The vast majority of goods, services, and imports in the Philippines are subject to a value-added tax (VAT), which makes VAT a core consideration for any business selling into the market. In 2024, VAT collections totaled almost 644 billion Philippine pesos (PHP) and made up about 22.6% of total national tax revenues. While the rate itself is fixed, companies should understand how to register for VAT in the Philippines, what transactions are VAT-taxable or exempt, and how VAT compliance and refunds actually work in practice.
Below, we explain how the Philippines VAT rate works from a business perspective: registration thresholds, taxable goods and services, filing and payment requirements, refund eligibility, and more.
What’s in this article?
- What is the Philippines VAT rate?
- What is a Philippines VAT number, and when is it required?
- When are businesses required to register for VAT in the Philippines?
- What goods and services are subject to VAT in the Philippines?
- How does VAT registration work in the Philippines?
- How is VAT filed in the Philippines?
- How do VAT refunds work in the Philippines?
- How Stripe Tax can help
What is the Philippines VAT rate?
The Philippines typically applies a 12% VAT to the sales of goods and services, as well as to imports. It’s a flat rate, which means there are no reduced or tiered VAT rates depending on product type. This makes the system simpler than in many other countries.
What is a Philippines VAT number, and when is it required?
In the Philippines, VAT-registered businesses receive a Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR)–issued tax identification number (TIN), which serves as their official VAT number. It’s used to signal that a business is registered, compliant, and authorized to charge VAT. It’s required on all VAT returns, payments, refund applications, and correspondence with the BIR. Business customers often require a supplier’s VAT number to confirm VAT registration before recognizing input VAT credits.
When are businesses required to register for VAT in the Philippines?
Businesses must register for VAT once gross sales or receipts exceed 3 million PHP in any rolling 12-month period, regardless of business structure or industry. The BIR looks at actual or reasonably expected revenue, which means fast-growing businesses can have VAT obligations midyear. Businesses earning less than 3 million PHP might still choose to register for VAT. This helps them recover VAT paid on operating expenses, capital equipment, or imported goods.
If your business regularly imports goods for resale, VAT registration can offset import VAT against output VAT, so you don’t absorb it as a cost. Nonresident businesses that supply digital services to customers in the Philippines are required to register for VAT once Philippine-sourced sales exceed 3 million PHP, even if they have no local entity.
Businesses that delay VAT registration risk penalties, interest, and the loss of input VAT credits, which can quickly outweigh any short-term benefit of staying unregistered.
What goods and services are subject to VAT in the Philippines?
The system in the Philippines assumes transactions are taxable unless a specific exemption or zero-rating applies, which means businesses should usually assume VAT responsibility.
Here’s a list of what’s included under VAT:
Sale of goods in the Philippines: Most tangible goods sold domestically are subject to 12% VAT, including manufactured products, retail items, and wholesale goods, whether sold for cash, on credit, or through installment arrangements.
Importation of goods: Goods imported into the Philippines are subject to VAT at customs based on the total landed value, including duties and other charges, regardless of whether the importer is VAT-registered.
Sale of services: Services performed in the Philippines are generally subject to VAT, including professional services, consulting, IT services, advertising, leasing, and digital services supplied to Philippine customers.
Lease or sale of properties: Commercial property leases and sales are VAT-taxable, while residential property is subject to VAT only if the selling price exceeds the statutory price threshold of 3.6 million PHP. Lower-priced residential housing is VAT-exempt.
Deemed sales: Certain noncash transactions, such as the transfer of goods to branches, consignment arrangements, or the use of business assets for nonbusiness purposes, are subject to VAT.
Zero-rated sales: Export sales of goods and qualifying services rendered to foreign clients are subject to VAT at 0%, which means no VAT is charged, but input VAT can still be recovered.
Specific categories in the Philippines are fully exempt from VAT, including unprocessed agricultural products sold by producers, education services, most healthcare services, financial and insurance services, public transportation, and certain government-related transactions. For these sales, no VAT is charged, and input VAT can’t be recovered.
How does VAT registration work in the Philippines?
VAT registration is a formal step that ties your business to the Philippine tax system and enables you to charge and recover VAT. Here’s how it works.
Register with the Bureau of Internal Revenue
Businesses register for VAT by filing the appropriate BIR registration form for their entity type and selecting VAT as the tax type. Existing businesses update their registration when they cross the VAT threshold. Foreign businesses that supply digital services to customers in the Philippines can register through an easier BIR process without establishing a local entity, provided they meet VAT registration thresholds.
Registration is handled through the BIR revenue district office with jurisdiction over the business’s principal place of operations, which becomes the point of contact for audits and correspondence. From 2024, businesses no longer have to pay an annual registration fee.
Receive tax identification number and certificate of registration
Every VAT-registered business receives a BIR–issued TIN, which serves as its official VAT number and tax identity across all filings. The standard TIN consists of nine digits, with an additional three-digit branch code if the business operates multiple branches; the branch code identifies where a transaction is recorded. Once the business’s registration is approved, the BIR issues a certificate of registration listing the business’s TIN and tax types, including VAT. This certificate must be displayed at the place of business.
Initiate VAT invoicing authority
After registration, businesses are required to issue VAT-compliant invoices or receipts that include their TIN, VAT registration status, and the VAT charged. Authorized printers must print these or approved electronic systems must approve them. Businesses are expected to register before charging VAT, not after. Charging VAT without registration (or delaying registration after becoming liable) can result in penalties and disallowed credits.
How is VAT filed in the Philippines?
VAT returns are filed quarterly using BIR Form 2550Q, with deadlines falling on the 25th day following the close of each quarter. Late filing, late payment, or incorrect reporting can incur surcharges, interest, and fixed penalties, even in quarters with no VAT payable.
Businesses must record output VAT collected from customers and input VAT paid on purchases. If output VAT exceeds input VAT, the difference must be paid to the BIR by the filing deadline through authorized banks or electronic payment systems. When input VAT exceeds output VAT, the excess is typically carried forward to future quarters unless the business qualifies for a refund.
Some businesses are required to submit detailed summaries of sales and purchases to support VAT filings; these allow the tax authority to verify transactions. VAT-related books, invoices, and supporting documents must be retained for at least five years, as they are subject to audit and verification. VAT is one of the most frequently audited taxes; claims that involve exemptions, zero-rated sales, or recurring excess credits are more likely to be reviewed.
How do VAT refunds work in the Philippines?
VAT-registered businesses with zero-rated sales, such as exporters of goods or qualifying cross-border services, can claim refunds for excess input VAT they can’t offset against output VAT. Refunds generally apply to VAT paid on purchases directly attributable to zero-rated sales. VAT-registered businesses whose sales are subject to regular VAT generally receive VAT credits rather than refunds.
Businesses file a formal refund claim with the BIR and submit detailed schedules of input VAT, along with invoices, import documents, and proof of zero-rated sales. The BIR requires complete and valid VAT invoices and receipts; missing or noncompliant documents are a common reason for partial or full denial. Refund claims are subject to a statutory two-year filing period, which is generally measured from the date the VAT was paid to the Bureau of Internal Revenue. Missing this deadline means the refund cannot be recovered.
Refund claims are classified as low-, medium-, or high-risk, with lower-risk claims subject to lighter verification and higher-risk claims undergoing a full audit. Once a claim is considered complete, the BIR is required to approve or deny it within 90 days, a rule designed to reduce long-standing refund delays. Approved refunds might be issued as cash or as a tax credit certificate that can be applied against future tax liabilities. Denied or partially approved claims can be appealed to the Court of Tax Appeals within the statutory deadlines, though litigation can substantially extend timelines.
Even with improved rules, refunds take time, so many businesses plan conservatively and treat VAT credits as medium-term assets rather than immediate cash.
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