Real Estate in PH

PH Real Estate Intel

Monday, June 8, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on real estate developments in PH. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on philippines real estate headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

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1

Philippines Real Estate Headlines

1 story

1.1

PRC Real Estate Broker Board: Regulatory Info Now on PH Government Portal.

The Professional Regulation Commission hosts a dedicated page for the Real Estate Broker board on its official government website.

Why It Matters

PH real estate professionals can access official licensing and regulatory information directly from the PRC, the governing body for their profession.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

When and how to appeal a property tax assessment.

Most PH jurisdictions allow appeals in a narrow annual window after assessments mail. The strongest appeals lead with three comparable sales from within 6 months and a half-mile radius, and explicitly address why the subject differs from the assessor's comp set — typically condition, location, or improvements that were over-counted.

Why It Matters

Successful appeals reduce the assessed value for the appeal year and often reset the baseline for future years. Even a 10% reduction compounds over a decade of ownership.

2.2

Why your jurisdiction may require a rental license you do not have.

A growing number of PH cities require landlords to register rental properties, pass periodic inspections, and pay an annual fee. Penalties for unlicensed operation typically include fines per day and, in some cases, retroactive return of collected rent. The rules apply to single-unit landlords, not just large operators.

Why It Matters

Enforcement has shifted from complaint-driven to data-matching against utility and property-tax records. Many landlords discover they were non-compliant when they receive a back-fines notice years after acquiring the property.

2.3

How redemption rights vary by state — and why buyers should care.

Some PH jurisdictions give the foreclosed owner a statutory right to redeem the property within a window after the sale (often 6-12 months). Buyers at foreclosure auctions in those jurisdictions take title subject to redemption — meaning the prior owner can reclaim the property by paying the auction price plus interest. Title insurance does not cover this exposure.

Why It Matters

A redeemed property is returned to the prior owner, not refunded with the original purchase price plus appreciation. Auction buyers in redemption-rights states need to hold capital reserves for the entire window.

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Issue Summary

DateJun 8, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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