Barangay Santo Niño (Mainggit)
Santo Niño, locally known by its older name Mainggit, is a Toledo City barangay with a tight community core, a strong Catholic devotional life centered on the Santo Niño chapel, and a residential-agricultural mix of land use. The barangay carries one of the city's oldest community identities and shows up prominently around the Toledo Sinulog and Santo Niño feast windows, when household orders for fiesta meals, baked goods, and pasalubong spike noticeably on Toleds.
Delivery from Santo Niño (Mainggit)
Standard coverage from Poblacion-based merchants. Typical ETAs sit in the 15 to 20 minute range outside fiesta peaks; longer windows during the Santo Niño feast period.
Local ordering notes
Family-sized orders dominate. Dinner windows, Sunday lunches, and feast-day catering are the most reliable demand patterns. Repeat-customer retention is high once a household tries the app, which makes Santo Niño (Mainggit) one of the steadier mid-city barangays for merchants planning weekly menus.
Local landmarks
- Santo Niño Chapel
- Mainggit Elementary School
Browse all Toledo City barangays
Toleds covers all 38 Toledo City barangays. Pick another barangay to see local delivery notes, ordering patterns, and landmarks.
Urban barangays
Dense, commerce-heavy barangays clustered around Poblacion. Fastest ETAs and widest merchant variety.
Coastal barangays
Barangays facing the Tañon Strait. Fishing communities, beachfront residential pockets, and seafood-leaning carinderias.
Mountain barangays
Upland Toledo barangays toward the Lutopan side. Longer delivery windows; best served by Lutopan-local merchants.
Industrial barangays
Barangays anchored by power generation, port operations, and shift-worker demand.
Mixed-use barangays
Residential cores with agricultural, light-commercial, or coastal edges. Toledo City’s steady-demand neighborhoods.