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Home Investment Pag-IBIG

Pag-IBIG contribution rate 2026: employees, self-employed, freelancers, and OFWs

Dudu by Dudu
July 13, 2026
in Pag-IBIG
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A Filipino business owner reviews his Pag-IBIG contribution rate on his laptop at a home office desk.
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TL;DR: The Pag-IBIG contribution rate is 2% of your Monthly Salary Credit for both the employee and employer share, capped at a ₱10,000 Monthly Salary Credit. That means the maximum total contribution is ₱400 per month. Employees only pay ₱200 because their employer covers the other half. Self-employed members and freelancers pay the full ₱400 themselves. OFWs pay only ₱200 because there is no employer counterpart. If you are self-employed and have been paying only ₱200, you have been under-contributing for every month it has gone uncorrected.

I spent the first two years of running my own business paying the wrong Pag-IBIG contribution rate. I was paying around ₱200 to ₱300 a month and thought I was doing it correctly. As a self-employed member, I was supposed to pay both the employee and employer share. I had no idea. It only came out when I applied for a housing loan. The Pag-IBIG staff told me my savings were far lower than they should have been. I had to back-pay 18 months to fix my records.

That mistake cost me two years of under-savings and a stressful afternoon at a Pag-IBIG counter. The rate is not the confusing part. Who pays which half trips most people, and the answer depends on how you work.

How much is the Pag-IBIG contribution rate?

The Pag-IBIG contribution rate is 2% of your Monthly Salary Credit (MSC) for the employee share and another 2% for the employer share. The MSC is capped at ₱10,000, so the most anyone contributes under the standard formula is ₱200 per share, or ₱400 total going into your account each month.

Member typeEmployee shareEmployer shareTotal to your account
Regular employee (any salary)₱200 (you pay)₱200 (company pays)₱400
Self-employed / voluntary member₱200 (you pay)₱200 (you also pay)₱400
OFW₱200 (you pay)None₱200
Minimum contributor (any type)₱100₱100 (you or employer)₱200

Both numbers run at 2%, so the rate itself is clear. However, figuring out who pays which half is where most people get confused. Employees see one number on their payslip. Self-employed members discover the full picture only when they apply for something and find their account is half as large as it should be.

Employees: what your payslip does not show you

When I was still an employee, I saw ₱200 deducted from my salary every month and thought that was my entire Pag-IBIG contribution. I had no idea my employer was quietly sending another ₱200 directly to the Fund on top of what I paid. That second ₱200 never appeared on my payslip as a separate line item.

So even though I only felt the ₱200 deduction, my account was getting ₱400 every month. That extra ₱200 stops showing up the day you go out on your own and forget to cover it yourself.

Your employer is required by law to match your contribution and remit the total to Pag-IBIG by a specific deadline each month. If they are not doing this, your account balance will be smaller than it should be. You can verify by logging in to Virtual Pag-IBIG and checking your posted contributions. Any month where only ₱200 was credited instead of ₱400 is a month your employer failed to remit their share.

The Pag-IBIG MID number guide covers how to access the portal and read your contribution history if you have never checked it before.

Self-employed and freelancers: you pay both shares

If you are self-employed, a freelancer, or a voluntary member, the full ₱400 per month comes from your own pocket. There is no employer to cover the second half. Pag-IBIG classifies you as a Self-Earning Individual, and you register and pay contributions on your own schedule through Virtual Pag-IBIG, GCash, Maya, or over the counter.

The rate is still 2% per share. At the ₱10,000 cap:

  • Employee share you pay: ₱200
  • Employer share you also pay: ₱200
  • Total monthly contribution: ₱400

Most freelancers starting out pay only ₱200 because that is what they remember from their employee days. That is the most common under-contribution mistake. It cuts your savings and loan capacity in half compared to a regular employee earning the same amount.

What happens if you stop paying?

Pag-IBIG does not immediately penalize individual members for skipping. There are no daily fines for self-employed or voluntary members the way there are for employers. However, the consequences pile up quietly. Your account goes inactive, which blocks you from applying for a housing loan, a Multi-Purpose Loan, or a calamity loan. Your Total Accumulated Value stops growing and dividends stop accruing. Most freelancers only find out when they need a loan and the account is dormant.

How OFW contributions work

OFWs are mandatory Pag-IBIG members, but because they work for a foreign employer, there is no counterpart contribution from that employer. The member pays only the 2% employee share, which maxes out at ₱200 per month at the ₱10,000 cap.

ItemLocal employeeOFW
Employee share (you pay)₱200₱200
Employer counterpart₱200 (Philippine employer pays)None
Total going to your account monthly₱400₱200
MSC cap₱10,000₱10,000

OFWs can also voluntarily top up beyond the ₱200 minimum, and many who are saving toward a house purchase do. Paying ₱400 by voluntarily covering both shares doubles how fast your account grows. It also increases the loanable amount you will qualify for when you apply for a Pag-IBIG housing loan on your return.

Who pays what: Pag-IBIG contribution rate by member type Regular employee You pay: ₱200 Employer pays: ₱200 ₱400 / month to your account Self-employed / freelancer You pay: ₱200 (employee share) You also pay: ₱200 (employer share) ₱400 / month you shoulder both shares OFW You pay: ₱200 No employer counterpart ₱200 / month can voluntarily top up
Self-employed and freelancers pay the same ₱400 total as employees, but shoulder both shares themselves. OFWs pay only the ₱200 employee share.

How to choose your Monthly Salary Credit

Your Monthly Salary Credit is the base number Pag-IBIG uses to calculate your contribution. The cap is ₱10,000 for all member types. If you set your MSC at ₱10,000, you pay ₱200 per share (₱400 total as a self-employed member). If you set it lower, everything scales down proportionally.

As a self-employed member or voluntary contributor, you set your own MSC. You can change it anytime by logging in to Virtual Pag-IBIG, going to your contribution settings, and selecting a new amount. The change takes effect on the next payment cycle. You can do this online without visiting a branch.

My strong advice: set your MSC at ₱10,000 from day one if you can afford the ₱400 per month. A lower MSC shrinks both your savings and the maximum amount you can borrow for a housing loan down the road. The difference in future loan capacity is much larger than the ₱200 per month you save by going lower.

A practical MSC starting point by income level

Your situationRecommended MSCMonthly contribution (self-employed)
New freelancer, irregular income₱5,000₱200 (minimum, builds the habit)
Stable income, just starting out₱10,000₱400 (recommended starting point)
Growing business, consistent cash flow₱10,000 + MP2 top-up₱400 regular + separate MP2 contribution

Once your regular savings are on track, consider opening a separate MP2 account for additional contributions. MP2 earns higher dividends than the regular savings account and the earnings are tax-free. The Pag-IBIG MP2 savings calculator can show you how much your combined contributions grow over five years. For a full breakdown of how the two accounts differ, the guide on regular Pag-IBIG savings vs. MP2 lays it out clearly.

Three mistakes self-employed members make with their contributions

These are the patterns I kept seeing, both in myself and in other business owners and freelancers I know.

1. Paying only the employee share. This is the most common one. A freelancer who just left a corporate job pays ₱200 per month because that is what felt normal. They do not realize they are supposed to match it themselves. After two or three years, their savings balance is half what it should be. When they apply for a housing loan, the loanable amount disappoints them.

2. Treating Pag-IBIG as an “if I have leftover” payment. Many self-employed people pay electricity, internet, and subscriptions on the first of the month without thinking, but move Pag-IBIG to the end of the month as an afterthought. When cash gets tight, it is the first thing they cut. But it does the most damage when you skip it for months. Pay it on the same fixed date every month, the way you pay rent.

3. No payment system, no advance payments. Pag-IBIG allows you to pay quarterly or semi-annually in advance. Self-employed members who pay month to month rely entirely on memory and discipline. A recurring bank transfer or a three-month advance payment takes memory out of the equation.

Three mistakes that keep self-employed Pag-IBIG accounts small Mistake 1 Paying only ₱200 (employee share only) Cuts your savings in half Mistake 2 Paying when cash is left (not a fixed schedule) Leads to gaps and delinquency Mistake 3 No advance payments, relying on memory Misses months during busy seasons
All three mistakes are fixable. The first one has the biggest financial cost; the third one is the easiest to eliminate immediately.

What employers must remit and the penalty for being late

If you have employees, your Pag-IBIG obligations go beyond your own contribution. You must deduct each employee’s 2% share from their salary, add your own 2% employer counterpart per employee, and remit the combined total to Pag-IBIG by the deadline.

Remittance deadlines are based on the first letter of your business name:

Business name starts withDeadline (following month)
A to D10th to 14th
E to L15th to 19th
M to Q20th to 24th
R to Z or numbers25th to end of month

Miss the deadline and Pag-IBIG charges a 0.1% daily penalty on the unpaid amount from the day after the due date. A ₱10,000 total monthly remittance delayed by 30 days already accumulates about ₱300 in penalties. Stretch that to four months and the total gets ugly.

I have seen this go wrong with a friend who runs a small retail business. He delayed remittances for four months during a slow season. When he finally settled, the amount he owed had nearly doubled and Pag-IBIG required him to clear everything before his employees could apply for loans. It damaged his relationship with his staff and cost him more than he saved by deferring. I pay mine on the 10th of every month so there is no chance of missing it.

How to back-pay missed contributions

If you realize you have been under-contributing or have gaps in your record, you can fix it. Voluntary and self-employed members can generally back-pay up to 12 to 24 months of missed or underpaid contributions. There is no daily penalty for individual members doing this, unlike the employer penalty above.

When I fixed my own records, I settled 18 months in a single lump sum at the branch. My Total Accumulated Value jumped noticeably after that. Within three years of correct payments, my savings were growing at roughly double the earlier rate. Before the fix, my account was growing by about ₱2,000 to ₱2,500 per year. After the fix, it was growing by ₱4,800 or more annually. That difference compounds over time.

To back-pay, visit any Pag-IBIG Fund branch with your MID number, a valid ID, and proof of income. Accepted proof includes your ITR, business permit, bank statements, or a notarized income affidavit. Tell the staff you want to settle previous contributions and they will calculate the exact amount owed. You can pay in a lump sum or ask about installments.

One important limit: you will not earn dividends retroactively for the months you missed. Dividends accrue only from the month a payment is actually posted. However, the savings balance you add through back-pay does start earning dividends going forward. You can check your Pag-IBIG balance online after the back-payment posts to confirm everything was credited correctly.

Total savings after 5 years: ₱200/month vs ₱400/month Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 ₱2.5k ₱5k ₱5.2k ₱10.4k ₱7.9k ₱15.8k ₱10.6k ₱21.2k ₱13.3k ₱26.6k ₱200/month (under-contribution) ₱400/month (correct contribution)
Estimated principal savings at ₱200/month vs ₱400/month over five years, excluding dividends. The gap widens every year and compounds with annual dividend earnings.

Frequently asked questions

How much is the Pag-IBIG contribution per month in 2026?

The maximum total is ₱400 per month (₱200 employee share plus ₱200 employer share), based on the 2% rate applied to the ₱10,000 Monthly Salary Credit cap. Employees only feel a ₱200 deduction because their employer pays the other half. Self-employed members and freelancers pay ₱400 themselves. OFWs pay ₱200 with no employer counterpart.

Do self-employed members and freelancers pay more Pag-IBIG than regular employees?

The total going into your account is the same: ₱400 per month at the ₱10,000 cap. The difference is that self-employed members shoulder the full ₱400 themselves, while employees only pay ₱200 and their employer covers the rest. Most self-employed members who under-contribute do so because they are still paying the ₱200 they remember from their employee days.

What is the maximum monthly Pag-IBIG contribution?

Under the standard formula, ₱400 per month is the maximum for regular savings. The ₱10,000 Monthly Salary Credit cap applies to all member types. If you want to save more through Pag-IBIG, you can open a separate MP2 account, which allows additional contributions and pays higher, tax-free dividends.

What is the penalty for late employer Pag-IBIG remittance?

Employers pay 0.1% per day on unpaid amounts from the day after the deadline. A ₱10,000 remittance delayed 30 days costs about ₱300 in penalties on top of the original amount. Prolonged delays can lead to audits and potential criminal charges. Individual voluntary members are not subject to this daily penalty.

Can I back-pay missed Pag-IBIG contributions as a self-employed member?

Yes. You can generally back-pay 12 to 24 months of missed contributions with no daily penalty. Visit a Pag-IBIG branch with your MID number, a valid ID, and proof of income. Dividends do not apply retroactively to the months you missed, but your new back-paid balance starts earning dividends going forward.

Two percent per share, capped at ₱400 total. The rate is not the problem. Most people arrive at the housing loan counter with a smaller balance than expected because they paid only ₱200 instead of ₱400, or skipped months thinking it was optional. Get the amount right, set a fixed payment date, and let it build. If you are behind, back-pay is there. The mistake is fixable.

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