We work hard to keep this guide accurate. If you spot outdated info, email updates to contact@desinri.com.
Short Description: Complete guide to the Philippines Special Investor’s Resident Visa (SIRV): eligibility, investment rules, documents, dependents, process, risks, and official sources.
Last Verified On: April 6, 2026
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Philippines |
| Visa name | Special Investor’s Resident Visa |
| Visa short name | SIRV |
| Category | Special resident visa for foreign investors |
| Main purpose | Long-term residence in the Philippines through a qualifying investment |
| Typical applicant | Foreign national investor seeking residence rights tied to an approved Philippine investment |
| Validity | Indefinite resident status as long as the qualifying investment is maintained and rules are met |
| Stay duration | Long-term/indefinite, subject to compliance |
| Entries allowed | Multiple-entry resident status |
| Extension possible? | Not usually framed as a standard extension; status continues while investment and compliance are maintained |
| Work allowed? | Limited/unclear in public guidance; verify with the Board of Investments (BOI) and Bureau of Immigration (BI) before relying on SIRV alone for employment rights |
| Study allowed? | Generally possible as a resident, but this is not primarily a study visa; institution-specific requirements may still apply |
| Family allowed? | Yes, typically spouse and unmarried children under 21 may be included, subject to documentary proof |
| PR path? | Yes/possible; SIRV is itself a special resident visa, but confirm how it is classified for long-term residence records and related rights |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect; Philippine naturalization has separate legal requirements and SIRV alone does not guarantee citizenship |
The Special Investor’s Resident Visa (SIRV) is a Philippine special resident visa granted to qualifying foreign nationals who make a required investment in approved Philippine enterprises or instruments under the program rules.
It exists to attract foreign capital, support business activity, and encourage longer-term settlement by investors in the Philippines.
In the Philippine immigration system, SIRV is best understood as a resident visa status tied to investment, rather than a simple short-stay entry visa. It is not an e-visa or tourist visa. It is a long-term status administered with the involvement of the Board of Investments (BOI) and implemented through Philippine consular and immigration authorities.
What kind of immigration route is it?
SIRV is a hybrid of: – an investment migration route – a resident visa – a multiple-entry long-term status
Who is it meant for?
It is meant for foreign nationals who: – are eligible under Philippine law and policy – can invest at least the required minimum amount in approved forms – want long-term residence in the Philippines based on that investment
Alternate official naming
The most commonly used official name is: – Special Investor’s Resident Visa
Common short form: – SIRV
It is often discussed alongside, but should not be confused with: – SRRV — Special Resident Retiree’s Visa – 9(a) — Temporary Visitor’s Visa – Pre-arranged employment visa (commonly 9(g)) – Other special resident or special non-immigrant categories
2. Who should apply for this visa?
Best-fit applicants
Investors
This is the core target group. SIRV is designed for foreign investors willing to place capital into an approved Philippine investment.
Founders and entrepreneurs
Potentially suitable if your business structure and investment qualify under SIRV rules. However, many founders assume any company investment qualifies. That is not always true. The investment must fit official SIRV rules.
Spouses and dependent children of qualifying investors
If the principal applicant qualifies, family members may usually be included, subject to dependency and age rules.
Long-term residents who want investment-based residence
Useful for foreign nationals who want residence not tied to employment, marriage, or retirement.
Usually not the right visa for these groups
Tourists
Do not use SIRV for ordinary tourism. Use the normal visitor route.
Business visitors attending meetings only
If you are only attending meetings, conferences, or exploratory visits, SIRV is usually excessive and unnecessary.
Job seekers and employees
SIRV is not primarily an employment visa. If you plan to work for a Philippine employer, a work-authorized visa or permit may be more appropriate.
Students
SIRV is not the normal route for studying in the Philippines. A student-specific route is usually better.
Digital nomads
The Philippines does not publicly position SIRV as a digital nomad visa. If your only goal is remote work for a foreign employer/client, SIRV is usually not the natural fit unless you independently qualify as an investor.
Retirees
Retirees often confuse SIRV with the Special Resident Retiree’s Visa (SRRV). These are different programs with different legal bases and requirements.
Religious workers, artists, athletes, journalists, diplomats, transit travelers, and medical travelers
These categories generally have more suitable visa options than SIRV.
Quick fit table
| Applicant type | Good fit for SIRV? | Better alternative if not |
|---|---|---|
| Tourist | No | Visitor/tourist route |
| Business visitor | Usually no | Temporary visitor/business visit route |
| Employee | Usually no | Work-authorized visa |
| Student | Usually no | Student visa |
| Investor | Yes | SIRV may be the correct route |
| Founder | Sometimes | Depends on business structure and investment eligibility |
| Retiree | Often no | SRRV may be more relevant |
| Spouse/child of investor | Yes, as dependent | Dependent inclusion under principal SIRV |
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purposes
Officially, SIRV is used for: – making and maintaining a qualifying investment in the Philippines – obtaining long-term resident status based on that investment – residing in the Philippines – multiple re-entry, subject to resident compliance rules – bringing qualifying dependents, where allowed
Activities commonly associated with resident life
As a resident, the holder may generally: – live in the Philippines long-term – manage personal affairs – maintain and monitor the approved investment – travel in and out of the Philippines as permitted under resident status rules
Prohibited or unclear uses
Employment
Publicly available official material does not clearly present SIRV as a blanket work authorization. Do not assume it gives unrestricted employment rights.
Volunteer work, internships, paid performances, journalism
Not the primary purpose of SIRV. Separate permissions may be needed depending on activity.
Study
Possible in practice as a resident, but SIRV is not designed as a study visa, and schools may require separate immigration compliance steps.
Medical treatment
You can seek treatment as a resident, but SIRV is not a medical visa.
Transit
Not applicable.
Marriage
You may marry while in the Philippines if otherwise lawful, but SIRV is not a marriage visa.
Religious activity
Not the core visa purpose. Organized missionary or religious assignments may require another status or clearance.
Grey areas and common misunderstandings
Remote work
A frequent grey area is whether a SIRV holder can work remotely for a foreign company while residing in the Philippines. Public official guidance for SIRV does not clearly answer this. Tax and labor implications may still arise. Verify before relying on this assumption.
Running a business vs. being employed by one
Owning or investing in a business is not always the same as being authorized to perform day-to-day compensated work in the Philippines. If you plan to actively work in the company, get official clarification.
Warning: Do not assume “resident visa” automatically means “free right to work.” Philippine immigration and labor compliance can be separate issues.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official program name
Special Investor’s Resident Visa
Short name
SIRV
Long name
Special Investor’s Resident Visa
Related agencies
- Board of Investments (BOI): central program authority for SIRV investment qualification
- Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) / Philippine embassies and consulates: visa issuance abroad
- Bureau of Immigration (BI): immigration implementation, registration, and status administration in the Philippines
Categories often confused with SIRV
| Visa/program | How it differs |
|---|---|
| SRRV | Retirement-based, not investment-based |
| 9(a) Temporary Visitor | Short-stay visitor visa, not residence |
| 9(g) work visa | Employment-based, not investment-based |
| Special visas under separate laws | Different legal basis and rights |
Old vs. current naming
The SIRV name remains in current official use in BOI and Philippine government materials. If a consulate uses slightly different formatting, follow the local official wording.
5. Eligibility criteria
Core eligibility
Based on official BOI guidance, the principal SIRV applicant generally must:
- be a foreign national
- be at least 21 years old
- be not convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude
- be not afflicted with a loathsome, dangerous, or contagious disease
- be not institutionalized for any mental disorder or disability
- be willing and able to invest at least the required minimum amount in approved investments
- come from a country that grants Filipinos the right to enter and stay there as investors or residents on a reciprocal basis, as referenced in official SIRV materials
Investment threshold
The commonly published official minimum is US$75,000.
However, readers should verify the current amount and eligible forms of investment directly with BOI because program details can be updated or interpreted through current circulars and implementing guidance.
Eligible investment forms
Official BOI materials describe qualifying investments as including: – publicly listed companies – companies engaged in areas listed in the Investment Priorities Plan (IPP)
Public guidance also states some sectors or investment types are excluded. For example, older and still widely cited official explanations note that: – investments in wholesale trading – investments in condominium units – certain non-qualifying passive or excluded sectors
may not qualify.
Because the eligible investment scope can depend on current BOI policy and the current priorities list, this must be checked carefully before investing.
Nationality rules
There is a reciprocity component in official SIRV materials. This means nationality matters.
If your country does not extend equivalent investor/residence privileges to Filipinos, your SIRV eligibility may be affected.
Passport validity
Applicants should hold a valid passport with sufficient remaining validity for visa issuance and travel. Specific embassy minimum validity rules can vary, but six months beyond intended travel is a common baseline practice.
Age
- Principal applicant: usually 21 or older
- Dependents: spouse and unmarried children under the age limit set by policy, usually under 21
Language
No general public official requirement for English or Filipino language testing is typically stated for SIRV.
Education and work experience
No general public official requirement for specific degrees or employment history is usually stated for SIRV.
Sponsorship / invitation / job offer / points
Not generally required for the principal SIRV route.
Relationship proof
Required if including spouse or children.
Maintenance funds
The main financial focus is the qualifying investment. But you should still be prepared to show ability to support yourself and dependents during settlement, especially if requested.
Health and character
Officially relevant: – medical clearance – police or criminal clearance – lack of disqualifying disease or criminal history
Insurance
Public SIRV guidance does not consistently state a universal private health insurance requirement, but practical relocation planning makes insurance strongly advisable.
Biometrics
Embassy/consulate and immigration practice can vary. Check current local instructions.
Residency outside the Philippines
Some applicants apply through Philippine embassies/consulates abroad. In-country handling may differ where legally permitted.
Quotas, caps, ballots
No widely published quota or lottery is typically associated with SIRV.
Embassy-specific rules
Yes, document formatting, appointment booking, fees, photo requirements, notarization expectations, and local submission practices may vary by embassy or consulate.
Eligibility matrix
| Requirement | Typical SIRV position |
|---|---|
| Foreign nationality | Required |
| Minimum age | Usually 21+ |
| Minimum investment | Usually US$75,000 |
| Approved investment class | Required |
| Criminal record check | Usually required |
| Medical clearance | Usually required |
| Passport | Required |
| Reciprocity nationality condition | Relevant |
| Language test | Not generally required |
| Job offer | Not required |
| Points test | Not required |
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Likely ineligibility factors
You may be ineligible if: – you do not meet the minimum investment threshold – your investment is in a non-qualifying sector or instrument – your nationality fails the reciprocity condition – you are under the minimum age – you have disqualifying criminal history – you have disqualifying medical issues under the applicable rules – your documents are incomplete, inconsistent, or unverifiable
Common refusal triggers
- applying under the wrong category
- assuming any business purchase qualifies
- using funds without clear lawful source
- failing to prove the investment was actually made in an approved manner
- mismatch between BOI investment approval and immigration application papers
- family documents that do not clearly prove dependency
- inaccurate translations or missing notarization/apostille where required
- passport validity problems
- prior immigration violations in the Philippines or elsewhere
Common Mistake: Buying a condo or making a non-qualifying passive investment and assuming it is enough for SIRV.
7. Benefits of this visa
Main benefits
- long-term residence in the Philippines
- multiple-entry resident status
- ability to include qualifying dependents
- status tied to investment rather than a local employment sponsor
- attractive route for investors who want presence in the Philippines
Family benefits
Spouse and dependent children may usually be included if properly documented.
Travel flexibility
SIRV is intended as a resident multiple-entry route, which is generally more flexible than repeated tourist extensions.
Business and residence stability
It can be attractive for: – investors – company principals – families relocating with investment-backed residence
Long-term path
SIRV gives a durable immigration footing as long as the investment is maintained and all compliance rules are met.
8. Limitations and restrictions
Main restrictions
- investment must remain compliant
- not all investment forms qualify
- work rights are not clearly stated as unrestricted in public materials
- family eligibility is limited to specific relationships and age brackets
- immigration registration and annual compliance may apply
- tax residence implications may arise if you reside long term
Ongoing obligations
You may need to: – maintain the required investment – update immigration records – carry out annual reporting or alien registration obligations, if applicable – comply with re-entry and travel documentation rules
No assumption of public benefits
There is no general basis to assume access to public funds or social welfare benefits because of SIRV alone.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Validity
SIRV is designed as an indefinite resident visa, not a short fixed-term visa, provided the holder: – keeps the qualifying investment – remains compliant with immigration rules
Stay duration
Long-term/indefinite residence.
Entries
Generally multiple-entry.
When the clock starts
The exact start point can depend on issuance, entry, and activation/registration procedures. Follow the wording on your visa and immigration records.
Grace periods
No general public grace-period rule is prominently published for losing the investment. If the investment ceases to qualify, status may be at risk.
Overstay consequences
If a person falls out of lawful status or fails to maintain immigration compliance, consequences can include: – fines – status cancellation – exit clearance issues – future visa problems
Renewal timing
Not a standard renewal in the tourist-visa sense, but there may be: – annual report obligations – ACR I-Card or related registration renewals – re-entry compliance steps
Verify current BI procedures.
10. Complete document checklist
Because exact embassy and BOI checklists can vary, use this as a structured master list and verify locally.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed application form | Official SIRV/visa form | Starts the application | Old form version, unsigned form |
| Passport | Valid travel document | Identity and visa issuance | Damaged passport, low validity |
| BOI endorsement/approval documents | Proof investment qualifies | Core SIRV eligibility | Investing first without checking qualification |
| Proof of inward remittance/investment | Banking and investment evidence | Shows funds entered and were invested properly | Missing transaction trail |
B. Identity/travel documents
- passport bio page
- prior Philippine visas or immigration records if relevant
- birth certificate
- national ID if requested locally
C. Financial documents
- bank certifications/statements
- proof of fund source
- remittance records
- investment account statements
- securities or company subscription papers, if applicable
D. Employment/business documents
- corporate records of investee company
- stock certificates or proof of shareholding
- business registration documents
- board resolutions, if relevant
E. Education documents
Not generally core for SIRV unless specifically requested.
F. Relationship/family documents
- marriage certificate for spouse
- birth certificates for children
- adoption papers if applicable
- custody/consent documents for minors where parents are separated
G. Accommodation/travel documents
Not always central, but some posts may ask for: – address in the Philippines – travel itinerary – onward/return booking depending on application location and timing
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
Usually not central unless some local post asks for host or company support letters.
I. Health/insurance documents
- medical certificate from an authorized or acceptable physician/facility if required
- health clearances
- insurance proof if specifically requested or practically advisable
J. Country-specific extras
Some consulates may request: – local residence permit if applying from a third country – police clearance from current country of residence – apostilled civil documents – translated documents
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- parental consent
- school records if useful for dependency context
- passport copies for both parents
- notarized travel consent in shared-custody situations
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
If documents are not in English, they may need: – certified translation – notarization – apostille or legalization, depending on issuing country and post instructions
Warning: Never assume a plain translation is enough. Follow the exact local consular instruction.
M. Photo specifications
Photo requirements vary by post. Use the exact dimensions, background, recency, and paper/digital format specified by the embassy or consulate.
11. Financial requirements
Minimum investment
The widely published official minimum is US$75,000.
Acceptable proof
Usually: – bank records – inward remittance evidence – proof of conversion/investment – share subscription or securities records – BOI-recognized proof that the investment is in a qualifying form
Key issue: lawful source and traceability
You should be ready to prove: – where the money came from – how it entered the Philippines – how it was applied to the approved investment
Dependents
Public guidance does not always provide a clearly separate maintenance-funds figure per dependent for SIRV. If a consulate asks for proof of support capacity, provide it.
Hidden costs
Beyond the investment itself, expect: – visa fees – BOI processing-related costs if any – document procurement costs – translations, notarization, apostille – medical and police documents – ACR I-Card/immigration registration costs where applicable – travel and relocation expenses
Currency issues
Use official or bank-generated records showing: – original currency – conversion into USD or Philippine pesos where relevant – exact transfer trail
Pro Tip: Large recent deposits are not automatically disqualifying if you clearly explain them with documentary proof such as sale agreements, dividend records, inheritance papers, or business distributions.
12. Fees and total cost
Exact fee structures can vary by: – embassy/consulate – in-country vs overseas processing – nationality – document services needed – current BOI/BI schedules
Fee table
| Cost item | Typical status |
|---|---|
| Visa/application fee | Check latest official post-specific fee page |
| BOI-related processing | Verify with BOI |
| Bureau of Immigration fees | Verify with BI |
| ACR I-Card or registration fees | May apply; verify current BI schedule |
| Medical exam | Varies by provider/location |
| Police clearance | Varies by issuing country |
| Translation/notary/apostille | Varies widely |
| Courier | Varies |
| Travel/relocation | Varies widely |
| Dependent fees | Usually additional |
| Legal/consultant fees | Optional, not government fees |
Because official fee pages change, applicants should check the latest official fee/processing page at the relevant Philippine embassy/consulate and the BI/BOI as applicable.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm SIRV is the right route
Check whether your intended investment qualifies under current BOI rules.
2. Confirm nationality eligibility
Verify reciprocity and any nationality-specific issues.
3. Prepare the investment structure
Before transferring funds or subscribing to shares, confirm that the investment vehicle is SIRV-eligible.
4. Gather personal and family documents
Collect passports, civil records, police certificates, and medical documents.
5. Make the qualifying investment
Follow the official BOI process and documentary trail for inward remittance and qualifying investment placement.
6. Secure BOI endorsement/certification
This is a critical step. BOI confirmation is central to SIRV eligibility.
7. Submit the visa application
Depending on your location and route, submit through: – a Philippine embassy/consulate abroad, or – the relevant in-country authority if such route is available to you
8. Pay fees
Pay the official fees required by the consulate, BOI, BI, or other relevant office.
9. Attend interview/biometrics if requested
Some applicants may be called for interview or document verification.
10. Submit additional documents if asked
Respond quickly and consistently.
11. Receive decision
If approved, the visa or status documentation will be issued according to the responsible authority’s procedure.
12. Travel to the Philippines
Carry supporting documents at entry.
13. Complete post-arrival immigration steps
This may include: – registration – ACR I-Card processing – annual report compliance – address updates, if required
14. Maintain investment and status
Do not liquidate or move the investment without first understanding immigration consequences.
14. Processing time
There is no single universally published SIRV processing time that applies in all cases.
What affects timing?
- how quickly BOI verifies the investment
- whether documents are complete
- whether civil documents need authentication
- whether police/medical checks are delayed
- embassy or consulate workload
- BI post-approval processing steps
- nationality-based security screening
Practical expectation
Expect SIRV to take longer than a tourist visa because it is an investment and residence route involving multiple authorities.
Warning: Do not commit to property leases, school start dates, or business launch deadlines until your SIRV is actually approved and activated.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
May be required depending on where and how you apply. Verify with the processing post.
Interview
An interview is not always guaranteed, but you may be asked to explain: – your investment – source of funds – intended residence plans – family dependency – prior immigration history
Medical
Public SIRV requirements commonly include medical admissibility standards. You may need a medical certificate proving you do not have a disqualifying disease.
Police clearance
Usually expected, especially for residence-based applications. You may need police clearance from: – your country of nationality – your country of residence – any other country as instructed
Validity
Medical and police documents often have limited validity periods. Follow current local instructions carefully.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official approval data
Public official approval-rate statistics for SIRV are not easily and consistently published. If no current official approval rate is available, applicants should not rely on unofficial percentages.
Practical refusal patterns
Based on the structure of the program, common problems likely include: – non-qualifying investment – weak proof of transfer and investment – incomplete BOI endorsement trail – family documents that do not clearly prove eligibility – criminal or medical inadmissibility – poor document consistency across agencies
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Focus on the investment trail
Your application is strongest when it clearly shows: 1. source of funds 2. transfer into the Philippines 3. investment into the qualifying vehicle 4. BOI-recognized proof of compliance
Use a document index
Create a master index with tabs: – identity – financial source – remittance – investment subscription/purchase – BOI approval – family documents – police/medical – miscellaneous explanations
Explain unusual transactions
If your bank statements show: – large deposits – multiple account transfers – family gifts – business sale proceeds
attach a short explanation and evidence.
Keep names consistent
If your passport, birth certificate, and bank records differ due to initials, middle names, or marriage changes, include a clear identity explanation.
Be conservative with claims
Do not overstate: – business plans – job creation – legal rights under the visa – timelines
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Confirm eligibility before investing
Many SIRV problems begin because applicants invest first and ask BOI later. Reverse that: confirm first.
Use one clean funds path
A single, easy-to-follow funds path is better than complex multi-account transfers.
Keep certified copies of all investment documents
Especially: – transfer receipts – bank certifications – securities records – BOI communications – company acknowledgments
Make family files separate
For each dependent, prepare a mini-pack: – passport – civil documents – relationship proof – photos – any consent documents
Prepare a one-page transaction summary
List: – date – amount – sending bank – receiving bank – purpose – supporting document reference
This helps officers review the file faster.
Be careful with excluded sectors
Applicants often assume real estate purchases or simple condo purchases qualify. Verify first. Public SIRV guidance has long indicated important exclusions.
Contact the embassy only for issues the checklist cannot answer
Embassies are more responsive when your question is specific and not already covered on the website.
Declare prior refusals honestly
If you had a refusal in another country, disclose it if asked and explain briefly. Misrepresentation is worse than the refusal itself.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
A cover letter is often not the legal centerpiece of SIRV, but it can help organize a complex file.
When useful
- your funds trail is complicated
- your investment structure needs explanation
- you include dependents
- documents contain minor inconsistencies
- you are applying from a third country
Suggested structure
- Applicant identity
- Purpose of application
- Summary of qualifying investment
- Source of funds summary
- List of dependents included
- Intended residence plan
- Document index reference
- Contact details
What not to say
- do not speculate about rights you have not confirmed
- do not make exaggerated claims
- do not hide prior immigration issues
- do not use generic copied text
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
This visa is not mainly sponsor-driven.
If relevant
A company letter or investee-company support letter may still help to: – confirm the investment – confirm share issuance or subscription – explain the business activity – identify corporate signatories
Sponsor mistakes
- vague company letters
- no proof the signatory is authorized
- mismatch between company papers and BOI-approved activity
- unsupported accommodation promises
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes, typically: – legal spouse – unmarried children under 21
Required proof
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- passports
- dependency evidence if requested
- custody/consent papers for minors, where relevant
Work/study rights of dependents
Public SIRV guidance does not clearly establish unrestricted work rights for dependents. Verify separately before accepting employment.
Children can generally study as resident dependents, but school and immigration compliance must still be satisfied.
Unmarried partners
Official SIRV materials typically refer to spouse, not unmarried partner. If not legally married, recognition may be difficult unless there is specific official guidance allowing otherwise.
Same-sex spouse issues
Because family recognition can depend on Philippine legal recognition of the marriage relationship, applicants in same-sex marriages should seek case-specific official guidance before relying on dependent eligibility.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
Publicly available official SIRV summaries do not clearly state that SIRV grants broad unrestricted employment authorization.
Safest interpretation
- You may reside as an investor.
- You should not assume unrestricted local employment rights without BI/DOLE/BOI confirmation.
Self-employment and active management
Owning shares is different from performing labor or rendering services. If you will actively work in the business, verify whether additional permits are needed.
Remote work
Not clearly addressed in public SIRV-specific rules. Tax, labor, and immigration issues can still arise.
Volunteering and internships
Not the intended visa purpose; verify before participating.
Passive income
Generally less problematic than active local work, but tax implications may still apply.
Study rights
Study is not the primary purpose, but resident status may allow schooling subject to school and immigration requirements.
Business meetings
Yes, consistent with investor residence and management, subject to lawful scope.
Receiving payment in-country
This can trigger labor and tax issues. Verify before doing so.
Work/study rights table
| Activity | Likely position on SIRV |
|---|---|
| Live in Philippines | Yes |
| Maintain investment | Yes |
| Study | Usually possible, not primary purpose |
| Work for Philippine employer | Unclear/verify |
| Run/manage own investment | Yes, but active labor permissions may need checking |
| Remote work for foreign employer | Unclear/verify |
| Volunteer | Not clearly covered; verify |
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Final admission is always at the border
Even with approved visa status, entry is still subject to immigration inspection.
Carry these documents
- passport with visa/status evidence
- copy of BOI endorsement
- proof of investment
- Philippine address
- dependent documents if traveling together
- return/onward ticket if instructed or if your status documentation requires it
Re-entry
SIRV is generally a multiple-entry resident route, but confirm: – re-entry permit requirements, if any – ACR I-Card validity – travel tax or exit documentation rules – immigration clearance rules for long-stay foreigners
New passport
If your passport expires, check BI rules for transferring or linking your status to a new passport.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Extension
Not usually a standard “extension” visa. SIRV continues as long as: – the investment remains qualified – immigration compliance is maintained
Renewal-like obligations
You may still need: – annual report compliance – ACR I-Card renewals or updates – record updates after passport change, address change, or civil status change
Switching
Switching from SIRV to another status may be possible in principle, but it depends on the target category and current BI rules.
Conversion from visitor to SIRV
This may be possible in some circumstances, but it is not uniformly described in simple public summaries. Verify with BI and BOI.
Changing the investment
Do not change or liquidate your investment without first confirming whether the new structure still qualifies.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does SIRV count as residence?
Yes, SIRV is itself a special resident route.
Does it lead to citizenship?
Only indirectly. Philippine naturalization is governed by separate laws and requirements. SIRV alone does not guarantee or automatically shorten the path.
Citizenship usually depends on separate factors such as
- total lawful residence period
- good moral character
- income or trade/profession
- language integration requirements under naturalization law
- legal standards evaluated by the proper authority or court
Because Philippine naturalization law is complex and not SIRV-specific, applicants considering citizenship should get current legal guidance.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Tax residence risk
If you live in the Philippines long term, you may become a Philippine tax resident depending on tax law and factual presence. Immigration status and tax status are related but not identical.
Immigration compliance
Possible obligations include: – annual report before BI – maintaining updated registration – reporting passport changes – updating address or civil status where required – obtaining exit clearances in some circumstances
Overstays and status violations
Failing to maintain the investment or immigration obligations can create serious status problems.
Warning: Residence rights do not eliminate tax obligations. Immigration approval does not equal tax clearance.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Reciprocity rule
One of the most important nationality-specific issues is the reciprocity condition. This can make SIRV unavailable or complicated for some nationalities.
Embassy practice differences
Requirements can differ depending on: – where you apply – whether you are resident in that country – local document legalization rules – local fee schedules
No universal visa-waiver substitute
Visa-free entry as a tourist does not replace SIRV requirements for residence.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Children may be dependents, but the principal investor generally must meet the minimum age.
Divorced or separated parents
Expect to provide: – custody orders – notarized parental consent – proof of legal authority to relocate the child
Adopted children
Adoption papers and recognition documents may be needed.
Same-sex spouses/partners
This is a sensitive area because local recognition rules matter. Do not assume recognition without official confirmation.
Stateless persons and refugees
These cases are highly specialized and may require direct consultation with the relevant Philippine authority.
Dual nationals
Apply using the passport and nationality context most consistent with your application and document trail. Nationality-based reciprocity may matter.
Prior refusals or overstays
Disclose honestly if asked. Prior issues do not always make approval impossible, but concealment can.
Expired passport but valid visa/status
You will likely need BI guidance on carrying the old passport plus the new one or transferring records.
Applying from a third country
Often possible only if you are legally resident there. Check local post rules.
Gender marker or name mismatch
Include legal proof of change and a simple explanation letter.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “Any Philippine property investment qualifies for SIRV.” | False. Public official guidance indicates important exclusions, including common misunderstandings around condo/property investment. |
| “SIRV automatically lets me work any job.” | Not clearly established in public guidance. Verify separately. |
| “I can invest first and ask BOI later.” | Risky. Confirm qualification first. |
| “Tourist status is basically the same if I keep extending.” | False. SIRV is a resident-investor route, not a visitor route. |
| “My unmarried partner is automatically a dependent.” | Usually not. Official rules generally focus on spouse and children. |
| “If I have the money, approval is guaranteed.” | False. The investment must qualify and all admissibility/document rules must be met. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After refusal
You should receive a refusal notice or explanation from the authority involved.
Is there an appeal?
Publicly available simple guidance on a formal SIRV appeal route is limited. In practice, options may include: – reconsideration – reapplication with corrected deficiencies – administrative clarification through the relevant authority
This can vary depending on whether the issue arose at: – BOI qualification stage – embassy/consulate visa stage – BI implementation stage
Fees after refusal
Government fees are often non-refundable, but verify the specific fee rule.
Best reapplication strategy
- identify the exact refusal reason
- fix the missing or weak element
- do not simply resubmit the same pack
- add a short cover note addressing the previous refusal
31. Arrival in Philippines: what happens next?
At immigration inspection
Be prepared to show: – passport – visa/status documents – BOI investment support documents if requested – Philippine address – family relationship documents if dependents travel with you
After arrival
Likely post-arrival tasks may include: – BI registration steps – ACR I-Card processing or updating – local address setup – bank account setup – school enrollment for children – tax and business registration, if relevant to your actual activities
First 30–90 days
Focus on: – confirming your immigration records are correct – securing your resident documentation/cards – maintaining the investment – understanding annual report and exit-clearance obligations
32. Real-world timeline examples
Investor applying from abroad
- Weeks 1–4: confirm investment eligibility, gather documents
- Weeks 5–8: transfer funds and complete qualifying investment
- Weeks 9–12: obtain BOI endorsement and finalize application
- Weeks 13+: consular/immigration processing
- After approval: enter Philippines and complete resident formalities
Family investor case
- Principal starts investment file first
- Dependents gather civil records in parallel
- Family applies together or in coordinated sequence
- Arrival may be staggered if school/work schedules require
Founder case
- Confirm company qualifies before capital injection
- Align corporate records, SEC/company papers, and BOI requirements
- Prepare clear explanation of business activity and investment structure
33. Ideal document pack structure
Recommended file order
- Cover letter / index
- Application form
- Passport and ID documents
- Civil status documents
- Police and medical documents
- Source of funds evidence
- Transfer/remittance trail
- Investment documents
- BOI endorsement/approvals
- Dependent documents
- Explanatory notes
- Copies of prior visas/status, if relevant
Naming convention
Use clear file names such as:
– 01_Passport_Principal.pdf
– 02_Birth_Certificate_Principal.pdf
– 03_Bank_Statements_Source_of_Funds.pdf
– 04_Remittance_Proof_USD75000.pdf
– 05_BOI_Endorsement.pdf
Scan quality
- full color where possible
- no cropped edges
- readable stamps and signatures
- one PDF per category if the post allows
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- Confirm SIRV is the right visa
- Confirm nationality reciprocity eligibility
- Confirm investment type is officially qualifying
- Gather passport and civil records
- Gather police and medical documents
- Prepare source-of-funds evidence
- Create funds transfer plan
- Verify embassy/consulate local checklist
Submission-day checklist
- Correct form version
- Signed forms
- Passport original/copies
- Fee payment method ready
- BOI documents included
- Dependents’ documents complete
- Photo specs correct
- Translation/apostille included where required
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- Appointment confirmation
- Passport
- Originals of key documents
- Copy of full application pack
- One-page investment summary
- Honest explanation of source of funds and purpose
Arrival checklist
- Carry approval documents in hand luggage
- Confirm Philippine address
- Keep company/investment contact details
- Confirm any BI follow-up steps
- Start ACR/registration process promptly if required
Extension/renewal checklist
- Verify annual reporting obligations
- Check ACR I-Card validity
- Keep investment proof updated
- Update passport and address changes
- Confirm re-entry compliance before travel
Refusal recovery checklist
- Read refusal reason carefully
- Identify missing evidence
- Correct document defects
- Add explanation letter
- Reconfirm current rules before reapplying
35. FAQs
1. What is the minimum investment for SIRV?
Usually US$75,000, but verify with current BOI guidance.
2. Can I buy a condo and get SIRV?
Usually no. Public official guidance indicates condominium purchase is not the standard qualifying SIRV investment.
3. Can I include my spouse?
Yes, typically a legal spouse may be included.
4. Can I include my children?
Usually yes, for unmarried children under 21, subject to proof.
5. Do I need to keep the investment after approval?
Yes. SIRV depends on maintaining the qualifying investment.
6. If I sell the investment later, do I lose the visa?
Potentially yes. Verify before making any change.
7. Is SIRV the same as SRRV?
No. SIRV is for investors; SRRV is a retiree program.
8. Can I work in the Philippines on SIRV?
Do not assume so. Public guidance is unclear; verify with the proper authorities.
9. Can I run my own company with SIRV?
You may invest in and be associated with the company, but active management/work permissions may need separate confirmation.
10. Is there a language test?
Not generally stated for SIRV.
11. Is there an age minimum?
Yes, the principal applicant is generally expected to be at least 21.
12. Is there an age maximum?
No standard upper age cap is commonly stated.
13. Do I need a police clearance?
Usually yes for residence-based processing.
14. Do I need a medical exam?
Often yes, or at least a medical certificate.
15. Can I apply from inside the Philippines?
Possibly in some circumstances, but verify current BI and BOI procedures.
16. Can I apply from a third country where I am not a resident?
Often difficult. Many posts require lawful local residence.
17. How long does SIRV processing take?
No universal published time. It depends on BOI, consular, and immigration processing.
18. Are there nationality restrictions?
Yes, reciprocity can matter.
19. Can my unmarried partner be a dependent?
Usually official rules focus on legal spouse, not unmarried partner.
20. Can same-sex spouses be included?
This may depend on recognition issues under Philippine law and current administrative practice. Verify case-specifically.
21. Do I need to show source of funds?
Yes, strongly recommended and often essential in practice.
22. Can the investment be in any company?
No. It must fit approved categories.
23. Can I switch from tourist to SIRV?
Possibly in some situations, but do not rely on this without official confirmation.
24. Is SIRV permanent residence?
It is a special resident visa with indefinite residence features, subject to maintaining the qualifying investment and compliance.
25. Does SIRV lead to citizenship?
Only indirectly, if you later qualify under separate naturalization rules.
26. Do dependents get work rights?
Not clearly stated in public guidance; verify before employment.
27. What if my passport expires?
You will likely need to update BI records and link status to the new passport.
28. What if my child turns 21?
Dependent eligibility may end; plan ahead before age-out.
29. Can I use borrowed money for the investment?
Only if lawful and clearly documented, and if allowed under the applicable program interpretation. Hidden or unexplained debt-financed funds are risky.
30. Is an interview always required?
Not always, but be prepared for one.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to SIRV and related Philippine immigration compliance. Check them again before applying because rules, forms, and fees can change.
- Board of Investments (SIRV main information): https://boi.gov.ph/special-investor-residents-visa-sirv/
- Board of Investments (investment priorities and related investor guidance home): https://boi.gov.ph/
- Bureau of Immigration: https://immigration.gov.ph/
- Bureau of Immigration – Annual Report information: https://immigration.gov.ph/services/annual-report/
- Bureau of Immigration – ACR I-Card information: https://immigration.gov.ph/services/acr-i-card/
- Department of Foreign Affairs, Republic of the Philippines: https://dfa.gov.ph/
- Philippine Embassy in Washington, D.C. visa services: https://philippineembassy-dc.org/visa/
- Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles visa page: https://www.philippineconsulatela.org/consular-services-2/visa
- Philippine Consulate General in New York visa page: https://newyorkpcg.org/pcgny/consular-services/visa/
- Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines: https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/
Warning: Embassy and consulate websites can have different local filing instructions. Always use the checklist of the exact post where you will apply.
37. Final verdict
The Philippines SIRV is best for foreign nationals who genuinely want to make a qualifying investment and obtain long-term residence in the Philippines on that basis.
Biggest benefits
- long-term resident status
- multiple-entry convenience
- ability to include spouse and children
- no need to rely on a local employment sponsor
Biggest risks
- investing in a non-qualifying asset
- misunderstanding work rights
- weak source-of-funds trail
- relying on outdated embassy instructions
- changing or withdrawing the investment after approval
Top preparation advice
- Confirm the investment qualifies before transferring money.
- Build a clean, traceable funds trail.
- Get BOI guidance and keep documentary proof.
- Treat work rights as a separate issue unless officially confirmed.
- Verify local consular rules and current BI compliance steps.
When to consider another visa
Choose another route if: – you are really a retiree rather than an investor – you only want to visit for meetings or tourism – your main purpose is employment or study – your intended investment does not clearly fit SIRV rules
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- Whether your nationality satisfies the current reciprocity requirement
- The current minimum investment amount and whether BOI has updated its implementation guidance
- The exact list of qualifying and excluded investment types under current BOI policy and the current Investment Priorities Plan
- Whether you can apply inside the Philippines or must apply through a Philippine embassy/consulate abroad
- The exact fee schedule at your filing post and any BI/ACR card costs
- Whether biometrics are required at your location
- The current validity periods and acceptable formats for medical and police documents
- Whether remote work or active compensated work in a Philippine company is permitted on SIRV without additional permissions
- Whether your spouse/children can file together or should file after principal approval
- How same-sex spouses, unmarried partners, adopted children, or custody cases are handled in current practice
- Current BI requirements on annual report, ACR I-Card, re-entry, and exit clearance
- Whether documents from your country require apostille, notarization, or consular legalization
- Whether the embassy where you apply requires lawful residence in that country for third-country applications
- Any recent changes in Philippine immigration, investment, or naturalization policy after the last verification date