As of 2020, the average monthly salary in the Philippines was approximately 45 thousand Philippine pesos. In that same period, the annual average wage in the country was 535 thousand Philippine pesos.
According to a 2020 survey among repatriated Filipino overseas workers (OFWs) during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, more than half of the respondents reported having a monthly income between 20,001 to 50 thousand Philippine pesos. Only three percent reported having a monthly income of more than 100 thousand Philippine pesos.
In 2022, the median monthly wage rate of time-rated full-time workers in the Philippines amounted to ****** Philippine pesos. This reflects a significant increase for this type of worker in 2020. In that year, aircraft pilots and related associate professionals were the highest paid occupations in the country.
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Wages in Philippines increased to 13487.30 PHP/Month in 2018 from 12646 PHP/Month in 2017. This dataset provides - Philippines Wage Index - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Philippines Average Family Income: Region V, Bicol data was reported at 187,000.000 PHP in 2015. This records an increase from the previous number of 162,000.000 PHP for 2012. Philippines Average Family Income: Region V, Bicol data is updated yearly, averaging 99,113.500 PHP from Dec 1988 (Median) to 2015, with 10 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 187,000.000 PHP in 2015 and a record low of 26,570.000 PHP in 1988. Philippines Average Family Income: Region V, Bicol data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.H020: Family Income and Expenditure Survey: Average Annual Income, Expenditure and Saving: By Region.
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Philippines Average Family Income: Region X, Northern Mindanao data was reported at 221,000.000 PHP in 2015. This records an increase from the previous number of 190,000.000 PHP for 2012. Philippines Average Family Income: Region X, Northern Mindanao data is updated yearly, averaging 109,666.500 PHP from Dec 1988 (Median) to 2015, with 10 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 221,000.000 PHP in 2015 and a record low of 35,801.000 PHP in 1988. Philippines Average Family Income: Region X, Northern Mindanao data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.H020: Family Income and Expenditure Survey: Average Annual Income, Expenditure and Saving: By Region.
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Philippines Employment: Wage & Salary Workers data was reported at 26,567.000 Person th in Jul 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 26,079.000 Person th for Apr 2018. Philippines Employment: Wage & Salary Workers data is updated quarterly, averaging 20,089.000 Person th from Jul 2003 (Median) to Jul 2018, with 61 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 26,567.000 Person th in Jul 2018 and a record low of 16,066.000 Person th in Oct 2003. Philippines Employment: Wage & Salary Workers data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.G013: Labour Force Survey: Employment: by Industry, Occupation and Class.
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Minimum Wages in Philippines remained unchanged at 645 PHP/day in 2025 from 645 PHP/day in 2024. This dataset provides - Philippines Minimum Wages- actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
In 2022, time-rated workers on full-time basis working in the electricity, gas, steam, and air conditioning supply in the Philippines received the highest median monthly basic pay at 29,928 Philippine pesos. Meanwhile, time-rated workers on full-time basis working in the information and communications industry received nearly 26 thousand Philippine pesos in monthly basic pay.
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Philippines Family Income: Median: First Decile data was reported at 83.000 PHP th in 2015. This records an increase from the previous number of 66.000 PHP th for 2012. Philippines Family Income: Median: First Decile data is updated yearly, averaging 28.000 PHP th from Dec 1988 (Median) to 2015, with 9 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 83.000 PHP th in 2015 and a record low of 9.000 PHP th in 1988. Philippines Family Income: Median: First Decile data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.H024: Family Income and Expenditure Survey: Median Income and Expenditure: By Decile.
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Philippines Employment: Wage & Salary Workers: With Pay in Own Family Business data was reported at 211.000 Person th in Feb 2025. This records an increase from the previous number of 106.000 Person th for Jan 2025. Philippines Employment: Wage & Salary Workers: With Pay in Own Family Business data is updated monthly, averaging 160.500 Person th from Jan 2021 (Median) to Feb 2025, with 50 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 312.000 Person th in Nov 2022 and a record low of 76.000 Person th in Dec 2024. Philippines Employment: Wage & Salary Workers: With Pay in Own Family Business data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.G025: Labour Force Survey: Employment: by Industry, Occupation and Class.
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Philippines CES: Level of Family Income: Php 10,000-Php 29,999 data was reported at 9.000 % in Sep 2018. This records a decrease from the previous number of 16.000 % for Jun 2018. Philippines CES: Level of Family Income: Php 10,000-Php 29,999 data is updated quarterly, averaging 5.600 % from Mar 2005 (Median) to Sep 2018, with 55 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 20.100 % in Sep 2017 and a record low of -19.300 % in Sep 2005. Philippines CES: Level of Family Income: Php 10,000-Php 29,999 data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.H005: Consumer Expectation Survey: By Household Income Level.
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The Gross Domestic Product per capita in Philippines was last recorded at 3745.65 US dollars in 2023. The GDP per Capita in Philippines is equivalent to 30 percent of the world's average. This dataset provides - Philippines GDP per capita - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Philippines BoP: CA: Secondary Income data was reported at 3.123 USD bn in Dec 2024. This records an increase from the previous number of 2.521 USD bn for Nov 2024. Philippines BoP: CA: Secondary Income data is updated monthly, averaging 1.885 USD bn from Jan 2005 (Median) to Dec 2024, with 240 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 3.123 USD bn in Dec 2024 and a record low of 817.455 USD mn in Feb 2005. Philippines BoP: CA: Secondary Income data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.JB001: BPM6: Balance of Payments.
In 2023, the minimum monthly wage in the Philippines was reported to have increased to 186.97 U.S. dollars from 182.9 in the previous year. The country's labor market has shown signs of recovery following the impact of the global coronavirus pandemic.
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Philippines Average Family Income: By Income Class (IC): Annual data was reported at 267,000.000 PHP in 2015. This records an increase from the previous number of 235,000.000 PHP for 2012. Philippines Average Family Income: By Income Class (IC): Annual data is updated yearly, averaging 146,019.500 PHP from Dec 1988 (Median) to 2015, with 10 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 267,000.000 PHP in 2015 and a record low of 40,408.000 PHP in 1988. Philippines Average Family Income: By Income Class (IC): Annual data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Statistics Authority. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.H018: Family Income and Expenditure Survey: Average Annual Income and Expenditure: By Income Class.
The 2006 Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FIES) had the following primary objectives:
1) to gather data on family income and family expenditure and related information affecting income and expenditure levels and patterns in the Philippines; 2) to determine the sources of income and income distribution, levels of living and spending patterns, and the degree of inequality among families; 3) to provide benchmark information to update weights for the estimation of consumer price index; and 4) to provide information for the estimation of the country's poverty threshold and incidence.
The 2003 Master Sample (MS) considers the country's 17 administrative regions as the sampling domains. A domain is referred to as a subdivision of the country for which estimates with adequate level of precision are generated. It must be noted that while there is demand for data at the provincial level (and to some extent municipal and barangay levels), the provinces were not treated as sampling domains because there are more than 80 provinces which would entail a large resource requirement.
The unit of analysis is the family. A family consists of the household head, spouse, unmarried children, ever-married children, son-in-law/daughter-in-law, parents of the head/spouse and other relatives who are members of the household.
In households where there are two or more persons not related to each other by blood, marriage or adoption, only the income and expenditure of the member who is considered as the household head is included.
Institutional population is not within the scope of the survey.
All households and members of households nationwide
Sample survey data [ssd]
The 2003 Master Sample (MS) considers the country's 17 administrative regions as defined in Executive Orders (EO) 36 and 131 as the sampling domains. A domain is referred to as a subdivision of the country for which estimates with adequate level of precision are generated. It must be noted that while there is demand for data at the provincial level (and to some extent municipal and barangay levels), the provinces were not treated as sampling domains because there are more than 80 provinces which would entail a large resource requirement.
As in most household surveys, the 2003 MS made use of an area sample design. For this purpose, the Enumeration Area Reference File (EARF) of the 2000 Census of Population and Housing (CPH) was utilized as sampling frame. The EARF contains the number of households by enumeration area (EA) in each barangay.
This frame was used to form the primary sampling units (PSUs). With consideration of the period for which the 2003 MS will be in use, the PSUs were formed/defined as a barangay or a combination of barangays with at least 500 households.
The 2003 MS considers the 17 regions of the country as the primary strata. Within each region, further stratification was performed using geographic groupings such as provinces, highly urbanized cities (HUCs), and independent component cities (ICCs). Within each of these substrata formed within regions, the PSUs were further stratified, to the extent possible, using the proportion of strong houses (PSTRONG), indicator of engagement in agriculture of the area (AGRI), and a measure of per capita income (PERCAPITA) as stratification factors.
The 2003 MS consists of a sample of 2,835 PSUs. The entire MS was divided into four sub-samples or independent replicates, such as a quarter sample contains one fourth of the total PSUs; a half sample contains one-half of the four sub-samples or equivalent to all PSUs in two replicates. The final number of sample PSUs for each domain was determined by first classifying PSUs as either selfrepresenting (SR) or non-self-representing (NSR). In addition, to facilitate the selection of sub-samples, the total number of NSR PSUs in each region was adjusted to make it a multiple of 4. SR PSUs refers to a very large PSU in the region/domain with a selection probability of approximately 1 or higher and is outright included in the MS; it is properly treated as a stratum; also known as certainty PSU. NSR PSUs refers to a regular too small sized PSU in a region/domain; also known as non certainty PSU. The 2003 MS consists of 330 certainty PSUs and 2,505 non-certainty PSUs. To have some control over the sub-sample size, the PSUs were selected with probability proportional to some estimated measure of size. The size measure refers to the total number of households from the 2000 CPH. Because of the wide variation in PSU sizes, PSUs with selection probabilities greater than 1 were identified and were included in the sample as certainty selections.
At the second stage, enumeration areas (EAs) were selected within sampled PSUs, and at the third stage, housing units were selected within sampled EAs. Generally, all households in sampled housing units were enumerated, except for few cases when the number of households in a housing unit exceeds three. In which case, a sample of three households in a sampled housing unit was selected at random with equal probability.
An EA is defined as an area with discernable boundaries within barangays consisting of about 150 contiguous households. These EAs were identified during the 2000 CPH. A housing unit, on the other hand, is a structurally separate and independent place of abode which, by the way it has been constructed, converted, or arranged, is intended for habitation by a household.
The 2006 FIES involved the interview of a national sample of about 51,000 sample households deemed sufficient to gather data on family income and family expenditure and related information affecting income and expenditure levels and patterns in the Philippines at the national and regional level. The sample households covered in the survey were the same households interviewed in the July 2006 and January 2007 round of the LFS.
The estimates from the 2006 FIES include results of the first FIES visit for the NCR based on questionnaires recovered from fire. The fire that hit the NCR’s Statistics Office on October 3, 2006 damaged 58 percent of the total questionnaires for the FIES first visit. Questionnaires that were encoded and processed cover around 42 percent of these questionnaires. In the preliminary results, values for the burned questionnaires were imputed using a ratio which requires data from the recovered questionnaires and data from corresponding questionnaires from the second visit. The ratio was computed by getting the sums of the total income and total expenditure in the recovered questionnaires from the first visit and the sums of the same data from corresponding second visit questionnaires and then by dividing the sums from the second visit by the sums from the first visit. The annual estimates on income and expenditure for NCR were computed by dividing the second visit values by the computed ratio. For the final results, the annual estimates for the NCR were computed by multiplying by 2 the second visit data. This imputation procedure was opted after it has been established that there was no significant difference between using the ratio and the multiplier ‘2’.
Face-to-face [f2f]
The 2006 FIES adopts a questionnaire design wherein separate questionnaire with the same sets of questions for both visits will be used. The sample household is interviewed in two separate operations each time using the half-year period preceding the interview as reference period. This scheme envisions to improve the quality of data gathered since it minimizes memory bias of respondents and at the same time captures the seasonality of income and expenditure patterns. The use of separate questionnaire with the same set of questions for both visits was used starting 2003 FIES. In previous FIES, the same set of questions for each semester (two enumeration periods) were contained in one questionnaire.
To further reduce memory bias, the concept of "average week" consumption for all food items shall be utilized for the 2006 FIES. Moreover, the reference period for Fuel, Light and Water, Transportation and Communication, Household Operations and Personal Care and Effects is limited to the past month and in some specified cases, the concept of average month consumption shall be used. For all other expenditure groups, the past six months shall be used as reference period.
The questionnaire has four main parts consisting of the following:
Part I. Identification and Other Information (page 1-3) (Geographic Identification, Other Information and Particulars about the Family)
Part II. Expenditures (page 4-45) Section A. Food, Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco Section B. Fuel, Light and Water, Transportation and Communication, and Household Operations Section C. Personal Care and Effects, Clothing Footwear and Other Wear Section D. Education, Recreation, and Medical Care Section E. Furnishings and Equipment Section F. Taxes Section G. Housing, House Maintenance and Minor Repairs Section H. Miscellaneous Expenditures Section I. Other Disbursements
Part III. Income (page 46-55) Section A. Salaries and Wages from Employment Section B. Net Share of Crops, Fruits and Vegetables Produced and/or Livestock and Poultry Raised by Other Households Section C. Other Sources of Income Section D. Other Receipts Section
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Philippines BoP: Primary Income data was reported at 223.994 USD mn in Jun 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 206.181 USD mn for May 2018. Philippines BoP: Primary Income data is updated monthly, averaging 115.703 USD mn from Jan 2005 (Median) to Jun 2018, with 162 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 483.677 USD mn in Oct 2008 and a record low of -426.117 USD mn in Aug 2006. Philippines BoP: Primary Income data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.JB005: Balance of Payments: BPM6: Primary Income.
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Philippines Return on Assets Ratio: PSE Financial data was reported at 1.078 % in Jun 2018. This stayed constant from the previous number of 1.078 % for May 2018. Philippines Return on Assets Ratio: PSE Financial data is updated monthly, averaging 1.285 % from Jul 2006 (Median) to Jun 2018, with 144 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 4.070 % in Jul 2006 and a record low of 0.715 % in Apr 2009. Philippines Return on Assets Ratio: PSE Financial data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Philippine Stock Exchange. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.Z006: Philippines Stock Exchange: Earnings and Net Income.
In 2022, female time-rated workers on a full-time basis in the Philippines earned more than their male counterparts. In particular, female workers earned a median monthly basic pay of 14,916 Philippine pesos while male workers earned 500 Philippine pesos less.
As of 2020, the average monthly salary in the Philippines was approximately 45 thousand Philippine pesos. In that same period, the annual average wage in the country was 535 thousand Philippine pesos.