Remittance inflows to the Philippines are showing signs of deceleration. According to data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), cash transfers sent home through banking channels coursed to $3.171 billion in October, marking just a 3% year-on-year increase—the weakest growth momentum witnessed since May’s 2.9% expansion.
Despite the softer annual growth, October’s remittance volume remained notably resilient on a sequential basis. The $3.171 billion inflow represented a 1.6% month-on-month increase from the prior month’s $3.121 billion, and still ranked as the highest monthly level recorded in the past three months, trailing only July’s $3.179 billion.
Where the Money Comes From
The geographic composition of remittances remained largely unchanged. The United States continued its position as the primary remittance corridor to the Philippines, followed by Singapore and Saudi Arabia. This distribution pattern underscores the importance of overseas Filipino workers concentrated in these key markets.
Broader Trends Through October
When examining the January-October 2025 cumulative period, the picture shifts slightly. Total cash remittances coursed through formal banking channels reached $29.202 billion, reflecting a more robust 3.2% annual growth compared to the $28.304 billion recorded in the equivalent ten-month window of the previous year.
Personal remittances—encompassing both formal bank transfers and informal channels alongside in-kind contributions—tells a complementary story. These broader measures rose 3% to $3.519 billion in October alone, and accumulated to $32.493 billion through October, representing 3.2% growth from $31.487 billion year-on-year.
The October slowdown, while modest, suggests potential headwinds ahead for Philippine remittance-dependent households and the broader economy’s foreign exchange dynamics.
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Filipinos' Overseas Remittances Hit Five-Month Low in October
Remittance inflows to the Philippines are showing signs of deceleration. According to data released by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), cash transfers sent home through banking channels coursed to $3.171 billion in October, marking just a 3% year-on-year increase—the weakest growth momentum witnessed since May’s 2.9% expansion.
Despite the softer annual growth, October’s remittance volume remained notably resilient on a sequential basis. The $3.171 billion inflow represented a 1.6% month-on-month increase from the prior month’s $3.121 billion, and still ranked as the highest monthly level recorded in the past three months, trailing only July’s $3.179 billion.
Where the Money Comes From
The geographic composition of remittances remained largely unchanged. The United States continued its position as the primary remittance corridor to the Philippines, followed by Singapore and Saudi Arabia. This distribution pattern underscores the importance of overseas Filipino workers concentrated in these key markets.
Broader Trends Through October
When examining the January-October 2025 cumulative period, the picture shifts slightly. Total cash remittances coursed through formal banking channels reached $29.202 billion, reflecting a more robust 3.2% annual growth compared to the $28.304 billion recorded in the equivalent ten-month window of the previous year.
Personal remittances—encompassing both formal bank transfers and informal channels alongside in-kind contributions—tells a complementary story. These broader measures rose 3% to $3.519 billion in October alone, and accumulated to $32.493 billion through October, representing 3.2% growth from $31.487 billion year-on-year.
The October slowdown, while modest, suggests potential headwinds ahead for Philippine remittance-dependent households and the broader economy’s foreign exchange dynamics.