🌏 东南亚合规中心
🇵🇭 Philippines税务

菲律宾MP2储蓄计划税务合规指南:7.12%免税分红详解

来源:HDMF · Rappler Philippines生效日期:2025-07-01

作者:东南亚合规中心编辑团队

TL;DR · 核心要点

菲律宾Pag-IBIG基金MP2计划2025年宣布7.12%税前分红,且该收益依法完全免税,显著优于应税银行存款与债券。关键合规要点:1)MP2为自愿性储蓄计划,非强制缴存;2)分红属税后净收益,依据《菲律宾税法》及2025年财政部(DOF)第03-2025号备忘录明确豁免所得税;3)适用对象含本地雇员及符合条件的外籍在菲工作者(须为Pag-IBIG正式会员);4)分红按年度实际资金占用天数加权计算,不承诺保底利率;5)企业代扣代缴义务仅限于强制性Pag-IBIG基本缴存(HDMF),MP2缴款无需企业参与。对企业影响:可作为员工福利补充工具,但需注意不得将MP2误列为薪酬组成部分或代为承诺收益,避免构成不当税务担保风险。

✅ 合规行动清单 · Compliance Checklist

  • 立即更新员工福利政策文件,明确MP2为员工自愿参与计划,不得表述为薪酬组成部分或承诺保底收益(2025年6月30日前由人力资源部与法务部联合完成)
  • 核查在菲外籍员工Pag-IBIG会员资格状态,确保其已正式注册并持续缴存基本计划(HDMF),方可享受MP2免税分红(2025年Q2内由HRBP完成全员筛查)
  • 停止代扣代缴MP2缴款;仅对强制性Pag-IBIG基本缴存(HDMF)履行企业代扣义务,并于每月10日前向HDMF提交缴存报表(依据HDMF Circular No. 578, s. 2023)
  • Revise all employee welfare policy documents to explicitly state MP2 as a voluntary, non-compensatory program—no guaranteed returns or payroll integration—by 30 June 2025 (HR & Legal Department)
  • Verify Pag-IBIG membership status of all foreign employees in the Philippines to confirm active HDMF basic membership prior to MP2 enrollment (completed by HR Business Partners in Q2 2025)
  • Cease employer-led MP2 contributions; only withhold and remit mandatory HDMF basic contributions, filing monthly remittance reports with HDMF no later than the 10th of each month (per HDMF Circular No. 578, s. 2023)

⚡ 这篇文章的要点太复杂?让 AI 帮你 30 秒解读

立即咨询 →

常见问题解答

中国企业外派员工在菲律宾参加MP2计划,其分红是否在中国和菲律宾双重征税?+
根据中菲税收协定及菲律宾DOF 2025年第03号备忘录,MP2分红在菲律宾境内完全免税;中国税务上,依据《个人所得税法实施条例》第八条,境外免税所得不计入中国应税收入,故不构成双重征税。但需保留Pag-IBIG官方分红证明以备中国个税申报备查。
菲律宾本地注册的中资企业能否为员工统一办理MP2缴存并作账务处理?+
可以代为协助员工开户与缴存,但MP2属员工完全自愿行为,企业不得强制、垫付或承诺收益。账务上不可列支为成本费用(无税前扣除资格),亦不可计入工资总额;若企业代缴,须视为员工借款,需签订书面协议并及时清偿。
MP2分红免税政策是否有期限?是否会因2026年新税法调整而取消?+
免税依据是菲律宾《社会改革法案》第13节及DOF 2025-03号行政备忘录,属长期法定豁免,非临时优惠。截至2026年3月,国会未提出修订动议;但企业需关注每年Q1 Pag-IBIG公告及DOF更新,重大调整将提前90天公示。
外籍员工(含中国籍)加入MP2是否需要满足居留或工作签证年限要求?+
无需签证年限门槛。只要持有有效菲律宾工作许可(如9G签证)并完成Pag-IBIG会员注册(REG-1表),即可开通MP2账户。非居民外国人(如短期派驻)亦可参与,但须指定菲律宾本地银行账户接收分红。
企业HR在员工离职时,MP2账户余额如何处理?是否涉及税务申报义务?+
MP2账户归属员工个人,企业无权处置。离职不影响账户存续——资金可继续计息并参与后续年度分红。企业无需就MP2做任何税务申报;但若员工申请全额提取,Pag-IBIG将直接支付至其指定账户,该笔款项仍享受全程免税待遇。

相关关键词

菲律宾MP2Pag-IBIG免税菲律宾税务合规菲律宾员工储蓄菲律宾分红税
📄 官方原文参考(英文)点击展开
personal finance tips [Finterest] What is Pag-IBIG’s MP2, and can you really earn 7% a year? Mar 4, 2026 8:00 AM PHT Lance Spencer Yu SUMMARY This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article. Pag-IBIG Fund INFO The honest answer is yes, it happened for 2025, and the return can be particularly compelling because there’s no tax eating into the payout MANILA, Philippines – Pag-IBIG’s MP2 program sounds, at first glance, like it belongs in the same mental drawer as deductions and government paperwork. But it’s not a mandatory contribution; in fact, this voluntary savings product might be one of the best places to park medium-term money. For 2025, Pag-IBIG declared an MP2 dividend rate of 7.12%, up from 7.10% the year before. Pag-IBIG also declared P64.34 billion in total dividends for 2025, which it said was the highest in its history. If you invest at all, your first reaction is probably that the rate looks amazing. But let’s carefully unpack what this dividend rate actually means and and how much of that 7.12% can you actually expect to keep. Image from Pag-IBIG Fund Facebook What the dividend rate actually means MP2 isn’t like a bank deposit, so it doesn’t pay interest the same way your savings account does. Pag-IBIG calls MP2 earnings a dividend because the rate is declared after the year ends, once the fund’s net income has been calculated and approved by the agency’s board of trustees. This also means that the dividend rate is flexible, so when you see 7.12%, think of it as only the latest declared result. It’s not a guaranteed quote you’re locking in for future years. Next year’s dividend rate can be higher or lower, depending on how Pag-IBIG performs. How do you estimate what you might earn? Your dividend is basically the declared rate multiplied by the money you had sitting in MP2 during the year. The earlier your money is in the account, the more of the year it actually counts. Here’s a sample computation using the declared 7.12% rate. Assume you contribute P5,000 every month starting January. Your end-of-year total contribution is P60,000, but your balance did not sit at P60,000 for the whole year. A simple way to estimate is to use your average monthly balance. Your monthly end balances would be P5,000, P10,000, P15,000, and so on, up to P60,000 in December. Add those up (P5,000 x 78 = P390,000) then divide by 12 months to get an average balance of P32,500. Apply the dividend rate: P32,500 x 7.12% = about P2,314 in dividends for that year. If instead you had placed a lump sum of P100,000 in January and left it there for the year, a rough estimate is simpler: P100,000 x 7.12% = about P7,120 for the year. Again, this is an estimate, but it gives you the feel of the math. How is Pag-IBIG able to give a rate that high? Let’s start with what Pag-IBIG is. Officially, it is the Home Development Mutual Fund, mandated to generate savings through a nationwide membership system and mobilize members’ funds for housing purposes. The reason MP2 can feel unusually generous is that Pag-IBIG is not trying to behave like a typical commercial bank that keeps profits for shareholders. Under its charter, Pag-IBIG returns at least 70% of its annual net income to members as dividends. For 2025, Pag-IBIG said it declared P64.34 billion in dividends, equivalent to a 98.6% payout ratio, on the back of P65.8 billion in net income. Where does Pag-IBIG earn from? Mostly, it earns the way a housing finance fund is supposed to earn — from lending. The bulk of Pag-IBIG’s income comes from the interest and collections on its housing loan portfolio, plus short-term loans like cash loans to members. Investing is a supporting revenue stream, though it’s still a meaningful one. On the investing side alone, Pag-IBIG reported P9.43 billion in investment income in 2025, with a large portion parked in government securities and the rest placed in time deposits, corporate bonds, and preferred shares. It’s from this stable flow of income that the agency declares these MP2 dividends. Pag-IBIG is essentially a giant pooled fund that collects savings, lends a big portion out through housing and member loans, invests the rest conservatively, then shares back most of what it earns as dividends. And yes, 7.12% is high relative to many safe benchmarks. For context, the Bureau of the Treasury’s reference rates showed the 5-year government yield around 5.555% as of February 26, 2026. MP2’s declared rate for 2025 sits noticeably above that, which is part of why it gets so much attention when the dividend is announced. And those returns are tax-free Another reason MP2’s returns hit harder in real life is that they are tax-free. In 2025, the Department of Finance explicitly clarified that savings and investments in SSS, GSIS, and Pag-IBIG, including MP2, remain tax-free. That tax-free detail matters more than you might think. Since July 2025, interest income from bank savings, bonds, and similar arrangements is generally subject to a 20% tax. That means you effectively keep just 80% of the interest you earned. A time deposit advertised at 6% gross, for example, is really about 4.8% net after tax. Even a 5% rate becomes 4% once that 20% tax takes its cut. With MP2, the dividend earnings are treated differently. The DOF has clarified that Pag-IBIG savings and investments remain tax-free, which means the declared MP2 dividend rate is much closer to what you actually keep, assuming you follow the rules and let the account run its proper course. So. can you really earn as much as 7% in MP2? The honest answer is yes, it happened for 2025, and the return can be particulary compelling because there’s no tax eating into the payout. But just remember this is a dividend declared after the fact, based on Pag-IBIG’s actual performance, not a guaranteed rate you can count on every year. – Rappler.com Lance Spencer Yu is a former business journalist for Rappler. He later worked as a private capital analyst at MSCI, working directly with sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, and family offices across the Asia-Pacific region. He now serves as an investment and strategy analyst at Dedale Intelligence, producing in-depth, actionable research for private equity funds and institutional investors. Finterest is Rappler’s series that demystifies the world of money and gives practical advice on managing your personal finances. Must Read [Finterest] Start 2026 strong with these personal finance tips Summarize this article with AI Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied How does this make you feel? Loading Related Topics Banking And Financial Services Finterest GOCCs investments PAG-IBIG Pag-IBIG Fund author Lance Spencer Yu @lanceyu_ Lance Spencer Yu is a multimedia reporter who covers the transportation, tourism, infrastructure, finance, agriculture, and corporate sectors, as well as macroeconomic issues. More from Lance Spencer Yu Banking And Financial Services Philippine News US sanctions on ICC did not impact Philippine probe – deputy prosecutor Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied Business [Finterest] GCash, Maya IPOs in 2026? What this means for potential investors Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied Thought Leaders [Vantage Point] Why a DBP–LandBank merger has become urgent Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied Business [Finterest] MSMEs run the economy, so why do they still get so little bank loans? Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied More on Banking And Financial Services Finterest Business [Finterest] GCash, Maya IPOs in 2026? What this means for potential investors Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied Business [Finterest] MSMEs run the economy, so why do they still get so little bank loans? Share in Chat Share article Facebook X (Twitter) Copy Link Copied Business [Finterest] New GCash