Not the number a content creator throws out to sell a paid consultation. Real monthly budgets across six cities, the two-economy reality that most guides skip, and what your money actually gets you — from Dumaguete to BGC.
Ask ten expats what it costs to live in the Philippines and you'll get ten different answers. One person lives on $800 a month and calls it comfortable. Another spends $3,000 and says they're being careful. Both are telling the truth. The Philippines doesn't have one cost of living — it has dozens, determined by where you live, how you live, and how well you understand the local market versus the expat market.
At the local level, the Philippines is legitimately affordable. Street food meals run ₱60–150 ($1–2.70). Jeepney and tricycle fares are cents. Local restaurants charge ₱150–350 for a full meal. Provincial rents in second-tier cities can be under ₱10,000/month ($180) for a decent furnished place.
The lifestyle adjustment conversation matters here as much as anywhere in SEA. Switching even one meal a day to local food — a Filipino breakfast and lunch rather than Western — cuts monthly food costs dramatically. It's not a sacrifice. Filipino food is genuinely good.
The Philippines has some of the highest electricity costs in Southeast Asia. MERALCO (Metro Manila and surrounding provinces) regularly charges ₱10–12/kWh. Island provinces served by electric cooperatives can charge even more. For context, Vietnam and Thailand charge roughly half this rate.
Air conditioning changes your bill dramatically. A studio with no A/C: ₱800–1,200/month. The same unit with A/C running six hours daily in summer: ₱4,000–6,000. Budget for it explicitly — it is consistently the biggest surprise for new arrivals.
| Item | Local / Street | Mid-Range | Western / Imported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Street food / carinderia meal | ₱60–150 (~$1–2.70) | ₱150–350 (local restaurant) | ₱400–900 (Western restaurant) |
| Coffee | ₱30–60 (local café) | ₱80–150 (Filipino chain) | ₱180–280 (Starbucks) |
| Local beer (store) | ₱45–65 | ₱60–120 (bar) | ₱150–280 (imported) |
| Grab ride (city, short) | ₱80–180 | ₱180–350 (longer) | — |
| Jeepney / tricycle fare | ₱13–80 | — | — |
| Monthly groceries (wet market) | ₱4,000–7,000 (~$70–125) | ₱8,000–15,000 (supermarket mix) | ₱18,000–35,000+ (imported-heavy) |
| 1L bottled water | ₱20–35 | — | — |
| Gym membership | ₱700–1,500/mo (local) | ₱1,500–2,500/mo | ₱3,000–5,000/mo (international) |
Exchange rate: ~₱56–58 per USD (2026). Prices vary significantly by city and region.
Two budget levels throughout: Local-Integrated means eating where locals eat, using local transport, renting in non-expat areas, shopping at markets. Expat-Comfortable means a modern A/C apartment, occasional Western restaurants, private transport, and private hospital access. Neither includes flights home, emergency savings, or one-time setup costs.
The most expensive base in the Philippines by a significant margin. BGC and Makati are the expat epicenters — modern, convenient, and priced accordingly. If you're not working here or specifically need the capital's infrastructure, most expats find better value elsewhere.
| Category | Local-Integrated | Expat-Comfortable | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR) | ₱12,000–18,000 | ₱35,000–70,000+ | BGC/Makati premium is real. Quezon City and Pasig offer more value. |
| Utilities | ₱3,000–5,000 | ₱6,000–12,000 | A/C use is the major variable. MERALCO rates are among the highest in Asia. |
| Food | ₱6,000–10,000 | ₱18,000–35,000 | Carinderia meals: ₱60–100. Western restaurant mains: ₱400–900. |
| Transport | ₱2,000–4,000 | ₱8,000–15,000 | MRT/LRT is cheap. Grab adds up fast. Car ownership means fuel + parking + traffic. |
| Health Insurance | ₱4,000–6,000 | ₱8,000–18,000 | Age-dependent. International cover costs more but is worth it. |
| Internet & Phone | ₱1,500–2,000 | ₱2,000–3,500 | Fiber available in most condo areas. PLDT, Globe, Converge compete here. |
| Monthly Total | ~$530–780 | ~$1,400–2,800+ | Manila range is wide. Location within Metro Manila matters enormously. |
The Philippines' second city and the most practical expat base in the Visayas. Good infrastructure, a growing IT and BPO sector, beaches within 30 minutes, and costs well below Manila. Cebu IT Park and Lahug are the expat-popular areas. Mactan Island is quieter and closer to the airport.
| Category | Local-Integrated | Expat-Comfortable | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR) | ₱8,000–14,000 | ₱20,000–45,000 | IT Park area commands a premium. Older Cebu City neighbourhoods are significantly cheaper. |
| Utilities | ₱2,500–4,500 | ₱5,000–10,000 | Visayas electricity rates can be higher than Luzon. A/C is the main driver. |
| Food | ₱5,000–9,000 | ₱15,000–28,000 | Lechon capital of the Philippines. Street food and local restaurants are excellent and cheap. |
| Transport | ₱1,500–3,000 | ₱5,000–10,000 | Grab is widely available. Jeepneys and habal-habal (motorbike taxis) cover gaps. |
| Health Insurance | ₱4,000–6,000 | ₱7,000–16,000 | Chong Hua and Cebu Doctors are the go-to private hospitals for expats. |
| Internet & Phone | ₱1,200–1,800 | ₱1,800–3,000 | Converge has strong fiber coverage in Cebu. Globe LTE is reliable as backup. |
| Monthly Total | ~$400–680 | ~$1,000–2,000 | One of the best value-to-infrastructure ratios in the Philippines. |
Bohol is one of the most common sticker-shock destinations for expats who move there expecting provincial pricing. It has the Chocolate Hills, world-class diving, and genuine charm — but the island's economy is built around tourism, and that pricing bleeds into everyday life. Groceries cost more because most are shipped in. Restaurants near Alona Beach and Panglao charge tourist prices by default. Tagbilaran City is more grounded, but the island-wide premium is real.
| Category | Local-Integrated | Expat-Comfortable | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR) | ₱8,000–14,000 | ₱18,000–35,000 | Tagbilaran is cheapest. Panglao and beach-adjacent areas carry a steep premium. |
| Utilities | ₱3,500–6,000 | ₱7,000–14,000 | Island electricity is significantly more expensive than mainland Luzon. Brownouts more frequent. |
| Food | ₱6,000–10,000 | ₱18,000–30,000 | Tourist-area restaurants add 30–60% premium. Tagbilaran public market keeps costs reasonable. |
| Transport | ₱2,000–4,000 | ₱6,000–12,000 | No Grab. Tricycles and habal-habal are the default. Scooter or car is almost essential. |
| Health Insurance | ₱4,000–6,000 | ₱7,000–16,000 | Serious cases often require transfer to Cebu. Factor this into your coverage decisions. |
| Internet & Phone | ₱1,200–2,000 | ₱2,000–3,500 | Connectivity patchier than Cebu. Fiber limited to Tagbilaran and some areas. |
| Monthly Total | ~$450–720 | ~$1,100–2,200 | Higher than Cebu with less infrastructure. The lifestyle tradeoff is real — choose deliberately. |
Consistently ranked among the most affordable expat cities in Southeast Asia. A university town with a calm pace, a small but established foreign community, and costs that genuinely reflect local economic conditions rather than tourism pricing. The trade-off is limited infrastructure compared to Cebu — fewer hospital options, patchier internet in some areas, and a smaller social scene.
| Category | Local-Integrated | Expat-Comfortable | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR) | ₱5,000–9,000 | ₱12,000–22,000 | Some of the most affordable decent housing in the Visayas. Sea-view units add a premium. |
| Utilities | ₱2,500–4,000 | ₱4,500–8,000 | NORECO cooperative rates. Brownouts occur but are generally manageable. |
| Food | ₱4,000–7,000 | ₱10,000–18,000 | Excellent local food scene along the boulevard. Market shopping stretches budgets significantly. |
| Transport | ₱1,000–2,000 | ₱3,000–6,000 | Tricycles dominate. No Grab. Most long-term expats rent or buy a scooter. |
| Health Insurance | ₱3,500–5,500 | ₱6,000–14,000 | Silliman University Medical Center is the main option. Serious cases go to Cebu. |
| Internet & Phone | ₱1,000–1,500 | ₱1,500–2,500 | Fiber available in parts of the city. Globe and PLDT compete. Generally reliable in city centre. |
| Monthly Total | ~$320–520 | ~$680–1,300 | Consistently one of the most affordable liveable cities in the Philippines. |
The largest city in Mindanao and consistently rated among the safest cities in the Philippines. Lower costs than the Visayas, a modern city centre, and a growing expat scene. The perception of Mindanao as unsafe is largely outdated for Davao specifically. That said, the expat community and international infrastructure are smaller than Cebu.
| Category | Local-Integrated | Expat-Comfortable | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR) | ₱6,000–11,000 | ₱15,000–28,000 | Ecoland and Matina are the expat-preferred areas. Good value versus comparable Cebu areas. |
| Utilities | ₱2,500–4,000 | ₱5,000–9,000 | DASURECO and DLPC cover the city. Generally more stable power supply than island provinces. |
| Food | ₱4,500–8,000 | ₱12,000–22,000 | Known for exceptional fruit — pomelo and durian capital of the Philippines. Local food is cheap and good. |
| Transport | ₱1,500–3,000 | ₱4,000–8,000 | Grab is available. Jeepneys and tricycles fill gaps. Traffic manageable vs Manila. |
| Health Insurance | ₱3,500–5,500 | ₱6,500–15,000 | San Pedro Hospital and Davao Doctors are the main private options. |
| Internet & Phone | ₱1,200–1,800 | ₱1,800–3,000 | Fiber expanding. PLDT and Globe both have reasonable coverage across the city. |
| Monthly Total | ~$360–580 | ~$820–1,600 | Underrated value. Lower costs than Cebu with a genuine city feel and good safety record. |
One of the most underrated expat cities in the Philippines. A clean, well-organised city with a strong food culture, good universities, a manageable pace, and costs that sit comfortably below Cebu. The expat community is smaller but growing. Direct flights from Manila and a handful of international connections make it accessible.
| Category | Local-Integrated | Expat-Comfortable | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (1BR) | ₱6,000–10,000 | ₱14,000–28,000 | Mandurriao and Jaro are the go-to expat areas. Good supply of modern condos at reasonable rates. |
| Utilities | ₱2,500–4,000 | ₱5,000–9,000 | More stable than island provinces. PECO covers most of the city. |
| Food | ₱4,500–8,000 | ₱12,000–22,000 | Iloilo is considered one of the food capitals of the Philippines. La Paz Batchoy alone is worth the trip. |
| Transport | ₱1,200–2,500 | ₱4,000–8,000 | Grab available. Well-laid-out city makes it easier to navigate than most. Traffic is relatively tame. |
| Health Insurance | ₱3,500–5,500 | ₱6,000–14,000 | Western Visayas Medical Center and St. Paul's Hospital are the main private options. |
| Internet & Phone | ₱1,000–1,600 | ₱1,600–2,800 | Fiber infrastructure improving. Converge expanding coverage. Generally reliable in city centre. |
| Monthly Total | ~$340–560 | ~$800–1,600 | Excellent quality of life to cost ratio. Genuinely underrated by the wider expat community. |
Food is where the two-economy gap in the Philippines is most visible. At street level and in local restaurants, eating in the Philippines is genuinely cheap and genuinely good. The moment you cross into Western restaurants, imported groceries, and tourist-area dining, you're paying prices that match or exceed back home.
A carinderia meal (the Filipino equivalent of a local canteen) runs ₱60–120 — rice, a protein, and a side. Street food like fish balls, kwek-kwek, and isaw: ₱5–25 per piece. A full Filipino breakfast (sinangag, egg, and a protein) at a local place: ₱80–150. Halo-halo on a hot day: ₱60–100.
Eating predominantly local: ₱4,500–8,000/month ($80–145) including all meals and snacks. This is the genuine local cost. The food is good — sinigang, kare-kare, lechon, adobo, fresh seafood — not survival rations.
A Western-style restaurant main in Manila runs ₱400–900. A burger and beer at an expat bar: ₱500–900. Starbucks coffee: ₱180–280. Imported wine at a restaurant: ₱400–900 per glass.
Imported groceries at Rustans, S&R, or specialty import stores cost the same as or more than back home — branded cereal, imported cheese, cold cuts, wine, specific medications. A Western-heavy grocery run in Manila: ₱18,000–35,000/month ($320–625). The import logistics markup is real and consistent.
The most practical food strategy in the Philippines is one you can implement immediately without any sacrifice: keep at least one — ideally two — meals a day Filipino. A Filipino breakfast (garlic rice, egg, longanisa or tocino) and lunch (a carinderia meal or tapsihan) costs ₱150–250 total. That's $2.70–$4.50 for two meals, eaten well.
Your dinner can then be whatever you want — Western, Japanese, whatever — without guilt, because you've already saved it elsewhere. Over a month, the difference between two local meals a day versus two Western meals a day is ₱15,000–25,000 ($270–450). Over a year, that's real money.
Wet markets vs. supermarkets: Buying fresh produce, protein, and staples at the local wet market costs 30–50% less than the same items at a supermarket, with no quality reduction. Find your nearest public market in the first week — it will be one of the best financial decisions you make.
Transport in the Philippines is shaped by one unavoidable fact: it's an archipelago of 7,600 islands. Getting around within a city is one cost calculation. Getting between islands — by ferry, RORO, or budget flight — is another entirely. And in cities without Grab (most provincial areas), a scooter isn't a preference, it's a practical necessity.
In most Philippine cities outside Metro Manila, owning or renting a scooter is the single best financial and practical transport decision you can make. No Grab in Dumaguete, Bohol, or most smaller cities means tricycles and habal-habal (motorbike taxis) for occasional use — but daily dependence on them adds up. A second-hand scooter (Honda Click, Yamaha Mio) costs ₱40,000–70,000 ($715–1,250). Monthly fuel and maintenance: ₱1,500–3,000 ($27–54). Compare that to ₱3,000–8,000/month on hired transport.
Follow traffic laws, wear a helmet always (it's the law and it keeps you alive), and get insurance. Philippine roads and traffic patterns are different from Western driving — take it seriously, especially early on.
A second-hand car in the Philippines starts around ₱250,000–400,000 ($4,500–7,000) for something reliable. New cars: ₱700,000–1,500,000+ ($12,500–26,800). Add insurance (₱15,000–40,000/year), fuel (₱4,000–10,000/month depending on usage), registration, and in Manila, parking fees and the cost of sitting in traffic. Car ownership makes sense if you have a family or specific professional needs. For single expats in most cities, a scooter plus occasional Grab is significantly cheaper.
| Transport Type | Typical Cost | Available In | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jeepney | ₱13–30/ride | Most cities | Fixed routes, extremely cheap, no A/C |
| Tricycle | ₱20–80/ride | Provincial cities, barangays | Short distances. Negotiate fare first. |
| Habal-habal (motorbike taxi) | ₱30–150/ride | Provincial areas, islands | Common where Grab doesn't reach |
| Grab car | ₱80–350/ride | Metro Manila, Cebu, Davao, Iloilo | Fixed fare, metered — no haggling |
| Scooter (own, monthly cost) | ₱1,500–3,000/mo | Everywhere | Fuel + maintenance; excludes purchase price |
| Inter-island ferry / RORO | ₱200–800 | Between islands | Budget option; travel time can be long |
| Budget domestic flight | ₱800–3,000 | Major airports | Cebu Pacific, AirAsia — book early for best fares |
Numbers without context are just numbers. Here's what different budget levels translate to in practical daily life — using Cebu City as the reference point since it represents the middle ground of the Philippine expat experience. Metro Manila runs 30–50% higher; Dumaguete and smaller provincial cities run 20–35% lower.
Basic furnished room or small studio, local food only, tricycles and jeepneys, no A/C or minimal use, local SIM data only. Possible but requires discipline and genuine local knowledge. Not recommended as a starting budget.
Decent 1BR with A/C, mix of local and occasional Western food, Grab for transport, basic health insurance, fiber internet. The sweet spot for most long-term expats in mid-tier cities.
Modern condo in a good area, regular restaurant meals, car rental or own vehicle, comprehensive health insurance, gym membership, regular trips within the country.
Premium BGC/Makati condo or Cebu IT Park unit, frequent dining out, own car, premium insurance, flights home 2x/year, full Western lifestyle with imported goods.
The overview above gives you the framework. Each guide below goes deep on a single topic — with real provider names, current prices, and the practical details you actually need.
The things Philippine expat blogs bury, Facebook groups argue about, and the retirement-abroad YouTube channels never quite get around to saying directly.
Use cash at: wet markets, street food stalls, tricycles, jeepneys, sari-sari stores, smaller local restaurants, provincial areas. The Philippines remains heavily cash-driven outside Metro Manila and major city centres.
Use card or GCash at: SM, Ayala, and Robinsons malls, major supermarkets, Grab rides, larger restaurants, hotel bills. GCash (the dominant Filipino e-wallet) is increasingly accepted at places that don't take cards — download it and link a local account as soon as you can.
ATM strategy: BDO, BPI, and Metrobank are the most reliable for foreign card withdrawals. Fees vary but expect ₱200–250 per withdrawal plus your home bank's fees. Withdraw larger amounts less frequently. Wise Debit and Charles Schwab are the best foreign cards for minimising fees.
In tourist areas, beach towns, and expat enclaves, prices for housing, food, and services are often set with foreigners in mind. An apartment listed on an international platform in Makati can be three times the price of an equivalent unit found through a local Facebook group. A taxi from a boat dock can cost six times what a Filipino passenger pays for the same ride if you don't know the fixed rates.
The solution is straightforward: spend time learning local prices before you commit to anything, and use the same platforms and channels locals use wherever possible. Having a Filipino partner, friend, or colleague negotiate on your behalf makes a measurable difference. This isn't unique to the Philippines — it's true across SEA — but the gap is wide here.
1. Eat Filipino at least once a day. Two local meals a day versus two Western meals a day saves ₱15,000–25,000/month ($270–450). The food is legitimately good. This isn't a sacrifice — it's an upgrade in cultural connection and a major budget lever.
2. Get a scooter outside Metro Manila. In most Philippine cities and islands outside Manila, a scooter is the financially rational transport choice. The monthly cost difference versus regular hired transport is ₱2,000–6,000/month ($36–107) once you own it outright. Wear your helmet — it's the law and it's the thing that keeps you alive.
3. Shop wet markets for staples. The cost gap between wet market and supermarket in the Philippines is 30–50% on produce, protein, and basics. Find your nearest public market in week one and make it a habit.
4. Live one neighbourhood away from the expat zone. The rent premium for living in BGC, IT Park, or beachfront tourist areas is real and significant. A motorbike makes the distance to those areas almost irrelevant while keeping your rent in a completely different range.
Every topic covered in depth — pick any deep dive and go straight in.
SRRV, 13A, tourist visa extensions, ACR I-Card, and what BI process actually looks like.
Read the full guide →Manila vs Cebu vs Davao vs Dumaguete. Monthly budgets — city by city.
You are here →Lease terms, deposits, foreigner property law, and city-by-city rental ranges.
Read the full guide →Private hospital networks, health insurance options, PhilHealth for foreigners.
Read the full guide →What Filipino food actually is, where expats eat, and local food geography by region.
Read the full guide →MRT/LRT, Grab pricing, jeepney modernization, inter-island ferries, budget flights.
Read the full guide →MERALCO electricity costs, internet providers, water, and why your bill might shock you.
Read the full guide →Malls, wet markets, pasalubong culture, skin tax reality for foreigner pricing.
Read the full guide →Opening a bank account, Wise transfers, GCash and Maya for expats.
Read the full guide →Importing belongings, balikbayan boxes, customs duties, what gets stopped.
Read the full guide →Island-hopping logistics, domestic airlines, ferries, and hidden gems.
Read the full guide →