The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is the central bank of the Republic of the Philippines, which regulates remittance fund transfers through banks, private remittance companies, and other remittance agents.
From BSP Foreign Exchange Regulations dated by June 2019:
If a person wishes to bring or send more than the equivalent of USD 10,000, a written declaration must be made in the form of the BSP’s “Foreign Currency and Other FX-Denominated Bearer Monetary Instruments Declaration Form” which may be downloaded from the website. Residents of the Philippines are taxed on any foreign income. Non-residents are taxed only on income originating in the Philippines. All sums exceeding PHP 400,000 (USD 7,600) must be reported to the Anti-Money Laundering Council.
According to open-source info, a commission of approximately PHP.150–250 (USD 3–5) or sometimes equivalent to 10 USD. And banks in the Philippines have a $25 additional charge for foreign wire transfer services.
You can easily use the most popular cards, Mastercard and Visa, in the Philippines. You might be charged fees, such as foreign transaction fees. A fee of 3% per transaction may apply depending on your credit card. That’s up to $90 in fees for $3,000 spent with your card. The popular prepaid debit cards in the Philippines are PayMaya Visa, Amore Visa Prepaid payWave, GCash Mastercard, and others.
A good number of international banks are represented in the Philippines, such as HSBC, ANZ, and Citibank. If you’ve set a maximum daily cash withdrawal limit with your home bank, you’ll find that it’ll apply in the Philippines too. Otherwise, the ATM providers rules will apply instead. Quick research shows that these vary between different banks. For instance, the Bank of the Philippine islands limits its customers to between PHP 20,000 (USD 380) and PHP 50,000 (USD 960) per day, with a maximum of 6 withdrawals allowed daily. Usually, ATMs apply up to a 5% fee on the transaction for many cards.
An interesting fact is that according to the 2018 World Bank report, the Philippines is one of the leading places in the largest remittance-receiving nation, with most of those remittances coming from Philippinos working abroad. Also, the infrastructure of offline money services is very slow, and online transfers are more desirable.
Here are the top money online transfer services in the Philippines, with their fees.
As we mentioned before, residents of the Philippines are taxed on any foreign income. Over the past years, the Philippines made stricter tax guidelines on gifted money. Gifts over PHP 250,000, or about USD 4,795 as of August 2019, need to be reported and will be taxed at a rate of 6%.
The virtual currency environment in the Philippines is loyal and regulated by BSP. The BSP established a formal regulatory framework for VC Exchanges — Circular №944 dated 6 February 2017. Virtual currency exchanges are companies or businesses that change VCs into fiat currency (and vice versa). BSP has required domestic crypto exchanges to register as remittance and transfer companies.
Crypto exchanges should have a virtual currency exchange license from the Philippines’ Central Bank to operate.
For cross-border transfers involving Philippine pesos, a person may freely bring into or take out of the Philippines or electronically transfer legal tender Philippine currency and other monetary instruments in amounts up to PHP 50,000 (USD 956). Prior BSP written authorization is required in excess of the PHP 50,000 limit. The BSP typically allows the transfer of Philippine currency in excess of PHP 50,000 for limited purposes only: (i) testing/calibration of money counting/sorting machines; (ii) numismatics (collectors of currency); and (iii) educational purposes.
Some of Sticpay’s specific features which might be interesting for Philippinos are the opportunity to open an account in the local currency, PHP, withdraw money to local banks in the Philippines, and the prepaid STIC card.
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