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Quiet right now
based on typical Saturday evening
The La Trinidad Strawberry Farm is the most famous strawberry destination in the Philippines, a roughly 79-hectare farm in Barangay Betag, La Trinidad, owned and maintained by Benguet State University, in the town dubbed the "Strawberry Capital of the Philippines." It is about 30 minutes from Baguio City; there is no entrance fee, but you pay for the strawberry-picking activity if you would like to join in — and note the picking season runs roughly November to May. In season, you can grab a basket and scissors and pick your own berries straight from the plots (priced per kilo, usually with a one-kilo minimum), then have them weighed at the scale. Even out of season, long rows of stalls sell fresh strawberries, strawberry jam and wine, strawberry ice cream, and cheap fresh vegetables, making it an easy half-day side trip — best timed for an early-morning visit on a clear day, since the fields get hot by mid-morning and muddy when it rains. It pairs well with nearby stops like Bell Church or the StoBoSa hillside houses.
Today's Hours
7:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Address
Barangay Betag, La Trinidad, Benguet (near Benguet State University)
Landmark: The vast BSU strawberry fields in La Trinidad, lined with strawberry-product stalls
Typical Visit
60 minutes
Usually busy at these times — based on typical patterns, not live crowd data.
Early morning (7 to 8:30 AM) for cool weather and fewer crowds, during the picking season (November to May, peak February to April). Go on a clear day, since the fields get muddy when wet.
A hat and sunblock (sunny by mid-morning), comfortable shoes (muddy when wet), and cash.
Barangay Betag, La Trinidad, near BSU — about 30 min / under 10 km from Baguio. Take a jeepney from in front of Baguio City Hall (Baguio-Buyagan route) or from the Bokawkan / Magsaysay terminals (about ₱11) and ask to be dropped at the Strawberry Farm; or a taxi or Grab (about ₱200 to 330). Parking is ₱50.
Free entry; strawberry picking is optional and paid by the kilo (about ₱700 to 800/kg, usually a 1-kg minimum) — and only really worth it in season. Out of season it is more of a market and food stop than a picking experience.
Landmark: The vast BSU strawberry fields in La Trinidad, lined with strawberry-product stalls
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