ILOILO CITY — A French luxury expedition cruise company that normally navigates the ice‑choked passages of the Arctic and the turquoise atolls of Polynesia has spent three days this May filming the Iloilo Terminal Public Market. The image is unexpected—a content producer from Compagnie du Ponant, one of the world's premier small‑ship cruise operators, pointing his camera at a stall of vacuum‑sealed danggit as Mayor Raisa Treñas looks on—but it captures precisely what has drawn the company back to Iloilo for the second time in four months. The city, recently crowned Western Visayas' top MICE destination by the Department of Tourism, is now being considered as a stopover in Ponant's Southeast Asian cruise itineraries, a development that could position Iloilo on the luxury cruise map for the first time.
The delegation, led by content producer Julien Fabro, first visited Iloilo in January 2026 for a site inspection that took in the city's heritage landmarks, historical attractions, and culinary scene. That initial visit was promising enough to warrant a return engagement—a dedicated photo and video shoot from May 16 to 18 that will produce promotional content for Ponant's global audience of high‑net‑worth travelers. "Welcome back to Iloilo City, Compagnie du Ponant! This leading high‑end expedition French cruise company is considering Iloilo City as a stopover destination in their upcoming Asian cruise itineraries," Treñas said. "Let us continue to promote discipline, beauty, peace, and cleanliness so that our beloved Iloilo City will be recognized as a top tourism destination."
A Cruise Line That Chooses Its Ports Carefully
Compagnie du Ponant is not a mass‑market operator. Founded in 1988 by Jean‑Emmanuel Sauvée and a group of former French merchant navy officers, the Marseille‑based company deploys a fleet of 12 small luxury yachts and hybrid vessels that carry between 64 and 264 guests—a scale designed for intimacy rather than volume. Its itineraries span the Arctic, Antarctica, the Mediterranean, French Polynesia, and increasingly Southeast Asia. Ponant positions itself as a "luxury expedition" brand, emphasizing sustainability, cultural immersion, and access to destinations that larger vessels cannot reach. The company's interest in Iloilo is therefore not a casual inquiry but a strategic alignment: it seeks ports that offer authentic cultural experiences, walkable heritage districts, and a food scene that rewards curiosity—precisely the assets that Iloilo has spent the past decade cultivating.
Department of Tourism Region VI Director Crisanta Marlene Rodriguez described the project as a "significant opportunity" for Iloilo to "further promote its tourism offerings and reinforce its standing as a premier destination in the Philippines." She recalled that the Japanese cruise ship MV Pacific Venus was the first to dock in Iloilo, and expressed confidence that "it will not be the last." The Ponant visit, facilitated jointly by DOT Region VI, the Iloilo City Government, and the Marketing Team of the city's Local Economic Enterprise Office, forms part of a concerted push to open the cruise tourism corridor. For a city whose tourism economy has been built primarily on domestic visitors, festivals, and the MICE sector, the prospect of attracting international cruise passengers represents a new tier of visitor spending—one that typically includes higher average daily expenditures on dining, local crafts, and guided heritage tours.
A City Ready for Its Close‑Up
The locations chosen for Fabro's shoot reveal as much about Iloilo's tourism strategy as they do about Ponant's editorial priorities. The Iloilo Terminal Public Market, redeveloped through a 25‑year public‑private partnership with SM Prime Holdings at an investment of approximately ₱3 billion, now houses around 2,000 stalls in a clean, safe, and efficiently organized environment. Former Senate President Franklin Drilon, who toured the markets earlier this year, described them as being "at par with public markets found in Europe" and called them "the most beautiful markets redeveloped through public‑private partnership." For a French cruise line accustomed to the covered markets of Provence and the food halls of Barcelona, the Terminal Market offers a familiar yet distinctly Ilonggo experience—a place where tourists can encounter the region's culinary identity in its most authentic form.
Beyond the market, Iloilo City's broader tourism portfolio has been accumulating the kind of institutional recognition that international cruise operators track. The DOT Western Visayas recently named Iloilo the region's top MICE destination and recognized it as a tourism champion for promoting multidimensional tourism products. The city also received the Tourism Mover Award, the Model Tourist Attraction Award for its Iloilo River Esplanade, and the Top Contributing LGU for Same‑Day Tourist Arrivals. These are not vanity citations; they are independent assessments of a destination's readiness to handle visitor volume, provide quality experiences, and sustain the infrastructure that cruise tourism demands. The Ponant photo shoot, capturing the Esplanade's mangrove‑lined walkways and the Terminal Market's organized bustle, will now carry those credentials to a global audience of travelers who book expeditions based on curated, visually rich content.
What Luxury Cruise Tourism Could Mean for Iloilo
The economic logic of cruise tourism is well‑documented. Cruise passengers typically spend on shore excursions, local dining, handicrafts, and transport—expenditures that flow directly into the local economy rather than being absorbed by all‑inclusive resort packages. For Iloilo, a UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy, the gastronomic dimension alone represents a significant draw: Ponant's clientele, accustomed to Michelin‑starred dining aboard their ships, will encounter La Paz batchoy, pancit molo, and fresh seafood in the very markets and eateries where Ilonggos themselves eat. That authenticity, increasingly prized by the luxury travel segment, cannot be manufactured by a tourism board; it must be lived, and Iloilo lives it daily.
Mayor Treñas, who personally welcomed the Ponant delegation and thanked the LEEO Marketing Team for facilitating the tour, has made tourism a central pillar of her administration's economic strategy. The "My Heart Beats in Iloilo City" campaign, the Living Heritage Museum Tour launched in May 2026, and the city's consecutive ASEAN Clean Tourist City awards all feed into a single proposition: Iloilo is not merely a stopover between Boracay and Cebu but a destination in its own right. Compagnie du Ponant's return visit, and the content now being edited for distribution to its global booking platform, suggests that proposition is beginning to register with the international cruise industry. When a French luxury line chooses to film a public market rather than a private resort, it is not looking for what is exclusive. It is looking for what is real. In Iloilo, it appears to have found exactly that.









