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Jurisdiction Monitor / Asia-Pacific / Philippines

Philippines [PH]

Corporate tax, FATF status, sanctions exposure, data-protection law and arbitration enforceability for Philippines — the facts a founder or counsel checks before incorporating or signing cross-border. Last reviewed 2026-06-10.

Corporate tax rate
25%
FATF status
compliant
Sanctions exposure
No
Data-protection law
DPA 2012
New York Convention
Yes
Apostille Convention (1961)
Yes
Foreign ownership
No
Local director requirement
Yes

Corporate tax rate in Philippines

The headline corporate income tax rate in Philippines is 25%. Free zones, small-business reliefs and participation exemptions can change the effective rate — treat this as the starting point.

FATF status in Philippines

Philippines is FATF-compliant and not on the grey list, which generally means smoother bank onboarding.

Sanctions exposure in Philippines

Philippines is not subject to broad sectoral sanctions programs in our dataset.

Data-protection law in Philippines

The applicable data-protection statute is DPA 2012 (in force since 2012). If you process EU/UK personal data you also need a valid transfer mechanism into Philippines.

New York Convention in Philippines

Philippines is a party to the 1958 New York Convention, so a foreign arbitral award can generally be enforced by local courts — the single most important box to tick before agreeing to arbitration with a counterparty here.

Apostille Convention (1961) in Philippines

Philippines is a party to the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention. Public documents — corporate certificates, powers of attorney, notarised papers — need only a single apostille to be recognised in other member states, with no consular legalisation. This materially speeds up cross-border paperwork.

Foreign ownership in Philippines

100% foreign ownership is restricted in Philippines — a local partner or specific structure is typically required. Price this into the setup.

Local director requirement in Philippines

Philippines requires a resident/local director. This adds real cost and a governance dependency — include it in the structure.

Draft a contract under Philippines law

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Informational resource, curated by the Ignito legal practice and cross-checked against primary sources — not legal advice. Rules change; verify before you sign. ← Back to the monitor

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