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Philippines VAT Filings Explained

Updated 2 months ago

Once you are registered for VAT in the Philippines, you are required to file VAT returns and remit any VAT due on a regular schedule. This article explains how filings work, which forms are used, key deadlines, and how Kintsugi handles this process for you.


Filing Frequency

Philippines VAT filings are quarterly for both resident businesses and NRDSPs.

The filing and payment deadline is the 25th day of the month following the end of the taxable quarter.

Quarter

Period

Deadline

Q1

January 1 – March 31

April 25

Q2

April 1 – June 30

July 25

Q3

July 1 – September 30

October 25

Q4

October 1 – December 31

January 25

If the deadline falls on a weekend or a Philippine public holiday, the next business day applies.


Which Forms Are Used

Business Type

Form

Purpose

Resident businesses

BIR Form 2550-Q

Quarterly VAT return for resident DSPs

Resident businesses (optional)

BIR Form 2550-M

Monthly VAT return (first two months of each quarter only; optional)

Non-resident (NRDSP)

BIR Form 2550-DS

Quarterly VAT return for NRDSPs via VDS Portal

Philippine business buyers (reverse charge)

BIR Form 1600-VT

Monthly Remittance Return of VAT Withheld; due within 10 days after month-end


Optional Monthly Payments for NRDSPs

NRDSPs may choose to make monthly VAT payments for cash flow convenience. Monthly payments are due within 25 days after the end of each month. However, this option does not replace the quarterly filing requirement — you still need to file Form 2550-DS at the end of each quarter and reconcile any remaining balance due.


How VAT Is Calculated for NRDSPs

  • B2C sales: Collect 12% VAT from the customer at checkout; report and remit the collected amount quarterly via Form 2550-DS

  • B2B sales: Issue the invoice without VAT; the Philippine business buyer withholds and remits 12% VAT via Form 1600-VT; report these B2B transactions in your Form 2550-DS for BIR information purposes


Reverse Charge: What Philippine Business Buyers Need to Know

If your Philippine business is buying digital services from a foreign (non-resident) vendor, you are responsible for the reverse charge:

  • Withhold 12% VAT from the payment to the foreign vendor

  • Remit the withheld VAT to the BIR using BIR Form 1600-VT within 10 days after the end of the month

  • You may then claim the withheld amount as an input VAT credit on your own VAT return (BIR Form 2550-Q), provided you are VAT-registered and the SaaS is used for taxable activities


Handling Refunds and Credit Notes

  • For B2C adjustments: Issue a credit note referencing the original invoice and adjust the amount in your Form 2550-DS for the relevant quarter. Per RMC 78-2025, overpayments are applied to future quarterly returns rather than refunded in cash.

  • For B2B adjustments: Both you (the NRDSP) and the Philippine buyer need to file amended returns; the buyer adjusts their Form 1600-VT accordingly.


Period Alignment

All VAT periods in the Philippines follow the calendar year — there is no fiscal year option for VAT. Quarters run January–March, April–June, July–September, and October–December.


What Kintsugi Handles for You

Kintsugi automates the following for your Philippines VAT compliance:

  • Tracking sales to determine when filings are due

  • Calculating VAT owed per quarter (B2C at 12%; B2B reported separately)

  • Preparing and submitting BIR Form 2550-DS (for NRDSPs) or BIR Form 2550-Q (for resident businesses)

  • Sending reminders ahead of quarterly deadlines


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