PRIMER
ON
PHILIPPINE
IMMIGRATION LAW
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I.
Nonimmigrant Visa under Section 9(g) of the Philippine
Immigration Act
II.
Special Nonimmigrant Visa under Section 47(a)(2)
III.
Multiple Entry Special Visa
IV.
Special Resident Visa
V. Other
Nonimmigrant Visas/Permits
VI.
Immigrant Visa under Section 13
VII. Other
Registrations
VIII.
Department of Labor and Employment Permits
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Nonimmigrant Visa
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Section 9 of the Philippine Immigration Act provides
for the admission of aliens as nonimmigrants under the
following categories:
- Temporary
Visitors Visa [9(a) Visa]- A
temporary visitor coming for business or for
pleasure or for reasons of health;
- Transients
Visa [9(b)
Visa]- A person in transit to
a destination outside the Philippines;
- Seamans Visa
[9(c) Visa]-
A seaman serving as such on a vessel arriving
at a port of the Philippines and seeking to enter
temporarily and solely in the pursuit of his
calling as a seaman;
- Treaty
Trader/Investor Visa [9(d) Visa]-
An alien entitled to enter the Philippines
under and in pursuant of the provisions of a
treaty of commerce and navigation (1) solely to
carry on substantial trade principally between
the Philippines and the foreign state of which he
is a national or (2) solely to develop and direct
the operations of an enterprise in which, in
accordance with the Constitution and the laws of
the Philippines, he has invested or of an
enterprise in which he is actively in the process
of investing, a substantial amount of capital;
and his wife, and his unmarried children under
twenty-one years of age, if accompanying or
following to join him, subject to the condition
that citizens of the Philippines are accorded
like privileges in the foreign state of which
such alien is a national;
- Diplomatic Visa
[9(e) Visa]-
An accredited official of a foreign
government recognized by the Government of the
Philippines, his family, attendants, servants,
and employees;
- Student Visa
[9(f) Visa]-
A student, having means sufficient for his
education and support in the Philippines, who is
at least fifteen years of age and who seeks to
enter the Philippines temporarily and solely for
the purpose of taking up a course of study higher
than high school at a university, seminary,
academy, college or school approved for such
alien students by the Commissioner of
Immigration; and
- Pre-arranged
Employment Visa - An alien
coming to pre-arranged employment, for whom the
issuance of a visa has been authorized in
accordance with section twenty of this Act, and
his wife and his unmarried children under
twenty-one years of age, if accompanying him or
if following to join him within a period of six
months from the date of his admission into the
Philippines as a nonimmigrant under this
paragraph.
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Special Nonimmigrant Visa under
Section 47(a)(2)
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The Special Nonimmigrant Visa is granted under
Section 47(a)(2) of the Philippine Immigration Act which
allows the President, when public interest warrants, to
issue such visa subject to conditions he may prescribed.
The President, acting through the appropriate
government agencies, has exercised this authority to
allow the entry of foreign personnel in the following
areas:
- Oil drilling
companies
- Philippine Economic
Zone Authority Registered Enterprises
- Board of Investment
Registered Enterprises
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Multiple Entry Special Visa
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The most convenient of the employment visas is the
multiple entry special visa which may be issued to the
following:
- Foreign Personnel
of Offshore Banking Units under Presidential
Decree 1034, Section 7 - Foreign
personnel of Offshore Banking Units of foreign
banks duly licensed by the Bangko Sentral ng
Pilipinas (Central Bank of the Philippines) to
operate as such may be issued a multiple entry
special visa. Likewise, their respective spouses
and minor dependents under twenty-one (21) years
of age, who are coming or following to join them
after their admission, shall be issued a multiple
entry special visa. A multiple entry special visa
is valid for one year and which may be extended
upon legal and meritorious grounds.
- Foreign Personnel
of Regional or Area Headquarters of Multinational
Companies under Executive Order 226, Book III,
Article 59 - Foreign
personnel of regional or area headquarters of
multinational companies, their respective spouses
and unmarried minor children under twenty-one
(21) years of age, if accompanying or following
to join them after their admission into the
country as nonimmigrants shall be issued a
multiple entry special visa. Such visa shall be
valid for one year unless extended upon legal and
meritorious grounds by the Commissioner of
Immigration.
The holder of this special visa is exempt from
immigration registration and fees, and from securing
clearances from any agency of the government except a tax
clearance, prior to final departure.
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Special Resident Visa
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There are five (5) instances when a Special
Resident Visa maybe issued, as provided under the
following laws:
- Special Investors
Resident Visa under Executive Order 226 or the
Omnibus Investment Code of 1987 -
Any alien, except nationals coming from
North Korea and Cambodia and such other countries
as may be classified as "Restricted" in
the future, who meets the following requirements
may be issued the Special Investors Resident
Visa:
- The alien must not have been
convicted of a crime involving moral
turpitude;
- He must not be afflicted with any
loathsome, dangerous or contagious
disease;
- He must not have been
institutionalized for any mental disorder
or disability;
- He is willing and able to invest the
amount of at least US$75,000.00 in the
Philippines. For purposes of compliance
with this particular condition, he should
prove that he has remitted such amount in
acceptable foreign currency to the
Philippines.
- Special Investors
Resident Visa in Tourist-Related Projects and
Tourist Establishments under Executive Order 63
-
Any alien who invests the amount of
US$50,000.00 in a tourist-related project or in
any tourist establishment shall be entitled to
the benefits and incentives granted under
Executive Order 63. As a benefit or incentive to
the investor, he may apply for a Special
Investors Resident Visa.
Foreign nationals and/or dependents
classified as "Restricted" by the
Department of Foreign Affairs and the Bureau of
Immigration are excluded from the coverage of
Executive Order 63.
- Special Investor
Retiree Visa under Executive Order 1037 or the
Philippine Retirement Authority -
The Special Resident Retirees Visa
entitles the holder to multiple-entry privileges
with the right to permanent residence in the
Philippines. The Special Resident Retirees
Visa is issued by the Bureau of Immigration of
the Philippines under the Retirement Program of
the Philippine Retirement Authority for
foreigners and expatriate/overseas-based
Filipinos.The Special Resident Retirees
Visa entitles the holder to multiple-entry
privileges with the right to permanent residence
in the Philippines. The Special Resident
Retirees Visa is issued by the Bureau of
Immigration of the Philippines under the
Retirement Program of the Philippine Retirement
Authority for foreigners and
expatriate/overseas-based Filipinos.
- Subic Special
Investors Visa under Republic Act 7227 or
the Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992
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The Subic Special Investors Visa
entitles a qualified investor, as well as his
spouse and dependent children under 21 years of
age, to a resident status which allows him an
indefinite stay in the Subic Bay Freeport Zone
and multiple entry into the Philippine without
need of obtaining the appropriate Re-entry Visa,
Special Return Certificate, and Emigration
Clearance Certificate from the Bureau of
Immigration.
An Investor is qualified for the Subic
Special Investors Visa when he has made and
continues to maintain an investment of not less
than US$250,000.00 within the Subic Bay Freeport
Zone. Investors may allocate equivalent units for
their investments to the foreign nationals
assigned to work for their companies. The
investments may be in the form of:
- A Subic Bay Freeport enterprise or
other direct investment, within the Subic
Bay Freeport Zone;
- A cash grant or interest-free loan to
the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority or
to a Subic Bay Freeport Enterprise for
the purpose of making the capital
improvements by the recipient in the
Subic Bay Freeport;
- A purchase or real estate in the
Subic Bay Freeport or of a Subic Bay
Freeport Enterprise for the purpose of
renovation, construction, or expansion of
buildings, equipment, structures, or
appurtenances for capital improvement
purposes; or
- A donation in kind to the Subic Bay
Metropolitan Authority or a Subic Bay
Freeport Enterprise of equipment or
material for capital improvement
purposes;
- Subic Special
Retirees Visa under Republic Act 7227 or
the Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992
-
The Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority may
issue permanent residency visas to any foreign
national who is a retired person and his or her
spouse and dependent children under 21 years of
age, for residence in Subic Bay Freeport.
The applicant must comply with the
following requirements:
- he must be at least 60 years of age
who can demonstrate to the satisfaction
of Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority that
he or she is of good moral character;
- has not been convicted of any crime
involving moral turpitude;
- no longer employed or self employed;
and
- who receives a pension or passive
income that is payable in Subic Bay
Freeport and exceeds US$50,000.00 per
year.
The permanent residency visa of the
retiree automatically terminates upon the taking
of residence by the retiree outside the Subic Bay
Freeport, or the acceptance by the retired person
or his or her spouse of work for compensation
within Subic Bay Freeport or anywhere within the
Philippines without the approval of the Subic Bay
Freeport.
The residency visa of the spouse of the
retiree automatically terminates upon the death
of the person to whom the residency visa was
granted, or upon their divorce, unless he or she
makes application for and receives a residency
visa from the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority.
The Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority may
summarily or after hearing revoke the residency
visa of any retiree, his/her spouse or child for
violation by these persons of any Philippine law
or regulation or the terms and conditions for the
issuance of the visa.
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Other Nonimmigrant Visas/Permits
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- Subic Special Working Visa under Republic Act
7227 or the Bases Conversion and Development Act
of 1992
- Temporary Work Permit under Republic
Act 7227 or the Bases Conversion and Development:Act of 1992
- Special Work Permit under Law
Instruction 27
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Immigrant Visa under Section 13
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- Quota Immigrant
- Non-Quota Immigrant
- Wife or Husband or Unmarried Minor
- Children of Philippine Citizens IV - 6
- Child of Alien Parents Born During Temporary
Visit Abroad of Permanent Resident Mother
- Child Born Subsequent to Issuance of Immigration
Visa to Parents
- Filipino Woman who Lost her Philippine
Citizenship By Marriage
- Returning Resident
- Wife or Husband or Unmarried Minor Children of
Permanent Residents
- Returning Natural Born Filipinos who were
Naturalized as Citizens of Foreign Countries
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Other Registrations
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- Alien Certificate
of Registration -
Under Administrative Order 01-93,
Alien Certificates of Registration, E Series, are
issued to foreign nationals who apply for initial
registration, fingerprinting, and issuance of an
Alien Certificate of Registration, as required
under the Alien Registration Act of 1950.
- The following aliens
are required to register and be
finger-printed:
- Any native
(Philippine)-born alien who is 14 years
or more and will remain in the
Philippines for 30 days or longer;
- Any alien who is 14
years or more and who is admitted into
the Philippines other that as temporary
visitor (9(a)) or transient (9(b)) and
who remains therein for 30 days or
longer;
- Any alien who is 14
years or more and who is admitted into
the Philippines other than as temporary
visitor (9(a)) or transient (9(b)) and
who remains in the Philippines for more
than six (6) months;
- Any alien bona fide
seaman entering the Philippines who has
been discharged with the consent of the
Immigration Officer in charge of the port
where the discharge occurred and who will
remain in the Philippines for 30 days or
longer; and
- Any alien under orders
of deportation.
- The parent or legal
guardian of any alien child who is below
14 years and who falls under any of the
categories mentioned in paragraphs 1 (a)
to (d) above, is required to register the
child, (without need of fingerprinting)
within 30 days after birth if
Philippine-born, or immediately upon the
childs entry. Within 15 days after
attaining 14 years of age, the alien
child must apply in person for
registration and fingerprinting.
- Any alien admitted
into the Philippines as temporary visitor
under 9(a) or transient under 9(b) and
who remains for over 59 days but not more
than six (6) months and who has no
derogatory information about him; and
does not belong to the category of
restricted nationals shall only be
required to pay the registration fees due
without undergoing any other formality
such as filling in an application form,
picture taking and/or fingerprinting.
- Accredited officials
of a foreign government recognized by the
Republic of the Philippines or members of
their official staff and families are
exempt from registration and
fingerprinting. (Alien Registration Act
of 1950 (Republic Act 562) as amended,
and the implementing regulations).
- In addition, the
following are likewise required to obtain
an Alien Certificate of Registration:
- International Treaty
Trader/Investor under Section 9(d);
- Student under Section
9(f);
- Pre-arranged Employee
under Section 9(g);
- Quota or non-quota
immigrants under Section 13;
- Special Nonimigrants
under Section 47(a)(2); and
- Special Resident Visa
holders.
- Certificate of
Residence -
Immigrants
The following immigrants are required to
secure an Immigrants Certificate of Residence:
- An alien who has his lawful and
permanent residence in the Philippines,
and an alien who may hereafter be
lawfully admitted in the Philippines for
permanent residence;
- An alien coming from abroad and
admitted either as a quota or non-quota
immigrant under the Philippine Immigrant
Act; and
- An alien admitted under a different
immigration category and whose status has
been changed to either quota or non-quota
immigration under the Philippine
Immigration Act.
Nonimmigrants
Nonimmigrants, on the other hand, are
issued any of the following:
- Certificate of Residence of
Pre-arranged Employee;
- Certificate of Residence of Temporary
Visitor;
- Certificate of Residence of Treaty
Trader; or
- Certificate of Temporary Residence of
Student.
- Emigration
Clearance Certificate -An
Emigration Clearance Certificate is issued to
aliens permanently or temporarily residing in the
Philippines, who are departing for temporary
sojourn abroad and intend to return to the
Philippines.
- Re-entry Permit
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- Special Return
Certificate -
The Special
Return Certificate is issued to an alien
nonimmigrant admitted to temporary residence in
the Philippines who is about to depart
temporarily from the Philippines. This document
allows the holder to return to the Philippines
with the same admission status as when he
departed. A Special Return Certificate shall be
valid for an initial period of six (6) months,
but on good cause shown, it may be issued with a
validity period of one (1) year, provided that in
no case shall its validity exceed the
holders authorized stay.
The Special Return Certificate shall be
valid for a single entry unless it is expressly
stated that it shall be valid for multiple
entries. A Special Return Certificate fee is
assessed on every issuance and/or extension for a
six (6)-month period but with respect to the
multiple Special Return Certificate, the fee is
assessed for every departure.
An application for the Special Return
Certificate is accompanied by an application for
the Emigration Clearance Certificate.
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Department of Labor and
Employment
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- Alien Employment
Permit -
Foreign nationals
who are in the Philippines for purposes of
employment must obtain an Alien Employment Permit
from the Department of Labor and Employment.
Executives of regional headquarters and
offshore banking units as well as Treaty Trader
Visa holders are exempt from the Alien Employment
Permit requirement.
The principal criterion that the
Department of Labor and Employment applies in
evaluating Alien Employment Permit applications
is the availability or non-availability of a
person in the Philippines who is competent and
willing to do the job for which the services of
the applicant are required.
The application is made by filing the
requirements with the Department of Labor and
Employment. In certain cases, an interview with
the foreign national and the Filipino
understudies may be required.
- Alien Employment
Registration Certificate -
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