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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A UK VS COUNTRY B Philippines

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for UK and Philippines in 2026.

OVERVIEW
The Philippines and UK share one of the world's largest bilateral migration corridors — approximately 200,000+ Filipino-born residents in the UK, and the Philippines hosts a significant British expat community driven by retirement visas, business, and the large English-speaking professional workforce. Under the Philippines' TRAIN Act (2018), income below PHP 250,000/year (~£3,600) is tax-free; the top 35% rate applies above PHP 8 million/year (~£114,000). The UK's 45% top rate (and 60% effective trap) is significantly higher than the Philippines' 35% maximum. At £60,000 income, UK residents pay approximately £16,818 vs Philippine residents approximately £13,700 — Philippines saves approximately £3,118/year. Philippine social contributions (SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG) total approximately 8–10% employee share, broadly similar to UK NI. The Philippines offers a globally popular retirement visa (SRRV — Special Resident Retiree Visa) that provides permanent residency for qualifying retirees. No UK-Philippines double taxation treaty exists — a significant planning gap requiring careful management of UK-source income for UK nationals becoming Philippine residents.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
🇬🇧
COUNTRY A
UK
TAX RATE
20–45%
Income Tax + 8% NI
Progressive 20%/40%/45%; personal allowance £12,570; 60% trap £100K–£125,140; NI 8% on £12,570–£50,270, 2% above
🇵🇭
COUNTRY B
Philippines
TAX RATE
0–35%
TRAIN Act — 6 Brackets
0–35% progressive (tax-free below PHP 250,000/year, ~£3,600; top 35% above PHP 8M/year, ~£114,000); SSS employee 4.5% (capped); PhilHealth 2.5% (salary-based); Pag-IBIG 1–2% (capped); total social ~8%+; large UK-Philippines remittance corridor; retirement visa popular
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from PhilippinesUK at At £60,000 (Philippines resident)
~£3,118/year
That's ~£260/month back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🇬🇧 GB TAX
🇵🇭 PH TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
£30,000
~£5,486 income tax + ~£1,386 NI = ~£6,872 total
~£5,300 PIT (15–25% brackets on ~PHP 2.1M/year) + ~£2,400 social (~8%) = ~£7,700 total
UK saves ~£828/year at £30K
~£8,280
£50,000
~£11,432 income tax + ~£3,186 NI = ~£14,618 total
~£8,800 PIT (25–30% brackets on ~PHP 3.5M) + ~£4,000 social (~8%) = ~£12,800 total
Philippines saves ~£1,818/year at £50K
~£18,180
£60,000
~£13,432 income tax + ~£3,386 NI = ~£16,818 total
~£10,000 PIT (28–32% effective on ~PHP 4.2M) + ~£4,200 social = ~£14,200 total
Philippines saves ~£2,618/year at £60K
~£26,180
£80,000
~£19,432 income tax + ~£4,186 NI = ~£23,618 total
~£14,800 PIT (30–33% effective on ~PHP 5.6M) + ~£4,600 social (partially capped) = ~£19,400 total
Philippines saves ~£4,218/year at £80K
~£42,180
£100,000
~£32,432 income tax (60% trap) + ~£4,386 NI = ~£36,818 total
~£20,800 PIT (33–35% effective on ~PHP 7M) + ~£4,800 social = ~£25,600 total
Philippines saves ~£11,218/year at £100K — UK 60% trap zone decisive
~£112,180
💡

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🇬🇧

UK Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Lower burden at £30,000 — UK personal allowance (£12,570 tax-free) is far more generous than the Philippines' PHP 250,000/year (~£3,600) threshold; UK wins for lower earners
  • NHS healthcare — free at point of use; Philippines requires private health insurance (PhilHealth is basic; private comprehensive plans £400–£1,500/year); Makati and BGC have good private hospitals but varying quality across provinces
  • No DTA complexity — UK residents pay UK tax; Philippines has no DTA with the UK, meaning UK nationals with UK income sources who become Philippine tax residents face potential double-taxation without treaty protection
  • ISA tax shelter — £20,000/year ISA allowance; no equivalent in Philippines
− CONS
  • 45% top rate vs Philippines' 35% maximum — Philippines' TRAIN Act capped income tax at 35%; UK charges 45%; at incomes above £80,000, Philippines is meaningfully cheaper
  • 60% effective trap — UK's £100,000–£125,140 personal allowance withdrawal; Philippines has no equivalent; at this range, Philippines saves approximately £11,000+/year
  • NI 8% on £12,570–£50,270 — broadly similar to Philippines' total social (~8%), but UK NI continues at 2% above £50,270 while Philippine social contributions cap
  • High London cost of living — Manila, Cebu, or provincial Philippines are 55–70% cheaper than London; retirement income stretches significantly further
🇵🇭

Philippines Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • 35% maximum income tax — Philippines' TRAIN Act cap of 35% (above PHP 8M/year, ~£114,000) is significantly below UK's 45% and completely avoids the UK's 60% effective rate trap
  • Tax-free income threshold PHP 250,000/year — approximately £3,600 is tax-free; larger tax-free amounts compared to the UK for modest income earners (especially retirees on small incomes)
  • SRRV retirement visa — the Special Resident Retiree Visa allows retirees 35+ (deposit required: $20,000–$50,000 USD) to live permanently in the Philippines with multiple re-entry, import duty exemptions on personal effects, and ease of process
  • Large English-speaking population — the Philippines has one of the world's largest English-speaking populations; British expats face no language barrier for daily life, business, and healthcare
− CONS
  • No UK-Philippines double taxation treaty — UK and Philippines have no DTA; British residents with UK income (pensions, investment income, rental) becoming Philippine tax residents face potential double taxation; only unilateral relief applies
  • Social contributions system complexity — SSS (4.5% employee, capped), PhilHealth (2.5%, salary-based cap), Pag-IBIG (1–2%, capped) together total approximately 8–10% employee share; contribution rates have been increasing in recent years
  • Variable healthcare quality — Philippine healthcare quality varies significantly by region; major private hospitals in Makati, BGC, and Cebu (Makati Medical Center, St. Luke's Medical Center) are excellent but expensive without insurance; provincial healthcare is limited
  • Infrastructure and administrative challenges — internet infrastructure, power reliability, and bureaucratic processes vary significantly by location; some areas of Metro Manila have excellent infrastructure while others lag
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a UK-Philippines tax treaty?

No. The UK and Philippines do not have a Double Taxation Agreement (DTA). UK nationals who become Philippine tax residents retain UK tax obligations on UK-source income (pensions, UK rental income, UK dividends). Without a DTA, relief is available only through each country's unilateral foreign tax credit provisions. British citizens with UK income sources must manage dual taxation risk carefully. A specialist cross-border tax advisor familiar with both jurisdictions is essential before relocating.

What is the Philippines SRRV retirement visa and who qualifies?

The Special Resident Retiree's Visa (SRRV) is issued by the Philippines Retirement Authority (PRA) and grants permanent residency to qualifying foreign retirees. Requirements: minimum age 35 years (lower age allows higher deposit); required USD deposit of $20,000–$50,000 depending on age and type (active vs. classic). Benefits: multiple-entry/exit, no annual re-validation, exemption from customs duties on personal effects on arrival, and access to golf and other PRA-affiliated facilities. The SRRV is popular among British, American, and Australian retirees for the Visayas and Cebu area.

How does Philippine healthcare compare to NHS for British expats?

Major private hospitals in Metro Manila and Cebu (St. Luke's Medical Center, The Medical City, Makati Medical Center, Chong Hua Hospital Cebu) are internationally accredited (JCI) and provide high-quality care at significantly lower cost than UK private healthcare. Surgery costs can be 60–80% below UK private rates. PhilHealth (public insurance) covers basic care but has significant gaps in coverage amounts. Comprehensive expat health insurance costs approximately £400–£1,500/year for good coverage. Outside major cities, healthcare quality varies — British retirees in provincial areas should plan carefully.

How does the UK-Philippines corridor work for remittances?

The UK-Philippines is one of the world's largest remittance corridors — the Philippines receives approximately $35+ billion in remittances annually (total, all sources), with the UK among the top sources. For tax purposes: money transferred from the UK to the Philippines is a remittance, not income, and is not taxable as such in the Philippines. Philippine income tax applies only to income earned by Philippine residents. British nationals remitting UK earnings (already taxed in the UK) to family in the Philippines should use Wise, Remitly, or other low-cost transfer services (Wise typically charges 0.3–0.5% for GBP/PHP transfers).

What are Philippine social contributions (SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG)?

Philippine employee social contributions: SSS (Social Security System) — 4.5% employee share (up to PHP 30,000/month contribution base ceiling as of 2026); PhilHealth — 2.5% of basic monthly salary (up to PHP 80,000/month ceiling); Pag-IBIG (Home Development Mutual Fund) — 1–2% (capped at PHP 100/month for incomes above PHP 5,000). Total employee social contribution: approximately 8–10% depending on income. Employer contributes additionally. For foreign employees on work visas, SSS and PhilHealth participation is typically mandatory; Pag-IBIG participation is also generally required.

Is the Philippines good for British remote workers?

The Philippines offers compelling conditions for British remote workers: English as an official language, a warm climate, lower cost of living (55–65% below London in major cities), and a growing expat and digital nomad scene in Makati/BGC, Cebu, and Palawan. Internet infrastructure in Metro Manila and Cebu is generally reliable for remote work; provincial areas can be less consistent. Tax-wise: staying fewer than 180 days keeps you non-resident (only Philippine-source income taxed). Longer stays trigger Philippine tax residency and potential dual-taxation without a UK-Philippines DTA. A work visa (AEP or special non-immigrant status) is required for formal employment.