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Philippines · Wohnen & Relocation

Mieten in Philippines

Partially verified Zuletzt geprüft June 15, 2026 Reviewed by Henry van de Vorming

Foreigners can rent freely in the Philippines (only land ownership is restricted; foreigners may own a condo unit and rent any property), and most incoming nomads head for furnished condos in Metro Manila's central business districts (Makati, BGC, Ortigas) or to Cebu City (IT Park/Lahug) and Davao for lower rents. The standard lease is 12 months, but the upfront cash requirement is the main hurdle: landlords commonly ask for one to two months' advance rent plus one to two months' security deposit, with a "two-and-two" structure (around four months upfront) widespread in the expat-condo tier. A national Rent Control Act exists but caps deposits/advances and rent increases only for low-rent units (PHP 10,000/month or less in Metro Manila and highly urbanized cities), so most foreigner-tier rentals fall outside its protections and terms are governed by the written contract. Furnished units are the norm at the expat end, and the short/mid-term market — serviced apartments, monthly Airbnb, and coliving — is well developed, making it easy to land softly before committing to a long lease.

Die Mietgrundlagen

Üblicher Mietvertrag
1 Jahr
Kaution
2 Monatsmieten
Möbliert
Möbliert üblich
Mittelfristiger Markt
Starker Mittelfristmarkt
Adressregistrierung
Erforderlich

Maklergebühr: No fixed legal commission rate. For rentals, broker/agent commission is commonly equivalent to about one month's rent per year of lease; who pays is negotiable (landlord and tenant may split, or one side may pay in full) and should be stated in the contract. Many private condo rentals are arranged directly with owners (e.g., via Facebook groups) with no agency fee.

Adressregistrierung

There is no European-style municipal address registration, but foreign nationals on a tourist/temporary-visitor visa who stay more than 59 days must obtain an ACR I-Card (Alien Certificate of Registration Identity Card) from the Bureau of Immigration. Changes of residential address must be reported to the Bureau (commonly cited as within 30 days), and late reporting carries a fine (about PHP 200 per month is cited). Separately, a Barangay Certificate of Residency (issued by the local barangay hall) can be obtained with a lease/proof of address and is often needed for other paperwork; many barangays expect a minimum period of established residence (around six months) before issuing one.

Ihre Rechte als Mieter

The Rent Control Act (Republic Act 9653, periodically extended) protects tenants of lower-rent units — monthly rent of PHP 10,000 or less in Metro Manila and highly urbanized cities, PHP 5,000 or less elsewhere. Within scope it caps advance rent at one month and the security deposit at two months, limits annual rent increases (the National Human Settlements Board set ceilings of 2.3% for 2025 and 1% for 2026 for continuing tenants paying PHP 10,000 or less), requires the deposit to be returned with any accrued interest at lease end (commonly within about 60 days, net of unpaid bills and damage), and restricts eviction to specific legal grounds (e.g., three months' unpaid rent, lease expiry, subleasing without consent, owner repossession or needed repairs with notice). Self-help eviction (padlocking, cutting utilities) is illegal; removal requires a court ejectment case. Most expat-tier rentals exceed the rent threshold, so the caps and increase limits do not apply and terms rest on the written lease.

Gut zu wissen

  • Foreigners may rent any house, apartment or condo without restriction (only land ownership is barred), and English-language contracts and listings are standard
  • Strong furnished short/mid-term market — serviced apartments, monthly Airbnb and coliving make a soft landing easy before signing a 12-month lease
  • Furnished, move-in-ready condos in CBDs are the default expat option, often with building amenities (pool, gym, security)
  • Cebu and Davao offer noticeably lower rents than Manila while still providing expat-friendly buildings

Worauf Sie achten sollten

  • High cash outlay to move in — commonly one to two months' advance rent plus one to two months' deposit, with a roughly four-months-upfront ('two-and-two') norm in the expat tier
  • Rent Control Act protections (deposit caps, rent-increase limits, refund timing) apply only to low-rent units, so most foreigner-tier leases rely entirely on the written contract — read deposit-refund and early-termination clauses carefully
  • Deposit refunds can be slow or contested (no third-party escrow); document the unit's condition at move-in and keep the contract and receipts
  • Foreigners staying beyond 59 days must obtain an ACR I-Card from the Bureau of Immigration and report address changes; barangay residency certificates may require a minimum period of established residence
  • Internet quality and power reliability vary by building and area — verify the actual connection before committing for remote work

Wo Sie suchen

Lamudi (lamudi.com.ph)Dot Property (dotproperty.com.ph)Rent.phHopplerAirbnb (monthly/extended stays)Facebook Marketplace and local rental groupsColiving.com (coliving spaces)

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Mieten in Philippines: FAQ

Mieten in Philippines: FAQ

Wie viel Kaution brauche ich, um in Philippines zu mieten?

Vermieter verlangen üblicherweise rund 2 Monats Miete als Kaution, zusätzlich zur ersten Monatsmiete im Voraus, plus etwaige Maklergebühr (no fixed legal commission rate. for rentals, broker/agent commission is commonly equivalent to about one month's rent per year of lease; who pays is negotiable (landlord and tenant may split, or one side may pay in full) and should be stated in the contract. many private condo rentals are arranged directly with owners (e.g., via facebook groups) with no agency fee.). Planen Sie das als Einmalbetrag ein, bevor Sie ankommen.

Muss ich meine Adresse in Philippines registrieren?

Ja — There is no European-style municipal address registration, but foreign nationals on a tourist/temporary-visitor visa who stay more than 59 days must obtain an ACR I-Card (Alien Certificate of Registration Identity Card) from the Bureau of Immigration. Changes of residential address must be reported to the Bureau (commonly cited as within 30 days), and late reporting carries a fine (about PHP 200 per month is cited). Separately, a Barangay Certificate of Residency (issued by the local barangay hall) can be obtained with a lease/proof of address and is often needed for other paperwork; many barangays expect a minimum period of established residence (around six months) before issuing one.

Finde ich möblierte oder kurzfristige Mietobjekte in Philippines?

Möbliert üblich und der mittelfristige Markt, auf den sich Nomaden verlassen, ist starker mittelfristmarkt. Beginnen Sie Ihre Suche auf Lamudi (lamudi.com.ph), Dot Property (dotproperty.com.ph), Rent.ph.

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