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Aircraft leasing in the Philippines entered a new compliance era in April 2026, when the President promulgated Executive Order No. 113, s. 2026, introducing the Thirteenth Regular Foreign Investment Negative List (13th RFINL). For foreign lessors, lenders, and aviation investors, the immediate question is whether existing and planned lease structures, ownership arrangements, and aircraft registrations remain lawful, or require restructuring. This guide provides a regulator-by-regulator implementation roadmap, sample clauses, and a red-flag matrix so deal teams can close transactions with confidence under the updated framework.
Executive Order No. 113, s. 2026 replaced the 12th Regular Foreign Investment Negative List and updated the catalogue of economic activities in which foreign ownership is restricted or prohibited in the Philippines. For aviation deal teams, the practical question is whether the new list altered the ownership or operational parameters that apply to aircraft leasing and operations in the Philippines.
The EO was signed on April 13, 2026, and took effect 15 days after publication in the Official Gazette. The full text is accessible via the online Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. Section 1 of EO No. 113 provides that “only the investment areas and/or activities listed in the attached 13th RFINL shall be reserved to Philippine nationals, subject to the exceptions and conditions indicated therein.”
The 13th RFINL retains the longstanding constitutional and statutory restrictions that most directly affect aviation investment in the Philippines. On March 21, 2022 Republic Act No. 11659 amended the Public Service Act and liberalised the operation of air carriers in the Philippines by allowing up to 100% foreign ownership in Philippine incorporated air carriers. The amendments to the Public Service Act are now carried forward into the 13th RFINL. Thus, operation of aircraft, and not merely leasing of aircraft, is now allowed for 100% foreign owned Philippine air carriers.
However, the 13th RFINL did update certain List B restrictions that may peripherally affect aviation investors, including activities regulated for reasons of security, defence, and public health, so counsel should verify the full list against the specific transaction structure in question.
| Topic | Pre-13th FINL Position | 13th RFINL Change / Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign ownership in domestic air transport operations | Limited to 40 % foreign equity (Public Service Act cap) | Now allows up to 100 % foreign ownership (Amended Public Service Act) |
| Aircraft ownership by foreign lessors | Not a reserved activity; foreign lessors could own and lease aircraft into the Philippines | Unchanged, aircraft leasing is not listed on the 13th RFINL; foreign lessors may continue to own and lease aircraft |
| Aircraft registration vs. operational control | CAAP rules governed registration; operational control determined ownership-cap analysis | CAAP rules continue to apply; however, operational control is still by a Philippine air carrier but can now be 100% foreign-owned |
| Competition/antitrust clearance | PCC thresholds applied to large acquisitions | PCC clearance may be required for large aircraft portfolio acquisitions, confirmed by recent PHCC precedent |
Foreign aircraft lessors can lawfully own aircraft and lease them to Philippine operators under the 13th RFINL framework, but registration and operational control are governed by distinct legal regimes, and conflating them is a common source of compliance risk in aircraft leasing in the Philippines.
Under Philippine law, there is no prohibition on a foreign entity holding legal title to an aircraft. A foreign lessor incorporated in Ireland, Singapore, or the Cayman Islands may own an aircraft and lease it to a Philippine carrier under a dry lease or finance lease without breaching the Foreign Investment restrictions, because the act of owning and leasing the asset does not constitute the operation of an airline.
Registration, however, follows CAAP rules. An aircraft operated by a Philippine air operator’s certificate (AOC) holder must typically be registered with the CAAP. The registration reflects the operator, not necessarily the owner. The foreign lessor’s ownership interest is protected through the lease agreement, security filings, and, where applicable, registration on the International Registry under the Cape Town Convention, which the Philippines has not yet ratified. This gap makes contractual protections and local security filings especially important for foreign lessors. The major update here is that Philippine airlines, i.e., Philippine companies that provide air transport services, can now be 100% foreign owned.
The Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) issued Advisory Circular 09-006, which sets out the application and process for aircraft leasing arrangements. Under AC 09-006, a Philippine AOC holder seeking to operate a leased aircraft must submit the lease agreement and supporting documentation to CAAP for review and approval before the aircraft enters service.
The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) separately regulates the economic aspects of air transportation, including route authorities and tariffs. For aircraft imported under a lease, CAB endorsement may also be required depending on the route structure and the lessee’s operating authorities. Counsel should coordinate simultaneous filings with both agencies to avoid timeline gaps.
Because the Philippines has not ratified the Cape Town Convention, foreign lessors cannot rely on the Convention’s self-help repossession or expedited court remedies. Repossession of a leased aircraft in the event of lessee default requires resort to Philippine courts or contractual remedies enforceable under local law. Early indications suggest that practitioners are increasingly using irrevocable deregistration and export request authorisations (IDERAs), adapted from Cape Town Convention practice, as a contractual workaround, though their enforceability under Philippine law remains untested.
| Entity Type | Registration Allowed? | Key Condition / Permit |
|---|---|---|
| Philippine AOC holder (up to 100% foreign owned) leasing from foreign lessor | Yes, aircraft registered under the lessee-operator | CAAP approval under AC 09-006; lease agreement submitted for review |
| Foreign-owned Philippine subsidiary (100 % foreign equity, non-airline activity) | Not possible under present CAAP regulations | Must be at least 60% Filipino owned Philippine company |
| Foreign lessor (no Philippine presence) | Aircraft is registered in the lessee’s name in the Philippines as operator, while the foreign lessor is annotated as the owner | Lessor retains legal title; protection via lease covenants, security filings, and international registry entries |
Depending on the intention, use, and operation of an aircraft, structuring an aircraft lease or sale in the Philippines requires careful navigation of the 13th RFINL and the criminal provisions of the Anti-Dummy Law. A lessor that inadvertently exercises, or is deemed to exercise, operational control over a Philippine company through contractual covenants risks prosecution under Commonwealth Act No. 108, as amended.
The most common types of aircraft leasing in the Philippines are operating leases (dry leases), wet leases, finance leases, and sale-and-leaseback arrangements. In a dry lease, the foreign lessor provides the aircraft without crew or operational support. In a wet lease, the lessor supplies the aircraft with crew, maintenance, and insurance. Finance leases transfer substantially all risks and rewards of ownership to the lessee. Each structure carries different regulatory, tax, and anti-dummy implications.
To mitigate risk, aviation investment in the Philippines should be structured so that the foreign lessor’s rights are confined to asset-protection covenants, maintenance standards, insurance requirements, return conditions, rather than operational-control provisions. Several practical patterns have emerged:
Foreign investment compliance in the Philippines for aircraft transactions requires interaction with multiple regulators. The following checklist maps the key agencies, required approvals, and practical timelines for each.
CAAP is the primary aviation safety and standards regulator. Under AC 09-006, the Philippine AOC holder (lessee) must submit a formal application to CAAP before operating any leased aircraft. Required documents typically include the executed lease agreement, the aircraft’s certificate of airworthiness, maintenance records, insurance certificates, and evidence that the lessee has the operational capability to manage the aircraft type. CAAP reviews the application for safety and regulatory compliance. Practical tip: engage CAAP early, pre-submission consultations can identify documentation gaps before the formal review begins, reducing cycle time.
The Philippine Competition Commission (PCC) administers the Philippine Competition Act (RA 10667). Large aircraft asset purchases, particularly platform-level acquisitions or portfolio transactions that breach PCC compulsory notification thresholds, may require merger clearance. In December 2025, the PCC granted clearance to CL Financing Gold for an aircraft asset purchase, reinforcing the PCC’s role in ensuring that consolidation in specialised global industries such as aviation leasing proceeds without harming competition. Deal teams should compute the Size of Party and Size of Transaction tests against PCC thresholds at the letter-of-intent stage.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) classifies aircraft leases as either operating leases or finance leases, with materially different VAT and withholding tax consequences. Operating lease rentals paid to a non-resident foreign lessor are generally subject to a final withholding tax, the rate of which may be reduced under an applicable tax treaty. Finance leases may be treated as instalment sales for tax purposes. Counsel should confirm the applicable BIR Revenue Regulation and treaty rate before signing.
Philippine covered institutions must conduct enhanced due diligence on foreign lessors and their beneficial owners under the Anti-Money Laundering Act (RA 9160, as amended). This includes verifying the ultimate beneficial ownership chain of the lessor entity.
| Regulator | Approval Needed | Typical Documents | Indicative Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| CAAP | Lease arrangement approval (AC 09-006) | Lease agreement, airworthiness certificate, maintenance records, insurance | 30–60 days (varies by complexity) |
| CAB | Economic regulation endorsement (if applicable) | For airlines, route authority documents, tariff filings | 30–45 days |
| PCC | Merger/acquisition clearance (if thresholds breached) | Notification form, transaction documents, market share data | Phase 1: 30 days; Phase 2: 60+ days |
| BIR | Tax treaty relief application (if applicable) | Certificate of residence, treaty relief application form, lease agreement | 30–90 days |
| AMLC / covered institution | Enhanced due diligence on foreign lessor | Beneficial ownership declarations, corporate documents, source-of-funds evidence | Concurrent with deal execution |
For lenders financing aircraft destined for Philippine operators, the interplay between FINL restrictions and security enforcement is a central due diligence concern. The likely practical effect of the Philippines’ non-ratification of the Cape Town Convention is that lenders must rely more heavily on local-law security instruments and contractual protections.
A chattel mortgage over an aircraft registered with the CAAP is a common form of security under Philippine law if the aircraft’s ownership is already transferred to the Philippine operator. The mortgage must be registered with the appropriate registry to be enforceable against third parties. For aircraft finance leasing arrangement, lenders should consider obtaining a power of attorney from the lessee authorising deregistration and export of the aircraft upon default, though the enforceability of such powers, absent Cape Town Convention backing, depends on Philippine court recognition. Assignment of the lessee’s insurance proceeds and maintenance reserves to the lender provides additional credit support.
The following illustrative scenarios demonstrate how aircraft leasing in the Philippines operates in practice under the 13th RFINL framework.
An Irish aircraft lessor enters into a 12-year dry lease with a Philippine flag carrier. The lessor retains legal title. The carrier registers the aircraft with CAAP and submits the lease for AC 09-006 approval. The lease contains standard return-condition and maintenance covenants but no route-approval or scheduling rights for the lessor.
A Singapore-based lessor enters a finance lease structured as a hire-purchase arrangement with a Philippine regional airline. Upon final payment, title transfers to the airline. During the lease term, the lessor holds legal title but has no operational role. If the airline defaults mid-term, the lessor must pursue repossession through Philippine courts (absent Cape Town Convention remedies). The lessor should have pre-positioned an irrevocable deregistration authorisation and a local custodial agent to accelerate recovery.
Executive Order No. 113 has not fundamentally altered the legal landscape for aircraft leasing in the Philippines as foreign owners can still lease aircraft, but has fundamentally altered operation of aircraft since foreigners can now own up to 100% equity of a Philippine airline.
For counsel and commercial teams navigating aircraft leasing in the Philippines under EO No. 113, early regulator engagement and tailored legal advice remain essential.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kerwin Tan at Tan Hassani & Counsels, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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