🇵🇭 Philippines

Philippines Visa Guide

From your 30-day visa-free stamp to the SRRV retirement visa — including the extensions process, the ACR I-Card, the ECC, and the parts of the Bureau of Immigration that nobody warns you about until you're sitting in front of a window trying to figure it out.

📅 Updated 2026
🏛️ Bureau of Immigration
📋 7 Tabs
Free on Arrival
30 Days
Most Western passports
Max Tourist Stay
36 Months
Via BI extensions
ACR I-Card Required
After 59 Days
Alien registration card
Blacklist Duration
1–10 Yrs
Up to permanent

You get 30 days free — here's what that actually means

Most Western passport holders land visa-free. The easy part is arrival. What catches people out is everything that comes after — the extension process, the ACR I-Card, the ECC before you leave. This section covers all of it.

🛬
At Arrival

What to Expect at Philippine Immigration

Philippine immigration at NAIA, Mactan-Cebu, and Clark is generally straightforward for Western nationals. Have your passport, your accommodation address, and an onward ticket accessible on your phone.

  • Fill out the arrival card on the plane or at the kiosk
  • Join the foreigner queue — usually shorter than citizen lines
  • Passport stamped with your "Authorized Stay Until" date
  • Customs: declare if carrying over ₱50,000 or equivalent in foreign currency
📏
Know Before You Go

Relaxed on Arrival, Serious Underneath

The arrival experience is welcoming — but the Bureau of Immigration enforces compliance once you're in-country. Overstaying, missing your ACR I-Card, or leaving with unpaid fines creates a record that follows you on every future visit.

  • Track your authorized stay date — it's stamped in your passport
  • Extend before expiry, not after
  • Blacklisting is real — can bar re-entry for years
  • The ECC is required to depart if you've stayed 6+ months

The extension process: step by step

The tourist visa extension system is one of the more foreigner-friendly in SEA — you can extend up to 36 months without leaving. But there's a process, and missing steps has consequences.

1

Your initial 30-day stay

You're stamped in at the airport for 30 days, free. Note your "Authorized Stay Until" date immediately — set a phone reminder 7 days before it expires. Missing it means overstay fines and a record with the BI.

2

First extension — adds 29 days (total: 59 days)

Head to any BI office before your 30 days expire. Bring your passport and the extension fee. No ACR I-Card required yet. Generally straightforward — this is the simplest step in the whole process.

~₱3,000–4,500 depending on processing speed
3

ACR I-Card required — triggered after 59 days

Your next extension requires an Alien Certificate of Registration Identity Card. First-time applicants must appear in person for biometrics (fingerprints + photo). Subsequent renewals can often be done online. The card itself costs approximately $50 USD paid in pesos.

~$50 USD ACR fee + extension fees
4

Ongoing extensions — 1-month, 2-month, or 6-month LSVVE

With your ACR I-Card, extend in 1 or 2-month increments at any BI office, or apply for the Long-Stay Visitor Visa Extension (6 months) at main offices in Manila or Cebu. Online extensions are available at e-services.immigration.gov.ph for eligible applicants.

1-month: ~₱3–4k · 2-month: ~₱4.5–6.6k · 6-month LSVVE: ~₱11,500
5

Emigration Clearance Certificate (ECC) — required to leave after 6+ months

If you've stayed more than 6 months total, you must obtain an ECC from the BI before you can depart. Build this into your timeline — don't discover this at the airport. Apply at any BI main office at least a week before your flight.

~₱710 filing fee + express lane charges if needed

Standard Processing

Leave your passport with the BI and return in 3–7 days. Less expensive but you can't travel while waiting. Works if you're locally based and don't need your passport urgently.

Lower cost3–7 day waitPassport surrendered

Express Processing

Same-day or next-day return. +₱2,000 express fee but you walk out with your passport. Worth it for most travelers who can't be without their passport for a week.

Same-dayKeep your passport+₱2,000

At the BI office: what to bring, what to expect

The BI office experience varies a lot depending on the location and what you're there for. Going prepared is the difference between a 30-minute visit and a half-day ordeal. Here's what veteran Philippines expats have learned.

What to bring for a standard extension

✅ Always required

  • Original passport
  • Last BI extension receipt (original — keep all receipts)
  • ACR I-Card (if you've passed 59 days)
  • Cash for fees + express lane if wanted
  • Completed application form (available at office)

📄 Bring just in case

  • Photocopy of your passport photo page
  • Photocopy of your last entry stamp
  • Proof of accommodation (hotel booking or lease)
  • Return or onward flight — some officers ask
  • Passport photos (2x2, white background)

❌ Common mistakes

  • Missing last receipt — always keep every BI receipt
  • Expired ACR I-Card — must be renewed before extension
  • Applying after authorized stay has already lapsed
  • Insufficient cash — no cards, no ATM guarantees
  • Wrong form filled in — ask staff before starting

BI fee structure (approximate — verify current rates)

ServiceBase FeeExpress LaneNotes
1-Month Extension~₱2,000–3,000+₱2,000Includes extension fee + misc charges
2-Month Extension~₱3,500–4,500+₱2,000More economical per month than 1-month
6-Month LSVVE~₱9,500–11,500+₱2,000Long-Stay Visitor Visa Extension — main offices only
ACR I-Card (new)~$50 USD in pesosOne-time; paid at first-time biometrics appointment
ACR I-Card (renewal)~$25 USD in pesosRequired when card expires
ECC (Emigration Clearance)~₱710+₱500–1,000Required to depart after 6+ months total stay
Overstay fine~₱500–1,010/monthAdded automatically; must be cleared before extension

Fees include base charges plus documentary stamps and miscellaneous BI fees. Actual totals vary. Always bring 20–30% more cash than the estimated amount.

Beyond tourist extensions: long-stay paths

If you're planning to stay longer than a year and want more stability than rolling extensions, the Philippines has structured long-stay visa programs. Each has different eligibility, deposit requirements, and benefits. None are as simple as the brochures suggest — but the SRRV in particular is one of the more accessible retirement programs in Asia.

🏦
Age 35+ · Bank Deposit Required

SRRV — Special Resident Retiree's Visa

Issued by the Philippine Retirement Authority (PRA). Gives indefinite stay, multiple-entry, and various exemptions including from customs duties on household goods. Requires a time deposit held in PNB (Philippine National Bank).

  • Age 35–49 with pension: $10,000 deposit
  • Age 35–49 without pension: $50,000 deposit
  • Age 50+ with pension: $10,000 deposit
  • Age 50+ without pension: $20,000 deposit
  • Application fee: ~$1,400 USD
  • Annual fee thereafter: ~$360 USD
Indefinite stayMultiple entryAge 35 minimum
💍
Married to a Filipino Citizen

13A — Spousal Immigrant Visa

If you're married to a Filipino national, the 13A gives you permanent residency. Starts as a one-year probationary visa, then converts to permanent after BI review. One of the most accessible long-stay paths available — and the document list, while substantial, is navigable.

  • PSA-authenticated marriage certificate
  • NBI clearance + FBI/home country background check (apostilled)
  • Birth certificate of Filipino spouse (PSA copy)
  • Health certificate from BI-accredited clinic
  • Proof of financial capacity
  • Passport photos (multiple sets)
1-yr probationary → permanent
💻
Remote Workers

ECA — Electronic Commerce Associate Visa

A newer category targeting digital economy and remote workers. Allows longer authorized stays. Requirements are still evolving — check the BI website for current conditions before applying. Not yet as established as the SRRV or 13A.

  • Proof of remote employment or digital business income
  • Health insurance coverage
  • Clean immigration record
  • Requirements still being refined — verify with BI directly
Requirements evolving — verify
👶
Child of Filipino Parent

13G — Former Philippine National Visa

Available to former Philippine citizens and their spouses. If you were born in the Philippines and acquired foreign citizenship, or if one of your parents was Filipino, this may be your most direct path to long-term residency. Requires a balikbayan or dual citizenship assessment first.

  • Proof of Filipino origin or prior Philippine citizenship
  • Requires BI Verification Division review
  • Can lead to permanent residency status

See the Documents tab for the full checklist

The long-stay visa document requirements are detailed — apostilled background checks, authenticated certificates, medical clearances. The Documents tab on this page covers exactly what each program needs and where to get it.

What you actually need to bring

This is where most long-stay visa applications run into trouble — not eligibility, but documentation. The Philippines requires authenticated, apostilled, and sometimes translated versions of documents that take weeks or months to obtain. Start early.

Short-stay visitor — what to carry

✅ Required at entry

  • Valid passport — 6 months validity beyond your departure date
  • Onward or return ticket (have it accessible on your phone)
  • Accommodation address for your first night
  • Sufficient funds — no official minimum stated, but have access to cash or a working card
  • Completed arrival card (filled on plane or at kiosk)

📄 Smart to carry — may be requested

  • Printed or offline copy of flight booking
  • Hotel or accommodation booking confirmation
  • Travel insurance details (policy number and emergency line)
  • Proof of funds (bank statement screenshot or card)
  • Copy of passport photo page (separate from passport)

SRRV (retirement visa) — full document checklist

Submitted to the Philippine Retirement Authority (PRA). All foreign documents must be apostilled. The PRA has its own submission requirements — verify current checklist at pra.gov.ph before applying.

📘 Identity & Background

  • Valid passport (original + photocopy)
  • Birth certificate — certified copy + apostille
  • FBI Identity History Summary (background check) + apostille from US Dept of State
  • NBI clearance if you have previous Philippines residency
  • 12 passport-size photos (2x2, white background)

💰 Financial Documents

  • Proof of pension or passive income (monthly minimum varies by age tier)
  • Pension award letter or Social Security benefit verification letter
  • Bank statements — typically 3–6 months
  • Proof of deposit placement at PNB (done during application process)

🩺 Medical & Other

  • Medical examination from a PRA-accredited clinic (done in Philippines)
  • HIV test result (required by PRA)
  • Marriage certificate + apostille (if applying with spouse)
  • Divorce decree + apostille (if applicable)
  • Application form (from PRA office or pra.gov.ph)

13A Spousal Visa — full document checklist

Submitted to the Bureau of Immigration. This list applies to the non-Filipino spouse. The Filipino spouse will also need their own documents — see below.

🌍 Foreign spouse documents

  • Valid passport (original + certified copies)
  • FBI/home country background check + apostille
  • Birth certificate + apostille
  • PSA-authenticated marriage certificate (issued in Philippines) or apostilled marriage cert if married abroad
  • Health certificate from BI-accredited clinic (includes HIV test)
  • 12 passport-size photos
  • Proof of financial capacity (bank statements or income letter)
  • Joint affidavit of support and guarantee

🇵🇭 Filipino spouse documents

  • PSA birth certificate (original)
  • Valid Philippine ID or passport
  • PSA marriage certificate
  • Community Tax Certificate (Cedula)
  • NBI clearance
  • Proof of residence
  • Barangay clearance

What "apostille" and "PSA-authenticated" mean

🔏
For Foreign Documents

Apostille

An apostille certifies that a foreign document is authentic and was issued by a legitimate authority — it's the internationally recognized authentication under the Hague Convention. For US citizens: state-issued documents are apostilled by that state's Secretary of State. Federal documents (FBI background check) are apostilled by the US Department of State in Washington, D.C.

  • Birth certificate: apostille from issuing state's SoS office
  • FBI background check: apostille from US Dept of State
  • Marriage certificate: apostille from issuing state's SoS office
📜
For Philippine Documents

PSA Authentication

Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) authentication is the local equivalent. The PSA issues security-paper copies of civil registry documents (birth certificates, marriage certificates, death certificates) that are accepted as official by the BI and PRA. Hospital-issued copies or photocopies are not accepted — it must be a PSA-issued copy specifically.

  • Order at serbilis.psa.gov.ph or PSA outlets
  • Delivery takes 1–3 weeks typically
  • For marriages registered abroad, different process applies

What happens when you overstay your visa

Overstaying in the Philippines is not a minor administrative inconvenience — it has a real fine structure, an escalation path, and consequences that follow you. The good news: if you catch it quickly and handle it properly, most overstay situations are resolvable without leaving the country.

The overstay fine structure

DurationFine ConsequencesAdditional Risk
1 day – 1 month ~₱500–2,000 in fines. Paid at the BI when you extend or at the airport when you depart. Resolvable at any BI office. Recorded on your file. Low risk if resolved promptly.
1–6 months ~₱1,010/month overstay fee accumulates. Total can reach ₱5,000–15,000+. Still resolvable in-country — pay, extend, continue. Increased scrutiny. Pattern of overstay builds a negative immigration record.
6 months – 1 year Significant accumulated fines. BI may require in-person appearance at a main office to clear before extending. Real risk of BI Commissioner-level review. Voluntary resolution strongly advisable.
Over 1 year Fines continue accumulating. BI can issue a Summary Deportation Order. Possible detention pending deportation. ⚠️ High blacklist risk. Possible multi-year or permanent bar. Immigration attorney is essential.

✅ Voluntary Disclosure — the better path

Walking into a BI office voluntarily — with the fines and an intention to regularize — is treated significantly better than being caught at the airport or during a compliance check. Demonstrating good faith matters to the officer reviewing your case.

  • Go to the nearest BI office
  • Declare your overstay situation at the window
  • Bring full documents and enough cash for estimated fines
  • Request an extension at the same time you clear the overstay
  • Get every receipt — proof of voluntary resolution matters

⚠️ Caught at Departure — harder situation

Airport departure is one of the worst places to deal with an unresolved overstay. Officers there have less discretion, time pressure is high, and fines must be paid before you can board. Longer overstays found at departure can result in:

  • Delayed or missed flight while fines are processed
  • Potential hold for BI Commissioner review
  • Deportation at your own cost
  • Name entered into deportation database
  • Formal legal process required to challenge

The Philippines blacklist — what it is, how it works, how to get off it

The Bureau of Immigration maintains an official Blacklist of foreign nationals banned from entering the Philippines. Most people who end up on it either don't know they're on it — or don't find out until they're standing at the immigration counter on a future trip. This is the plain-language guide almost no one publishes.


What gets you blacklisted

⏱️

Extended or repeated overstay

A single short overstay resolved promptly is unlikely to cause blacklisting. Overstaying by months without attempting to regularize, or repeatedly overstaying across multiple visits, is the most common path to the blacklist for foreign nationals.

📜

Deportation order

Any formal deportation order — summary (BI-issued) or court-ordered — typically results in automatic blacklisting. Duration depends on severity and the BI Commissioner's discretion at the time of the order.

⚖️

Criminal conviction or pending charges

A conviction in Philippine courts, or being the subject of an active criminal case, can result in a Hold Departure Order (HDO) and subsequent blacklisting. Drug offenses are treated with particular severity under Philippine law.

🚫

Immigration fraud

Providing false information on visa applications, using fraudulent documents, or attempting to bribe immigration officers. These carry the most severe blacklist penalties — up to permanent ban.

📢

Being deemed "undesirable"

The BI Commissioner has broad authority to blacklist any foreign national deemed undesirable. This has included individuals who publicly denigrate the Philippines, its people, or its government on social media while residing in the country.

Broad discretionIncludes social media
💸

Unpaid fines on departure

Departing while owing the BI outstanding fines — particularly if detected at the airport and refusing payment — can result in a blacklist entry even without a formal deportation order.


How long does a blacklist last?

DurationTypical CauseNotes
1 yearMinor violations — short overstay, first-time low-level infractionShortest period. Resolvable once lifted.
5 yearsSignificant overstay (6+ months), deportation order, unresolved compliance issuesMost common duration for overstay-related blacklisting.
Up to 10 yearsRepeated violations, serious immigration fraud, criminal mattersSignificant offenses. Legal challenge possible but difficult.
PermanentSevere criminal conviction, drug offenses, national security, fraud with aggravating factorsCan be petitioned to the Secretary of Justice. Removal is extremely rare in practice.
Ground Level

The 10-year blacklist provision is not theoretical — the Philippines has used it. People have been barred from returning to homes they'd built, partners they were with, and businesses they owned, because they didn't take an overstay seriously, left with unresolved fines, or made comments online deemed offensive to the country. This is not a system designed to punish good-faith visitors. But it has real teeth for people who ignore or dismiss it.


How to check if you're on the blacklist

1

In person at the BI Legal Division — most reliable

You or a legal representative can request a status check at the BI Legal Division, Intramuros, Manila. Bring your passport. This is more reliable than the online portal — not all blacklist data is visible through e-services. A representative with a notarized authorization can do this on your behalf if you're abroad.

2

Via a licensed Philippine immigration attorney

If you have any compliance history and are planning to return, an attorney running a records check before you book your flight is the sensible move. Cost is typically ₱1,500–3,000 for an initial check. Far cheaper than an 18-hour return flight on your dime.

3

BI e-Services portal — limited reliability

The BI's online portal (immigration.gov.ph) has some self-service inquiry functions but blacklist status is not always visible through online channels. Don't rely solely on a portal check if you have a serious compliance history.

Getting off the blacklist

For shorter-duration blacklists

  • Wait out the blacklist period if it's 1–2 years
  • File a Petition for Lifting of Blacklist Order with the BI
  • Show evidence that underlying issue has been resolved (fines paid, court clearance etc.)
  • Attorney representation strongly recommended even for petition filing
  • Processing: weeks to months — don't expect fast resolution

For deportation-related or permanent blacklists

  • Requires a Motion for Reconsideration to the BI Commissioner
  • May require appeal to the Secretary of Justice
  • Permanent blacklists tied to criminal convictions are extremely difficult to lift
  • This is firmly attorney territory — do not attempt to navigate this without legal representation
  • Timelines are measured in months to years

Embassies in the Philippines — and Philippine missions abroad

Whether you're a foreign national needing your home country's consular help in the Philippines, or a Filipino citizen needing a Philippine consulate abroad — here's the key contact information.

🇺🇸

US Embassy Manila

Manila, Philippines

1201 Roxas Boulevard, Ermita, Manila. Emergency citizen services available 24/7. Passport renewal, notarial services, and American Citizen Services (ACS). Book appointments through travel.state.gov.

ph.usembassy.gov →
🇬🇧

British Embassy Manila

Manila, Philippines

120 Upper McKinley Road, McKinley Hill, Taguig City. British citizen services, emergency travel documents, and consular assistance for UK nationals.

gov.uk/world/philippines →
🇦🇺

Australian Embassy Manila

Manila, Philippines

Level 23, Tower 2, RCBC Plaza, 6819 Ayala Avenue, Makati City. Emergency passport assistance, notarial services, and Australian citizen services.

philippines.embassy.gov.au →
🇨🇦

Canadian Embassy Manila

Manila, Philippines

Level 6–8, Tower 2, RCBC Plaza, 6819 Ayala Avenue, Makati City. Citizen services, emergency travel documents, and consular assistance for Canadians.

canada.ca Manila →
🇩🇪

German Embassy Manila

Manila, Philippines

25th Floor, Tower 2, RCBC Plaza, 6819 Ayala Avenue, Makati City. Passport and ID services, notarial services, and consular assistance for German nationals.

manila.diplo.de →
ℹ️

Find your country's embassy

Not listed above?

The Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs maintains the full list of foreign embassies and consulates. Most Western countries maintain at least a full embassy in Manila.

DFA Full Embassy List →

All Philippines Deep Dives

Every topic covered in depth — pick any deep dive and go straight in.

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