₱ 58.96 million (2020), 26.15 million (2012), 28.28 million (2013), 32.05 million (2014), 36.31 million (2015), 39.59 million (2016), 45.79 million (2017), 49.02 million (2018), 52.39 million (2019), 63.01 million (2021), 95.6 million (2022)
₱ 95.25 million (2020), 63 million (2012), 69.76 million (2013), 32.14 million (2014), 37.32 million (2015), 37.73 million (2016), 48.75 million (2017), 66.92 million (2018), 82.34 million (2019), 97.43 million (2021), 234.5 million (2022)
₱ 34.2 million (2020), 19.45 million (2012), 21.21 million (2013), 24.42 million (2014), 27.62 million (2015), 30.2 million (2016), 32.16 million (2017), 31.14 million (2018), 41.4 million (2019), 43.36 million (2021), 76.99 million (2022)
₱ 11.96 million (2020), 5.877 million (2012), 6.187 million (2013), 5.559 million (2014), 10.08 million (2015), 7.585 million (2016), 8.549 million (2017), 12.51 million (2018), 21.9 million (2019), 30.66 million (2021), 67.55 million (2022)
Tagapul-an, officially the Municipality of Tagapul-an (Cebuano: Lungsod sa Tagapul-an; Waray: Bungto han Tagapul-an; Tagalog: Bayan ng Tagupul-an), is a municipality in the province of Samar, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 8,805 people.[3]
It is the farthest municipality from the province's mainland.
History
The island of Tagapul-an was originally part of the municipality of Almagro. Tagapul-an was established as a municipality of Western Samar on November 15, 1976. It originally consisted of 11 barangays: Baguin, Balocawe, Guimbarocan, Langbaybay, Luna, Mataloto, Nipa, Pantalan, Polangbato, San Vicente, and Sugod, which was designated as the municipal seat of government.[5]
Geography
Barangays
Tagapul-an is politically subdivided into 14 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.