Knowing when you are required to register for VAT in the Philippines is a critical first step in staying compliant. This article covers the economic nexus thresholds, what counts toward those thresholds, and when registration becomes mandatory.
Both resident businesses and non-resident digital service providers (NRDSPs) are subject to the same registration threshold:
PHP 3,000,000 in gross annual sales or receipts from digital services consumed in the Philippines.
This threshold is measured on a rolling 12-month basis — both looking back at the past 12 months and forward at the projected next 12 months.
Registration becomes mandatory when either of the following conditions is met:
Your gross sales or receipts from Philippine customers exceed PHP 3,000,000 over the past 12 months, or
You reasonably expect to exceed PHP 3,000,000 in the next 12 months
Once the threshold is crossed, you must register within 30 days.
Included | Excluded |
|---|---|
B2B and B2C digital service sales | VAT-exempt supplies (e.g., educational services to accredited institutions) |
Zero-rated supplies (for resident sellers) | — |
Sales facilitated through your own marketplace platform (if you are the marketplace operator) | — |
Inter-company revenue between your own entities | — |
Transaction count threshold: None. The Philippines uses a revenue-only threshold — there is no separate transaction count limit.
Refunds: Refunded or credited sales are likely deducted from your threshold calculation, with the deduction applied at the date of the refund or credit, not the original sale date.
For non-resident sellers, physical presence in the Philippines is not required to trigger a VAT obligation. Under RA 12023, an NRDSP is deemed to have nexus if their digital services are consumed in the Philippines, regardless of where the seller is located.
For resident businesses, physical presence categories such as branch offices, warehouses, and trade show participation do not independently trigger VAT registration unless the revenue threshold is also met.
The Philippines includes a forward-looking component in its nexus rules. If you reasonably expect your sales to exceed PHP 3,000,000 in the next 12 months — even if you have not crossed the threshold yet — registration is mandatory.
If your sales remain below PHP 3,000,000, your business is generally subject to a 3% Other Percentage Tax (OPT) under Section 116 of the NIRC rather than VAT. This is a simpler, lower-rate obligation.
If you operate an electronic marketplace (e-marketplace) that connects buyers and sellers:
All sales facilitated through your platform count toward your own PHP 3,000,000 threshold
If your marketplace controls key elements of a transaction (terms, ordering, or delivery), you are liable to collect and remit 12% VAT on behalf of the non-resident sellers on your platform
If payment goes directly from the buyer to the non-resident seller (bypassing your platform), the liability shifts back to the seller
Similar to the US, if your business has already collected VAT from Philippine customers without formally meeting the economic nexus threshold, that collection itself establishes nexus. Kintsugi tracks this automatically.
Field | Detail |
|---|---|
Threshold amount | PHP 3,000,000 |
Measurement period | Rolling 12 months |
Forward-looking test | Yes |
Transaction count threshold | None |
Time to register after crossing threshold | Within 30 days |
Applies to | Both resident businesses and NRDSPs |
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