Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Today's Print

Sandro Marcos moves to abolish travel tax

House Majority Leader Ferdinand Alexander “Sandro” Marcos of Ilocos Norte has pushed for the immediate abolition of the travel tax, saying the levy has outlived its purpose and now works against the country’s goals of economic recovery, mobility and regional competitiveness.

Marcos filed House Bill (HB) 7443, which seeks to scrap the travel tax and directly responds to the everyday burden faced by Filipino travelers.

- Advertisement -

“The travel tax was created in a very different economic context. Today, it has become an added cost that restricts mobility and weighs heavily on ordinary Filipinos who simply want to travel for work, family or opportunity,” Marcos said on Wednesday.

Under the bill, the travel tax imposed under Presidential Decree (PD) No. 1183 and related provisions of the Tourism Act of 2009 would be repealed, ending the collection of fixed charges that currently reach P2,700 for first-class passengers and P1,620 for economy class travelers.

Marcos noted that for families, these amounts quickly add up and divert resources that could otherwise be spent on basic needs or local economic activity.

“When travel becomes more expensive, fewer people move, fewer people spend and fewer opportunities circulate through the economy. Lowering the cost of travel allows Filipino families to allocate their money where it matters most,” Marcos explained.

The Ilocano lawmaker pointed out that the Philippines has increasingly become an outlier in the region, with many ASEAN member states having already removed similar travel-related levies to stimulate tourism, trade and people-to-people exchanges.

He said maintaining the travel tax runs counter to regional commitments aimed at easing movement within Southeast Asia.

“A tax that discourages travel also discourages growth. If our neighbors are opening doors and reducing barriers, we should not be holding on to policies that place us at a disadvantage,” according to the presidential son.

Marcos said that abolishing the travel tax does not mean abandoning support for tourism, culture or education, which currently benefit from travel tax collections.

Instead, the bill shifts funding for agencies such as the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority, the Commission on Higher Education and the National Commission for Culture and the Arts to the General Appropriations Act.

“Public programs should be sustained through transparent budgeting, not through charges that disproportionately affect travelers. This approach ensures continuity of funding while removing an unnecessary burden on the public,” he said.

Marcos added that reducing travel costs would help stimulate tourism-dependent industries, including hotels, transport services and small businesses that rely on visitor spending, while also encouraging more Filipinos to explore domestic destinations.

“Travel is not a luxury for many Filipinos,” the majority leader said. “It is part of how families stay connected and how workers sustain their livelihoods.”

- Advertisement -

Leave a review

RECENT STORIES

spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
spot_img
spot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Popular Categories
- Advertisement -spot_img