Our Expert in Philippines
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Last reviewed: 28 May 2026
The 2026 fiscal and regulatory package in the Philippines has redrawn the playbook for investment structuring Philippines deal teams have relied on for years. Between the CREATE Act clarifications that tightened the rules around the special corporate income tax (SCIT), a series of SEC circulars that introduced new acquisition-disclosure and beneficial-ownership obligations, and the raised audit and exemption thresholds that took effect between February and May 2026, every stage of an M&A transaction, from initial due diligence through post-closing compliance, now carries different risk weightings.
This guide delivers what high-level summaries from advisory firms and government agencies leave out: a step-by-step deal playbook with worked tax calculations, SPA drafting points, regulator navigation tactics, and compliance timelines calibrated to the rules as they stand today.
Before diving into the detail, here are the eight takeaways every general counsel, CFO, or private equity sponsor should absorb immediately.
The regulatory environment for investment structuring Philippines transactions operate within shifted materially over a four-month window. The instruments below are the ones with the most direct deal impact.
The Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act (RA 11534) established the framework. The 2026 clarifications, issued by the BIR in coordination with the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB), tightened the conditions under which registered business enterprises (RBEs) may continue to claim the 5% SCIT in lieu of all national and local taxes. The practical effect for M&A is that acquirers must now verify, during due diligence, that the target has filed all annual incentive-compliance reports with the relevant investment promotion agency (IPA) and the BIR, and that no deficiency has been flagged. A gap in compliance can trigger retroactive assessment at the regular corporate income tax (RCIT) rate of 25%.
SEC Circular No. 3 (Series of 2026) is the headline instrument. It expanded the scope of mandatory disclosures for acquisitions of substantial shareholdings and introduced a standardised beneficial-ownership declaration form that must be filed concurrently with any acquisition report. Companion circulars tightened the timelines for amendments to the General Information Sheet (GIS) following a change of control. Deal teams should budget an additional five to ten business days for SEC compliance at closing.
Effective in the February–May 2026 window, updated thresholds raised the revenue ceiling below which corporations may file unaudited financial statements. While this reduces compliance costs for smaller enterprises, it also means that some acquisition targets, particularly in the lower mid-market, may present unaudited financials to buyers. Due-diligence protocols must adjust to compensate.
| Date | Instrument | Immediate Deal Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | BIR clarifications on CREATE / SCIT compliance | Stricter annual incentive-compliance reporting; retroactive RCIT exposure for non-compliant RBEs |
| Q1 2026 | SEC Circular No. 3 (Series of 2026) | Expanded acquisition-disclosure triggers; mandatory beneficial-ownership declaration |
| Feb–May 2026 | Raised audit/exemption thresholds (BIR / SEC) | Some mid-market targets no longer require audited financials; DD scope must widen |
| Ongoing | BSP Manual of Regulations on Foreign Exchange Transactions (updates) | Registration of inward investment remains prerequisite for guaranteed repatriation |
Tax is the single largest variable in Philippine M&A pricing. The 2026 changes add new layers that corporate tax planning Philippines deal models must capture. Below, each tax head is analysed with worked examples where the numbers matter most.
The standard RCIT rate is 25% on net taxable income (20% for domestic corporations with net taxable income not exceeding PHP 5 million and total assets not exceeding PHP 100 million, excluding land). For RBEs that qualified under the CREATE Act, the SCIT of 5% on gross income earned is the principal incentive, it replaces all national and local taxes for the duration of the incentive period.
Consider the following worked example to illustrate the SCIT 5% Philippines impact on deal pricing:
Scenario: Target company is a BOI-registered export enterprise with annual gross income earned of PHP 200 million. Under the SCIT regime, its annual tax liability is PHP 10 million (5% × PHP 200 million). If the SCIT were disallowed, say, because of a compliance gap discovered post-closing, the company would be assessed at the RCIT rate of 25% on estimated net taxable income. Assuming a 40% cost ratio, net taxable income would be PHP 120 million, yielding an RCIT liability of PHP 30 million. The annual tax differential is PHP 20 million.
Over a three-year assessment window, the buyer’s exposure could reach PHP 60 million before penalties and interest, a figure that should be reflected in the purchase price or backstopped by escrow.
| Entity Type | Typical Tax Rates / SCIT Exposure | Notes on Repatriation |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic corporation (non-RBE) | 25% RCIT on net taxable income (20% for qualifying small corps) | Dividends to non-resident shareholders subject to 25% final WHT (reduced under applicable tax treaties) |
| Domestic corporation (BOI/PEZA-registered RBE) | 5% SCIT on gross income earned (during incentive period); reverts to RCIT post-incentive | Same WHT on dividends; SCIT compliance must be clean for incentive to hold |
| Branch / permanent establishment of foreign corporation | 25% RCIT on Philippine-source income; 15% branch profit remittance tax (BPRT) on after-tax profits | BPRT may be reduced under tax treaties; BSP reporting required for remittance |
| Representative office | Generally not taxable (no income-generating activities permitted) | Funded by head office remittances; no profit repatriation issue |
Repatriation of profits Philippines investors plan for depends on entity structure. Dividends paid by a domestic corporation to a non-resident foreign corporation are subject to a 25% final withholding tax, unless a tax treaty provides a lower rate. The Philippines has treaties with over 40 jurisdictions, the treaty with Singapore, for example, can reduce the dividend WHT to 15% (or 25% depending on the shareholding percentage). Practically, the investor must ensure its inward capital was registered with the BSP to guarantee the right to purchase foreign exchange for remittance at market rates. Failure to register is the single most common obstacle to efficient repatriation.
In a share deal, the transfer is subject to a capital gains tax of 15% on the net capital gain (for shares not listed and traded on the stock exchange) and DST of PHP 1.50 per PHP 200 of par value. In an asset deal, VAT at 12% applies to the sale of goods and properties in the ordinary course of trade, and DST is assessed on specific instruments (deeds of sale, mortgage documents). The 2026 clarifications reinforced that asset deals involving real property trigger additional local transfer taxes and registration fees that can add 1.5–3% to deal costs. Modelling both structures side by side is essential for accurate investment structuring Philippines pricing.
Incentive preservation is frequently the swing factor in Philippine M&A. Under the CREATE More Act 2026 regime, the FIRB oversees the grant, modification, and monitoring of all fiscal incentives. The BOI and PEZA remain the principal IPAs, but the approval chain now runs through the FIRB for strategic investments.
For acquirers seeking to preserve a target’s existing incentives through a change of control, the following checklist reflects the practical workflow:
Targets registered under pre-CREATE regimes (e.g., the Omnibus Investments Code or the Special Economic Zone Act) may still enjoy grandfathered incentives, but these are time-limited. The CREATE Act set sunset dates for most legacy incentives. Buyers negotiating SPAs must identify whether any incentive is approaching its sunset and price the post-incentive tax burden into the valuation. Industry observers expect that targets with fewer than two years remaining on a grandfathered incentive will trade at a discount reflecting the step-up to RCIT.
| Incentive | Typical Benefit | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Income tax holiday (ITH) | 4–7 years of 0% income tax | Must be in a BOI/PEZA-registered activity; FIRB-approved if strategic |
| SCIT (5% on gross income earned) | Replaces all national and local taxes during incentive period | Annual compliance reports; no deviation from registered activity |
| Enhanced deductions | Up to 200% deduction on training, R&D, and infrastructure costs | Available after ITH/SCIT period; activity-specific |
| Duty-free importation | 0% customs duty on capital equipment and raw materials | Goods must be used directly in registered activity; BOI endorsement required |
Choosing the right transaction structure is the foundation of efficient corporate tax planning Philippines deals demand. The 2026 changes have not fundamentally altered the available structures, but they have shifted the cost-benefit balance within each option.
Foreign acquirers frequently route investments through jurisdictions with favourable tax treaties with the Philippines. Singapore, Japan, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom are common treaty partners. The treaty benefit typically reduces dividend WHT from 25% to 10–15% and may provide relief on interest and royalty payments. However, the BIR has increasingly scrutinised treaty claims, requiring a Certificate of Residence for Tax Treaty Relief Application (CORTT) filed before the income payment. Deal teams should confirm that the acquiring entity has substance in the treaty jurisdiction and that the CORTT application is filed and processed before closing.
Permanent establishment (PE) risk is the second major cross-border concern. Under the 13th Foreign Investment Negative List, certain activities are restricted to Philippine nationals or require minimum Philippine equity. An inadvertent PE can trigger full Philippine taxation on attributed profits. Structuring advice must account for the foreign ownership requirements that still apply across regulated sectors.
A Philippine holding company can consolidate subsidiaries, pool dividends tax-free (intercorporate dividends between domestic corporations are exempt from income tax), and manage repatriation centrally. Intercompany loans remain a viable tool for extracting value, but the BIR’s transfer pricing regulations, aligned with OECD guidelines, require arm’s-length interest rates and documentation. The 2026 environment has made transfer pricing a primary DD focus area, as the BIR’s audit capacity has been redirected toward related-party transactions.
Key SPA provisions for 2026 transactions include:
| Obligation | Domestic Corporation | Foreign Branch / PE |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate income tax return | Annual; standard CIT rules; filed by 15 April | Branch tax; possible PE attribution; filed by 15 April |
| Withholding tax on remittances | WHT on dividends and interest; monthly remittance to BIR | 15% BPRT on profit remittance; additional BSP reporting for outward transfer |
| Incentive compliance reporting | BOI/PEZA periodic reports (annual); FIRB monitoring for strategic projects | Incentive claims often limited to the specifically registered entity |
| Beneficial ownership declaration | SEC filing within prescribed period after change of control | Same requirement; may also require head-office corporate documents |
The raised audit threshold 2026 Philippines rules introduced means that due-diligence teams can no longer assume every target will present audited financial statements. This is a structural change in how mid-market deals are underwritten.
Where a target falls below the new audit threshold, the buyer should insist on a special-purpose audit as a closing condition or, at minimum, negotiate a representation that the unaudited financials are prepared in accordance with Philippine Financial Reporting Standards. The SPA should include a mechanism for purchase-price adjustment if post-closing verification reveals material discrepancies. Early indications suggest that buyers are increasingly using locked-box pricing with a leak adjustment to manage this risk.
Red flags: Gaps in annual incentive-compliance reports; unsigned or unfiled transfer pricing documentation; BSP registration omissions for early-stage foreign capital injections; unresolved BIR preliminary assessment notices.
Post-closing compliance in the Philippines involves three regulators, the SEC, the BIR, and the BSP, each with independent filing requirements and tight deadlines.
Under SEC Circular No. 3 (Series of 2026), any acquisition that results in ownership of 5% or more of a public company’s outstanding shares must be reported within five business days. For private companies, the GIS must be amended to reflect the new shareholding structure and filed within 30 days of the effective date of transfer. The beneficial-ownership declaration form must accompany the amended GIS. Failure to file triggers administrative penalties and can delay subsequent corporate actions.
On the BIR side, the buyer must ensure that capital gains tax (for share transfers) or creditable withholding tax (for asset deals) is remitted within 30 days of the transaction. A Certificate Authorising Registration (CAR) must be obtained from the BIR before the SEC will process the stock transfer. For BSP purposes, the foreign investor must register the investment, including the purchase price and the source of funds, with the BSP-accredited agent bank. This registration is what secures the right to future repatriation of profits Philippines investors depend on. Practical tip: engage the agent bank before closing so that registration can be completed concurrently. For local banking mechanics, see our guide on opening a bank account in the Philippines.
| Action | Responsible Party | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| File acquisition report (public company) | Buyer / broker | 5 business days after acquisition |
| Amend GIS and file beneficial-ownership declaration | Target company (with buyer cooperation) | 30 days after effective date of transfer |
| Remit capital gains tax / WHT | Buyer (or withholding agent) | 30 days after transaction |
| Obtain BIR Certificate Authorising Registration (CAR) | Buyer / seller jointly | Before SEC processes stock transfer |
| Register investment with BSP agent bank | Foreign investor | Concurrent with or immediately after fund inflow |
| File BOI/IPA notification of change of control | Target company | As prescribed by IPA; typically 30–60 days |
Effective negotiation in a 2026 Philippine M&A transaction requires precise allocation of the new risks. The following model clauses and tactics reflect emerging market practice.
Escrow sizing example: Assume enterprise value of PHP 1 billion. The target has a BOI-registered activity with three years remaining on its SCIT. The potential SCIT-to-RCIT differential over the remaining incentive period is PHP 60 million (per the worked example above). Adding a 20% buffer for penalties and interest yields an escrow amount of PHP 72 million, approximately 7.2% of enterprise value. If the buyer identifies additional transfer pricing or VAT exposure, the escrow should be sized upward to 10–15%.
Rep and warranty insurance (RWI): The Philippine RWI market remains nascent, but regional insurers (primarily Singapore- and Hong Kong-based) will underwrite Philippine transaction risk. Industry observers expect RWI to become more prevalent as deal sizes increase and as the 2026 regulatory changes make tax indemnities harder to negotiate on a clean, uncapped basis.
Indemnity carve-outs for incentives: Best practice is to carve the incentive-related indemnity out of any general cap on seller liability. The rationale is straightforward: an incentive disallowance is a binary event with a quantifiable downside, and capping it at a general threshold (e.g., 20% of purchase price) may leave the buyer materially underprotected.
Every investment structuring Philippines transaction in 2026 carries new tax and regulatory variables that demand tailored advice. To discuss how these changes affect your specific deal, whether you are structuring an inbound acquisition, preserving BOI incentives through a change of control, or planning profit repatriation, connect with a qualified Philippines commercial law practitioner through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Danielle Marie C. Tan at Morales & Justiniano, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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