Philippines Expat & Visa Guide 2026

A practical breakdown of your long-term stay options in the Philippines β€” visas, residency, and honest expat tips.

Visas, Residency & Expat Life

A practical breakdown of your long-term stay options in the Philippines, updated for 2025–2026.

πŸ–οΈ Tourist / Visitor Visa (9a) Short-term

Up to 30 days initially, extendable to 36 months total at Bureau of Immigration offices.

  • βœ” Most popular entry path
  • βœ” No minimum deposit required
  • ⚠ Extension fees apply (~$25–$60/extension)
  • ⚠ Not a permanent solution for long-term residents
Read: How to Extend Your Tourist Visa β†’

🏑 SRRV Retirement Visa Long-term

Special Resident Retiree's Visa. Age 40+ (as of Sept 2025). Permanent, renewable residency.

  • βœ” Indefinite stay β€” no annual renewal
  • βœ” Multiple entry, duty-free import of household goods
  • βœ” Principal applicants age 40+ (expanded program)
  • πŸ’΅ Deposit varies by SRRV category, age bracket, and pension status. Check PRA's current schedule for exact amounts
  • πŸ’΅ Principal processing/service fee: US$1,400 (per PRA)
  • ⚠ Deposit and fee requirements change β€” always verify with PRA directly β†’
Read: SRRV Requirements Deep Dive β†’

πŸ’» Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) EO 86 β€” 2025

Created via Executive Order No. 86 (signed April 2025). Designed for remote workers employed by or earning from companies outside the Philippines. Note: Some implementation details (income thresholds, exact application process) were still being finalized as of early 2026. Verify current status with the Bureau of Immigration before applying.

  • βœ” Up to 1 year, renewable once (2 years max)
  • βœ” Multiple-entry privileges
  • βœ” Legal framework for remote workers (previously a grey area)
  • πŸ’΅ Expected to require proof of sufficient foreign income, health insurance, and clean criminal record
  • ⚠ May not engage in local employment. Check the Bureau of Immigration for the latest requirements and application status
Read: Digital Nomad Visa Guide β†’

πŸ’ 13a Spouse / Immigrant Visa Permanent

For foreign nationals married to a Filipino citizen. One of the most common long-term visa routes.

  • βœ” Permanent residency after 2 years on probationary 13a
  • βœ” No deposit requirement
  • βœ” Work rights (unlike SRRV)
  • ⚠ Requires valid marriage certificate, police clearances, medicals
Read: 13A Marriage Visa Guide β†’

🏒 SIRV / SRRV Investor Visa Investment

Special Investor's Resident Visa β€” for those investing $75,000+ in BOI/PEZA-registered enterprises.

  • βœ” Permanent residency for investor + dependents
  • βœ” Multiple entry privileges
  • ⚠ Higher financial threshold
  • β„Ή Best with legal assistance

πŸŽ“ Student / Missionary / Other Special

Various long-term visas for students, missionaries, journalists, and others with documented purpose.

  • βœ” Tied to enrollment, organization, or accreditation
  • βœ” Extensions available through BI
  • β„Ή Visit Bureau of Immigration β†’

πŸ“– Visa Deep Dives

Detailed blog guides for each visa type β€” step-by-step processes, fees, and practical tips.

Tourist Visa Extension
Step-by-step extension process + BI e-services
SRRV Retirement Visa
Categories, eligibility, and PRA process
13A Marriage Visa
Probationary to permanent for American spouses
Digital Nomad Visa (EO 86)
Requirements, costs, and best cities
Balikbayan Privilege
One-year stay for Filipino-Americans
SE Asia Visa Guide
Every country's rules for Americans

πŸ’‘ Practical Tips from Long-Term Expats

1

Don't plan to work locally

Most professional jobs are restricted to Filipino citizens. Plan to work remotely, freelance, or have retirement income before moving.

2

Check internet before signing a lease

Fiber is excellent in cities, spotty in provinces. Ask neighbors β€” don't rely on landlord assurances. PLDT, Globe, and Converge are the main providers.

3

Foreigners can't own land

Foreign nationals cannot own land in the Philippines. You can own a condo unit (up to 40% foreign-owned building). Long-term leases (up to 50 years) are an alternative.

4

Electricity is expensive

Power costs are among the highest in Asia β€” about $0.18–0.22/kWh. Budget for AC usage carefully. This is often the budget-buster expats don't expect.

5

Get private health insurance

PhilHealth (government insurance) may be required for foreign nationals holding certain immigration documents (e.g., SRRV holders, ACR I-Card holders). Coverage is basic. Get international or supplemental private coverage for real protection.

6

Traffic in Manila is real

Metro Manila ranks among Asia's worst traffic cities. Most long-term expats choose to live in BGC, Makati, or Pasig to minimize commute, or move to Cebu/Davao entirely.

7

Build up a local emergency fund

Typhoon season runs June–November. Having 3–6 months of cash reserve locally is smart. Power outages and flooding can disrupt daily life in some areas.

8

Learn basic Filipino (Tagalog)

English gets you everywhere, but even 20 Tagalog phrases earns enormous goodwill. "Salamat" (thank you), "Magkano?" (how much?), and "Saan?" (where?) go a long way.

9

Budget serious time for any government paperwork

This one comes from firsthand experience. Getting IDs, registering documents, transferring titles, or handling anything at a Philippine government office is rarely a one-trip affair. Offices frequently don't share data with each other β€” so expect to visit multiple agencies, collect different sets of requirements from each, and in many cases be told to come back tomorrow.

The process is the same even for Filipinos. A Filipina navigating ID renewals or civil registry documents can easily make 3–5 trips across different offices for what should be a straightforward task. The cultural term is palakasan β€” things tend to move faster when you have a personal connection inside the relevant office. As an expat without that network, your main tools are patience, a complete folder of every document you could possibly need, and not booking any flights around a government deadline.

πŸ›‘οΈ

Travel & Health Insurance for Nomads & Expats

SafetyWing offers affordable travel medical insurance designed for remote workers and expats β€” covers 180+ countries including the Philippines. Plans start at $45/month.

Get Covered
πŸ“¬

Get the Free Philippines Moving Checklist

Join expats and travelers getting weekly tips on living in the Philippines β€” cost of living updates, visa changes, destination guides, and deals we find along the way. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Subscribe Free β†’

Free forever Β· Weekly updates Β· 1-click unsubscribe