๐ต๐ญ Philippines visa for EU citizens
EU citizen passport holders can enter Philippines visa-free for up to 90 days. No application, no fee, just a passport valid for at least six months.
The verdict
For EU citizen passport holders specifically
EU passport holders get 90 days visa-free entry into the Philippines. No application needed beforehand. You get this stamp right at the immigration desk upon arrival.
Expect to show a return or onward ticket out of the Philippines. Proof of sufficient funds is also a common requirement, usually around $300 USDโ per month of intended stay. Many EU citizens get flagged for having an open-ended ticket or insufficient funds shown. Visa extensions are possible, but they're a hassle.
โ = figure we couldnโt independently verify. Confirm with the official source before you book.
Philippines visa, the full picture
Most Western passports get you 30 days visa-free. Some countries need an actual visa before you even book a flight. It's not complicated, but you've got to know your passport's standing.
Who Walks In Visa-Free and Who Doesn't
If you hold a passport from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, or most EU countries, you're looking at 30 days of visa-free entry. Nice and simple. Just show up.
Citizens of many ASEAN countries also get this 30-day visa-free treatment. Think Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand. Easy peasy.
Then there are countries that do need a visa beforehand. This includes citizens of China, India, and Russia. You'll need to apply through a Philippine embassy or consulate in your home country. Don't expect to sort this out on arrival. There's also a list of countries that get 59 days visa-free, but it's shorter than the main bloc. Check the official Bureau of Immigration website for the exact list if you're unsure.
How Long Can You Actually Stay?
That initial 30 days is just the starting point. Most remote workers will want to extend. You can apply for extensions at any Bureau of Immigration office. The first extension usually gets you another 30 days, and you can keep extending up to a total of 36 months. Each extension typically costs around PHP 3,000 to PHP 4,000โ , plus some processing fees.
The big gotcha? Overstaying. It's a bad idea. Fines are calculated per day, and they add up fast. An overstay fine can range from PHP 1,000 to PHP 5,000โ per month, but worse, you'll likely get an order of exclusion and might even be banned from re-entry for a period. You also need to make sure you have a valid return or onward ticket. Without one, immigration might deny your entry or force you to buy one immediately.
Working Remotely on a Tourist Stamp
Here's the reality: the Philippines doesn't have a specific "digital nomad visa" like some other Southeast Asian countries. Working on a tourist stamp is technically a grey area. The law is designed for tourism, not long-term work.
However, enforcement is pretty lax for remote workers. Most digital nomads I know work from co-working spaces or cafes on their tourist visas without issue. You're not employed by a Philippine company, so immigration isn't usually looking for you. Your income is coming from overseas. The risk is low, but it's not zero. If you're asked, you're on holiday and just checking emails.
What's New on the Visa Front?
The Philippines has been slowly rolling out an eVisa system for some nationalities, aiming to streamline the application process for those who need a visa beforehand. This started with select countries and has been expanding. It's not for visa-free entries, but for those who would have applied at an embassy. Check the official eVisa Philippines portal to see if it applies to your nationality and if it's operational.
Beyond the eVisa, there haven't been massive shifts for the visa-free crowd in the last year or so. The core rules for 30-day visa-free entry for most Westerners remain. Fee structures for extensions are generally stable, though always check for the latest government announcements. Some reports suggested potential changes to entry requirements during peak COVID periods, but those seem to have largely reverted to pre-pandemic norms.
If you're a citizen of a country requiring a visa, applying through the eVisa system is the most significant recent change. It means less visiting consulates and more online forms.
โ = figure we couldnโt independently verify. Confirm with the official source before you book.
How other passports enter Philippines
The rule changes entirely with the document. Open the row that matches yours.