Understanding your tax obligations in the Philippines
You're a Resident Alien if you:
Tax Obligation: Taxed on Philippine-sourced income only (not worldwide income)
You're a Non-Resident Alien if you:
Tax Obligation: 25% flat rate on Philippine-sourced income
| Annual Taxable Income (PHP) | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| ₱0 - ₱250,000 | 0% (Exempt) |
| ₱250,001 - ₱400,000 | 15% of excess over ₱250,000 |
| ₱400,001 - ₱800,000 | ₱22,500 + 20% of excess over ₱400,000 |
| ₱800,001 - ₱2,000,000 | ₱102,500 + 25% of excess over ₱800,000 |
| ₱2,000,001 - ₱8,000,000 | ₱402,500 + 30% of excess over ₱2M |
| Over ₱8,000,000 | ₱2,202,500 + 35% of excess over ₱8M |
The Philippines does NOT tax worldwide income. As a resident alien, you're only taxed on income earned within the Philippines. Foreign pension, investment income, and income from work performed abroad is NOT taxable.
| Income Type | Taxable in Philippines? |
|---|---|
| Salary from Philippine employer | Yes - Withheld at source |
| Freelance income from PH clients | Yes - Must file returns |
| Rental income from PH property | Yes - Must file returns |
| Interest from PH bank accounts | Yes - 20% final tax (withheld) |
| Foreign pension | No |
| Remote work for foreign employer | Gray area - technically no if work is for foreign benefit |
| Foreign dividends/investments | No |
| Capital gains on PH property sale | Yes - 6% of selling price |
You need to register with BIR and get a TIN if you:
The Philippines has tax treaties with many countries that may reduce withholding rates or prevent double taxation:
Major treaty partners: USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, France, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and 35+ other countries.
To claim treaty benefits, you typically need a Certificate of Residence from your home country.
If your only income is foreign pension or foreign investments, you likely have zero Philippine tax liability. The Philippines does not tax:
However, you may still have tax obligations in your home country. Consult a cross-border tax specialist.