Neighbours report how each stretch of the mountain road is right now — the Sagada spur, the Halsema legs and the Banaue way out — alongside the DPWH's official advisories.
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From Town Tools. For the current version, visit https://www.town.tools/sagada-mountain-province-ph/is-the-road-clear
One mountain road connects Sagada to everywhere else, and in the wet season it can be slow, fogged or cut — often before any official page says so. Here neighbours, drivers and guides say how each stretch is right now. Tap a stretch to report it clear, slow going or blocked — and check before you set out.
Reading is free. To add a report you sign in, so the board stays honest.
Tap a road to say how it is right now.
Dantay–Sagada Road
The spur from the Dantay junction on the Halsema up into town — Sagada's own driveway, and the first stretch to matter when anything falls.
No reports yet
Sagada–Bontoc (via Dantay)
The everyday run to the provincial capital — the hospital, the banks, the market — about an hour down the Chico valley.
No reports yet
Halsema north: Bontoc–Sabangan–Abatan
The Mountain Province leg of the Baguio–Bontoc road, climbing from the Chico valley to the Abatan junction in Buguias.
No reports yet
Halsema south: Abatan–Atok–Baguio
The Benguet leg — includes the Pilando section that collapsed in August 2024 and the high ridge at Atok, the fog belt every Baguio bus crosses.
No reports yet
Bontoc–Banaue Road
The eastern way out towards Ifugao and the Manila buses — the alternative when the Halsema is cut, when it isn't cut itself.
These are neighbours, not an official service. Live closures and incidents are here: DPWH – Cordillera — The DPWH clears and closes national roads and posts storm-by-storm advisories on its Cordillera Facebook page; the Sagada Tourism Office (tourism.sagada.gov.ph) carries the municipality's own travel advisories.Report a hazard: 911
How this works
Each report counts for about 6 hours, then drops off on its own. A road shows once at least 1 recent report is in; when several are in we show the middle one, so a single voice can’t swing it.
These are neighbours, not an official service, and a quiet board doesn't mean every stretch is clear — it may just mean nobody has reported yet. In a life-threatening emergency call 911. For disaster help in Mountain Province, the PDRRMO answers on 0920-946-3373 (Smart) and 0977-834-6308 (Globe). The official road status comes from the DPWH and the municipality — heavy rain from June to October can close any of these stretches with little warning, so on a stormy day confirm before a long trip.