What are the preferred payment methods for Filipinos?
The payment ecosystem in the Philippines is characterised by diversity, with traditional cash transactions co-existing with digital payments, and the following is an analysis of the mainstream local payment methods and the latest trends:
- cash economy(Dominance)
- Approximately 60% of daily transactions are still done in cash
- Cash usage in rural areas up to 75%
- The prevalence of a culture of small change (e.g., splitting large notes into "dozens")
-
Explosive growth of e-wallets
- GCash:
- Passed 76 million users (2023 data)
- Support code scanning payment, cross-border remittance (GCash Remit)
- Added cryptocurrency trading function
- Maya (formerly PayMaya):
- VISA co-branded card issued over 5 million units
- Integrated Investment Products
- Coins.ph:
- Web3 Payment Solution Provider
- Support digital currency exchange such as Bitcoin
- GCash:
-
Innovations in bank transfers
- InstaPay: real-time microtransfer system (50,000 pesos single transaction limit)
- PESONet: bulk clearing system (large interbank transfers)
Two major systems to process transactions up 42% year-on-year in 2023
-
Cross-border remittance channels
Western Union/MoneyGram still has 351 TP3T market share, but digital channels are growing at a significant rate:
- GCash international remittances grow at an annual rate of 1,20%
- WorldRemit and other online platforms increase market share to 18% -
emerging trend
- "Buy Now Pay Later" services on the rise: Atome, BillEase and other platforms reach 12% penetration rate
- CBDC Pilot: BSP plans to test wholesale digital currency in 2024
- QR Ph standard rollout: National unified QR code payment coverage has reached 65% merchants
Regulatory Update: The BSP requires all e-money issuers to hold a licence and implement strict anti-money laundering scrutiny. The share of digital payments is expected to increase from the current 42% to 50% by the end of 2024.
Overseas enterprises are advised to adopt a hybrid solution: simultaneous access to GCash/Maya + mainstream banking gateways + cash collection channels (e.g., 7-Eleven CLIQQ), and keep an eye on the Central Bank's upcoming Open Finance API framework.
In-depth analysis and strategic recommendations for the Philippine payments market (continued)
6. Digital transformation of offline payment channels
Despite the rapid growth of e-payments, a large number of consumers in the Philippines still rely on offline channels to complete digital transactions, creating a unique "O2O cash loop":
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Convenience store collection and payment network
- 7-Eleven CLIQQ: Support GCash/Maya cash recharge, bill payment (over 500,000 transactions per day)
- Palawan Pawnshop: Cash-to-e-wallet conversion service at 2500+ outlets nationwide
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Agent Banking
- BDO, BPI and other banks expand services through small community shops to reach the internet banking-less population
- Agency points processed approximately 281 TP3T of social security benefit payments in 2023
7. Credit/debit card differentiation
-
Credit card penetration is only 8%(much lower than in neighbouring Southeast Asian countries), but with significant growth at the top end of the market:
- VISA/Mastercard "zero down payment instalment" promotion with local banks (e.g. BDO's 0% instalment plan)
- JCB Card dominates the Japanese community and travel consumer scene
-
Debit card dominates online payments::
- DragonPay and other gateways support direct debit from 500+ banks, avoiding the problem of high credit card processing fees
8. Innovative models for B2B payments
Demand on the enterprise side has spawned new solutions:
- UBX (part of UnionBank) : Provide SME APIs to interface with PESONet for bulk payments
- SquidPay : Focus on supply chain finance, integrating logistics information and dynamic settlement
9. Government-driven infrastructure upgrades
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National ID System (PhilSys): 78 million people have been registered and will be hit in the future:
- Real Name System for SIM Cards → Strengthening e-wallet KYC
- Direct Benefit Transfer → in lieu of cash social benefit payments
-
QR Ph standardisation : RBI mandates all merchants to access unified QR code system by 2024
[Key challenges]
-
Digital divide issues
- Only 321 TP3T of GCash users are from rural areas
- Signal blindness leads to high OTP authentication failure rates -
Rising risk of fraud
Fintech fraud cases increased by 67% year-on-year in 2023, the main type:
① "Fake customer service" to induce the transfer of funds
② Lazada/Shopee Parcel Payout Scam
[Landing strategy for enterprises going to sea]
take | Recommended programme | note |
---|---|---|
e-commerce retail | GCash + COD (cash on delivery) | COD share still 45% |
SaaS subscription fees | Recurring Card Payment | Cooperate with local acquirers to prevent denial of payment |
Cross-border collections | Thunes + Maya Cross-Border Accounts | Compliance costs lower than traditional TT 40% |
Note on Technology Docking::
- GCash API requires a separate application for a business account (personal accounts have a limit of 100,000 pesos/month)
- PESONet clearing window is 9AM-3PM weekdays
Future trends and strategic deepening of the Philippine payments market (continued)
10. Convergence of social e-commerce and embedded finance
Social e-commerce in the Philippines (e.g. Facebook Marketplace, TikTok Shop) is driving the "chat as payment" model:
- GCash + Messenger Integration: Users can transfer money directly in FB conversations without having to jump to an app
- Telegram Trading Bot: Local startup develops AI assistant to handle P2P micro-lending (APR 60%-120%)
11. Cryptocurrencies and the grey area of Web3 payments
Although the BSP prohibits the use of cryptocurrencies as payment instruments, there are workarounds in reality:
- Coins.ph Allows users to exchange bitcoins to GCash balance (subject to 1.5% fee)
- Chain players such as Axie Infinity settle their earnings via USDT and then cash out through informal OTC channels
Regulatory developments: The SEC has begun cracking down on unregistered crypto exchanges, but the DeFi protocol remains difficult to control.
[Payment solutions for niche industries]
(1) Game & Entertainment Industry
-
Prepaid cards are preferred ::
- Garena Shells, Razer Gold have more than 70% market share in the Internet cafe channel
- Maya launches a "virtual card for games" (to avoid bank interception).
-
Live streaming reward tiered settlement ::
The platform splits the revenue through a third-party payment aggregator:graph LR
Audience --> |GCash Payment| Aggregator (e.g. PayMongo)
Aggregator -->|80% Split|Anchor E-Wallet
Aggregator --> |20% Split|Platform Public Accounts
(2) Education Technology Sector
Private schools and international programme providers tend to use it:
- Semester instalments : Atome offers a 3 term interest free programme (default rate only 2.3%)
- Blockchain Academic Degree Deposit Fee : Some Universities Require ETH to Pay for Certificates to Upload Gas Fees
[Anti-fraud technology upgrade]
The Philippines has become a high-risk area for money-laundering in South-East Asia and is recommended for deployment:
- biometric verification : GCash mandatory selfie + ID comparison (false positive rate 15%)
- Behavioural analysis engine : Monitor anomalous patterns such as:
- Frequent switching of account logins on the same device
- GCash balance just reloaded and immediately transferred out to an unknown account
typical case:: The "operator fraud ring" uncovered in 2024 used 2,000 puppet e-wallets to transfer stolen money.
[Infrastructure investment opportunities]
-
Rural agent network expansion
Currently there is only 1 financial service point per 100,000 rural inhabitants, which needs to be built.- Solar-powered mobile POS terminals (to solve the problem of unstable electricity)
- KYC Simplified Device (supports PhilSys ID card scanning)
-
Offline payment technology
Developed for signal blindness:- SMS-based transaction confirmation system
- NFC Near Field Prepaid Card Top-up
- SMS-based transaction confirmation system
[Ultimate strategy proposal]
In order to capture the Philippine market in depth, it is necessary to build a "cash-digital-cross-border" trinity of capabilities:
flowchart TD
Cash Entry --> |Agents/Convenience Stores| A[eWallet]
A --> |QR Ph/PESONet| B [Bank Account]
B --> |SWIFT/Stablecoin| C [cross-border pooling]
Implementation steps::
① Access to GCash+Maya first to cover 75% digital users →
② Connect to DragonPay to get direct bank connection.
③ Lastly, use Thunes to open up the overseas remittance chain.