Lemery is a major municipality in Batangas. It is a commercial center for the eastern portion of western Batangas. The town lies next to and to the west of the heritage town of Taal; together they form a single urban area. The boundary runs along the Pansipit River; the river area was part of the sea until it was buried by tephra deposits from the 1755 eruption of Taal Volcano.
Lemery is largely a commercial center, with most shopping options found here. It also has more available accommodation than Taal, with a few sights around. Along with Taal, Lemery forms a minor metropolitan area, constituting the eastern commercial center for western Batangas (the others are Balayan and Nasugbu).
Lemery is thought to be named after the Spanish Governor-General José Lemery, but by folklore, is rather named after a legendary Roberto Lemery, a Spanish military captain who fell in love with the town's residents. The municipality used to be a part of nearby Taal until it was separated in 1861.
Lemery is a large municipality, including rural areas to the north, at the foot of Mount Batulao. Commercial activity is found in the Poblacion (downtown), which is divided into smaller barangays for administrative purposes, and approximately bordered by the Palanas and Pansipit rivers. Resorts and accommodations, as well as the bus stations and a new commercial district, are to the west of Poblacion. The rural area to the north houses Leisure Farms and Fantasy World.
The Taal-Lemery Bypass or Diversion Road runs along the hypoteneuse of an approximately right triangle whose short side goes through downtown Taal and long side through downtown Lemery. It is a developing area, with hotels and residential subdivisions. It also has a large new hospital; Lemery has others but Taal does not.
Getting to Lemery is easy, though for any mode of transport traffic jams in the suburbs of Manila or Batangas City often make the journey quite slow.
Lemery is served by buses from Manila, Batangas City, or Nasugbu.
Fares from Manila for either DLTB or JAM are at around from Buendia or from Cubao. Trips take about 3 hours, depending on traffic conditions.
Jeepney can also be used to reach Lemery or Taal from Batangas City, but service is infrequent and sometimes slow. Unless your budget is very tight, take the more comfortable bus instead.
For cars coming from Batangas City, Palico-Balayan-Batangas Road (Route 436) is the main route. It becomes Ilustre Avenue, the town's main street running between the Diversion Road and the boundary with Taal at Pansipit River.
Most travel within Lemery or Taal, and between the two, is by tricycle. Fares range from up to around 100.
There are also jeepney departing from near the Lemery market to Batangas City via Taal and to Nasugbo via Balayan. These are cheaper than the trikes for trips out to the suburbs, but not much use within Lemery.
All the malls have restaurants, there are fast food places both in malls and along the main street, and cheap Filipino-style carinderia in various areas, especially near the market.
There were few hotels in town a few years back, except perhaps for beach resorts, but the economic boom in Lemery resulted in increasing number of hotels spawning around. The town has become a major stopover for travellers to western Batangas. Hotels around Lemery are generally mid-range, whereas in Taal almost all available accommodation is expensive by local standards (₱2,000 and above).
There are a whole group of beach resorts somewhat north of town in the Purok area, turn left off the highway about a km beyond the bypass. The beach is black sand and underwater there is a gradual slope with few rocks and little seaweed.
There are several hospitals, including large ones across the street from Xentro Mall and out on the Taal-Lemery bypass road, and a few small ones along Illustre Street (Lemery's main drag).
Lemery is the hub location for trips to western Batangas from the east. Car travellers who went to Tagaytay first will stop at Lemery before proceeding to the rest of western Batangas or to the south to Mabini or Batangas City.
Lemery has no interesting beaches downtown, though there are some in Barangay Purok to the north. Beyond those, the highway runs along the bay to the towns of Calaca and Balayan, both of which have some beach resorts. The highway continues to Nasugbu which has many resorts.
Just south of Lemery is the heritage town of Taal, whose old downtown is designated a National Historical Landmark. Beyond it is San Luis which has beaches and resorts.
The best-known beach resort area in the region is Mabini to the south. Take the highway toward Batangas City and turn off for Mabini.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division