Your stay — Spot On Junction Hostel
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The Property — Spot On Junction Hostel
Spot On Junction Hostel is a no-frills budget base in Makati’s central business district. The lobby is compact and functional, with a small reception desk, a few plastic chairs, and a noticeboard listing walking tours. It’s clean but worn at the edges, aimed squarely at backpackers and short-stay workers who treat the room as a place to sleep, not socialise.
Chronicles of Makati City
Makati was a swampy fishing village until the Americans built a military airbase here in the 1910s, which later became the site for a master-planned financial district. Post-independence, its transformation into the Philippines’ corporate hub accelerated in the 1970s, with skyscrapers rising over former wetlands and rice paddies. Today, Makati is the country’s premier business district, defined by its glass towers, expat-heavy residential enclaves, and the high-end shopping of Ayala Center.
Best Time to Visit
Full Makati City guide →Best months
January and February: dry, cool (24-30°C), and post-holiday lull means emptier streets and slightly easier taxi hails. March also works if you can handle higher humidity.
Peak / festival surge
December and Holy Week (March/April 2026) see a tourist surge. Makati hotels don’t spike as much as beach resorts, but rates can jump 30-50%. The main drivers are Christmas shopping and domestic travel for Easter.
Budget shoulder season
May and June offer lower prices as the wet season starts, with fewer tourists and hotel discounts of 20-30%. Rain showers are brief, so you still get good exploring windows.
Weather & packing
July is the heart of the southwest monsoon (habagat); expect daily heavy downpours and occasional flooding in low-lying parts of Makati. Pack a compact umbrella and waterproof shoes, not sandals — you’ll wade through puddles.
Live City Briefing — Makati City
- The EDSA bus carousel system remains in effect, but expect delays along the main thoroughfares from roadworks on the Makati-Manila boundary.
- Several new Korean barbecue and fried chicken spots have opened along P. Burgos Street in the last quarter, replacing older bars.
- The National Capital Region is under a heightened dengue alert; bring insect repellent, especially after rain.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Spot On Junction Hostel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor, facing the inner courtyard or away from Don Pedro Street. These mid-level floors reduce street noise and avoid potential lift traffic on lower floors.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor (street-level noise, lift lobby footfall) and any room facing Don Pedro Street directly, especially on floors 2–3 where traffic noise bounces off neighbouring buildings.
Best views
The best view is likely a side or rear aspect overlooking the low-rise residential blocks of Makati’s barangay, rather than the main road — ask for a room with a window to the back or inner well.
Quietest floors
Floors 4–5 are generally quietest, as they sit above the street hum and are less used by service staff than lower floors.
🔊 Noise notes
Don Pedro Street is a narrow two-lane road used by local jeepneys, tricycles, and delivery trucks, particularly during weekday commuting hours (7–9am, 5–7pm). Occasional karaoke from nearby eateries may carry up. The building’s own lift and corridor noise are minimal above floor 3.
Insider tips
1. Check in after 3pm to avoid the morning housekeeping rush and request a courtyard room directly at the desk — staff are flexible with allocation if you ask politely. 2. The hostel’s common area closes at 10pm, so if you need quiet after that, a higher courtyard room is essential.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Facilities — Spot On Junction Hostel
Complimentary Wi-Fi throughout property; standard speed sufficient for browsing and social media (approx. 10 Mbps down); no premium paid tier; login via room number and surname
One lift serves all floors (ground plus three upper floors); no stairs-only sections
No daily newspaper or digital newsstand; a small communal bookshelf in the ground-floor lounge has a few donated magazines and guidebooks
Standard check-in from 14:00; early bag-drop allowed from 11:00 (free). Late check-out until 12:00 free, subject to availability; after 12:00 incurs PHP 200 per hour until 18:00, after which full night charged
Free luggage storage available before check-in and after check-out (same day only); overnight storage not permitted
Step-free access from street into lobby (one shallow ramp); lift to all upper floors; door widths standard (approx. 80 cm); no specially adapted rooms; shower cubicles have raised lip
No on-site parking; nearest public car park is across the street at Greenbelt Parkade (PHP 60 per hour, PHP 400 overnight 22:00-06:00); no EV charging on site or nearby
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: None (no additional city tax borne by guest; all taxes included in room rate)
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment required at booking for all online reservations; a PHP 1,000 cash-only incidental deposit required at check-in, returned at check-out if no damage
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Church: Korean Methodist Church (311 m · ~4 min walk)
- Church: Mary Mother of Hope - Landmark Chapel (1.9 km · ~23 min walk)
- Church: United Pentecostal Church Philippines (1.9 km · ~24 min walk)
- Church: Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses (1.9 km · ~24 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Powerplant Mall — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
Ayala Museum — 1.6 km · ~20 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Bitcoin ATM Philippines — 79 m · ~1 min walk
TGP — 134 m · ~2 min walk
Arellanos — 18 m · ~1 min walk
BGC - Ayala Terminal — 2.0 km · ~26 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Philippine Peso, PHP
Change money at bank branches or their ATMs (e.g., BPI, BDO) in Makati; avoid airport and mall exchange bureaus for poor rates.
Visa/Mastercard widely accepted in malls and restaurants; Amex less common; tap-to-pay (Visa/MC contactless) accepted; cash essential for jeepneys and small eateries.
Restaurants: loose change or 10% if no service charge; taxis: round up fare; hotel staff: PHP 20–50 for bellboys/maids.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Brewed coffee at a local bakery or chain coffee shop around PHP 50–80.
Rice + ulam (meat/fish dish) from a carinderia or food court stall about PHP 100–150.
Simple noodle or rice bowl at a lokal eatery for PHP 120–180 per main.
Street-food stalls cluster around Gil Puyat Avenue and near LRT stations; try skewers (PHP 10–20 each) off Buendia.
Puregold, SaveMore, and Rustan's Supermarket (upscale) are common; Puregold on Chino Roces is the budget option.
Ukay-ukay (thrift) shops along Pasong Tamo and in areas like Guadalupe; Divisoria is the cheapest source but is a jeepney ride away.
Jeepney (PHP 13–20 per ride) is cheapest; from NAIA: take the airport bus to EDSA then jeepney/MRT; avoid airport taxi scams.
Eat at carinderias or food courts inside malls for PHP 100 meals; use jeepneys instead of Grab; buy water beyond tourist zones—convenience stores charge PHP 15–25 per bottle.
Emergency Contacts
Makati CityNational emergency hotlines: 911 (all services). Makati local police non-emergency: (02) 8810-6346. Tourists can also call the Philippine National Police hotline 117 from any phone, or the Makati Public Safety Department at (02) 8826-5675 for traffic or security concerns.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Makati City, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Spot On Junction Hostel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Bitcoin ATM Philippines — 79 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · TGP — 134 m · ~2 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Taft Avenue MRT Station → Artina Suites Hotel (closest: Ayala or Buendia station)
💡 Don't use MRT for airport trips—the only train link to NAIA is via the airport loop (P2P bus). But for getting around Makati, take MRT-3 to Ayala station, then walk 15 mins or take a tricycle to Artina Suites. Avoid peak hours (7–9 AM, 5–7 PM) as trains are crush-loaded.
NAIA Terminal 3 Bus Terminal → Makati City (Ayala Avenue stop)
💡 The bus runs via NAIA Expressway and stops along Ayala Avenue. From Ayala, take a short jeepney or Grab to Artina Suites (around 5 minutes). Bring exact change—the conductor hands out tickets.
Anywhere in Manila (including NAIA) → Artina Suites Hotel, Makati City
💡 Grab is the safest and most predictable option. From the airport, set your pickup to ‘Arrivals Bay’ and book a GrabCar (not GrabTaxi) for fixed pricing. Surge pricing applies during rain or rush hour—pre-book if you have a flight to catch.
Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) → Artina Suites Hotel, Makati City
💡 Use the official airport taxi booth (around 500–600 PHP) to avoid scams. Alternatively, book a Grab car from the airport for a fixed fare—often cheaper and more reliable than hailing a cab on the street.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Spot On Junction Hostel?
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor, facing the inner courtyard or away from Don Pedro Street. These mid-level floors reduce street noise and avoid potential lift traffic on lower floors.
Which rooms should I avoid at Spot On Junction Hostel?
Avoid rooms on the 1st floor (street-level noise, lift lobby footfall) and any room facing Don Pedro Street directly, especially on floors 2–3 where traffic noise bounces off neighbouring buildings.
Is Spot On Junction Hostel noisy?
Don Pedro Street is a narrow two-lane road used by local jeepneys, tricycles, and delivery trucks, particularly during weekday commuting hours (7–9am, 5–7pm). Occasional karaoke from nearby eateries may carry up. The building’s own lift and corridor noise are minimal above floor 3.
Which rooms have the best views at Spot On Junction Hostel?
The best view is likely a side or rear aspect overlooking the low-rise residential blocks of Makati’s barangay, rather than the main road — ask for a room with a window to the back or inner well.
What are insider tips for staying at Spot On Junction Hostel?
1. Check in after 3pm to avoid the morning housekeeping rush and request a courtyard room directly at the desk — staff are flexible with allocation if you ask politely. 2. The hostel’s common area closes at 10pm, so if you need quiet after that, a higher courtyard room is essential.
What time is check-in at Spot On Junction Hostel?
Check-in at Spot On Junction Hostel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Spot On Junction Hostel have Wi-Fi?
Complimentary Wi-Fi throughout property; standard speed sufficient for browsing and social media (approx. 10 Mbps down); no premium paid tier; login via room number and surname
Is there a city or tourist tax at Spot On Junction Hostel?
None (no additional city tax borne by guest; all taxes included in room rate)
Where can I eat cheaply near Spot On Junction Hostel?
Rice + ulam (meat/fish dish) from a carinderia or food court stall about PHP 100–150.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Spot On Junction Hostel?
Jeepney (PHP 13–20 per ride) is cheapest; from NAIA: take the airport bus to EDSA then jeepney/MRT; avoid airport taxi scams.
When is the best time to visit Makati City?
January and February: dry, cool (24-30°C), and post-holiday lull means emptier streets and slightly easier taxi hails. March also works if you can handle higher humidity.
Top Attractions in Makati City
💡 Go at sunset when the chapel lights reflect on the pond. Avoid Sunday mornings when it's packed with mass-goers.
💡 Come at 7pm when the light and music show starts. Weekday afternoons after the lunch rush (2pm-3pm) are the quietest.
💡 Arrive before 8am to beat the heat and queues. The longganisa (Filipino sausage) and bibingka (rice cake) are worth the wait.
💡 Start at the corner of P. Burgos and Kalayaan Avenue. Maps are available at the Makati Tourism office inside the Ayala Malls complex.
💡 Visit on the first Sunday of the month for free entry. Otherwise, skip the permanent diorama floor and head straight to the special exhibitions.