philippine Standard Geographic Code] {{Authority control Iloilo City, 1566 establishments in the Philippines 1581 establishments in the Philippines Cities in Iloilo Highly urbanized cities in the Philippines Former national capitals Populated places established in 1566 Populated places established in 1581 Provincial capitals of the Philippines Populated coastal places in the Philippines Port cities and towns in the Philippines