Anyone who has ever driven into a busy city knows the feeling: you’re confident at first, you think you’ll find parking, and then thirty minutes later you’re circling the same block for the third time wondering why you even brought your car. I’ve been through this dance in Manila, Makati, Cebu, and even smaller cities where you’d think parking shouldn’t be a problem — yet it always is.
Over the years, I’ve learned that cheap parking does exist. It’s just rarely obvious, never advertised, and almost always discovered through strategy rather than luck. What separates stressed drivers from smart ones is knowing where and how to look.
Here are the best ways I’ve found to save money, avoid endless circling, and secure good, cheap parking in the city — based on real lessons learned the hard way.
There’s a funny rule about parking in crowded cities: the areas closest to your destination are always the most expensive. Everyone wants the slot right in front of the mall, restaurant, or office building, which means demand skyrockets — and prices follow.
The trick that helped me for years is simple: park one or two streets away from the main road.
Not ten minutes away.
Not three blocks away.
Just one or two streets.
In Makati, for example, side streets like San Agustin, Sorsogon, or parts of Salcedo have lower parking rates than Ayala or Dela Rosa. In Manila, streets around Ermita and some areas near UN Avenue offer cheaper hourly charges compared to the commercial buildings right beside them.
Most drivers don’t want to explore beyond the “hotspots,” so these near-but-not-quite streets usually stay less congested — and much cheaper.
Restaurants, hostels, small hotels, gyms, cafés, and even private clinics often have spare parking spaces. They don’t always advertise them, but they exist. Many of these businesses allow parking for non-customers, especially during off-peak hours.
I once found a hidden parking spot behind a dental clinic in Quezon City simply because I asked the guard, “Do you allow hourly parking?”
He replied, “Yes, ₱20 per hour.”
Meanwhile, the big commercial parking building nearby was charging ₱60 for the first two hours.
These small establishments aren’t trying to profit from parking. They simply want a bit of extra income for unused space. And because they’re not well-known parking hubs, they rarely get full.
One of the biggest shifts in city parking is the rise of peer-to-peer parking platforms — similar to how people rent out spare rooms or storage spaces. Platforms like Leeveit now allow homeowners, condo owners, or small businesses to rent out their unused driveways, garages, or parking slots.
This is often significantly cheaper than commercial parking for two reasons:
I’ve seen parking in Makati and Manila go as low as ₱50–₱80 per hour, or even ₱2,000–₱3,000 per month on peer-to-peer listings — far cheaper than building-operated parking that charges ₱4,000–₱7,000.
The best part is that these spaces sit inside actual neighbourhoods. No crowds, no complicated entrances, and no massive queues.
If a parking building is connected to a mall or office tower, expect premium pricing. But there are smaller, privately-owned parking buildings that don’t get advertised on Google Maps or Waze. They’re not glamorous — sometimes just a plain four-storey structure — but they offer some of the best deals.
I once parked in a small building in Malate for ₱30 per hour because it wasn’t connected to a mall or tourist spot. Meanwhile, the mall parking three streets away charged almost double.
These hidden buildings usually don’t fill up quickly, and their attendants are much more flexible with overnight stays or longer parking hours.
City parking behaves like traffic: timing is everything.
If you arrive around:
you’re competing with everyone else. Prices don’t technically increase, but your options shrink — meaning you might end up settling for the expensive lot simply because you have no choice.
Early mornings, late nights, or even mid-afternoon between 3:00–5:00 PM often reveal the cheaper lots that are empty earlier in the day.
This is one of the most underrated hacks.
Many LGUs and city offices have public parking areas that people often overlook, assuming they’re only for employees. But most of them welcome public parking during certain hours — and they charge much less than private buildings.
Examples include:
Parking fees are usually standardized and cheaper because they’re not profit-oriented.
If you’re willing to walk five minutes, the savings add up dramatically. Some of the best parking deals are located:
Walking five minutes in exchange for a 40–50% price drop? That’s always worth it.
If you regularly drive to the city, monthly parking is the cheapest long-term choice. Even if you don’t go daily, monthly rates are usually low enough to justify the cost.
I once calculated the difference:
Daily parking at ₱50 per hour → ₱250 per day
5 days a week → ₱1,250
Per month → ₱5,000
But a nearby building offered monthly parking for ₱3,500 — and peer-to-peer spaces were even lower.
If you work in the city, study in the city, or visit regularly, monthly parking saves both time and stress.
Guards know which lots are full, which ones are cheap, and which ones have space hidden at the back. They are the walking parking directory of every city. Many of the best deals I’ve found came not from apps, but from asking:
“Boss, saan po may mas murang parking dito?”
Guards often recommend:
They’ll even tell you if a place isn’t safe or often gets towed.
When something sounds too good to be true, it usually is.
There are common traps:
Saving ₱40 is not worth risking a ₱1,000+ towing fee.
Finding cheap parking in the city isn’t about luck. It’s about strategy. Over time, I’ve learned that the best parking spots are rarely the obvious ones. They don’t show up on Google Maps. They’re not in front of your destination. And they’re almost never inside the most popular buildings.
They are:
Once you know these patterns, finding cheap parking becomes easy — predictable even. And you save time, money, and your sanity.