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Philippines Sets New Mining Tax Rules: Higher Government Take, More Stability For Investors

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The Philippines has overhauled its mining tax system with the signing of the Enhanced Fiscal Regime for Large-Scale Metallic Mining Act (RA 12253). The law introduces a margin-based royalty and windfall profits tax, ensuring the government captures more revenue when global metal prices soar.

Key features include:

  • Royalties ranging from 1% to 5% on income, with a minimum 0.1% on gross output for low-margin mines.
  • Windfall tax of up to 10% when mining firms earn outsized profits.
  • Limits on tax deductions via a 2:1 debt-to-equity rule.
  • Ring-fencing per project, stopping companies from offsetting losses against profitable ventures.
  • Transparency safeguards to improve accountability.

The Department of Finance estimates the new regime could raise ₱25 billion in revenues between 2026 and 2029. While miners face higher taxes, industry leaders welcomed the law, citing clarity and predictability—critical for long-term investments in nickel, copper, and other critical minerals needed for the global clean energy transition.

What this means for you: More government revenues from mining could free up funds for infrastructure and social programs. But if companies pass on costs, expect mineral-based goods—like construction materials, electronics, or even EV batteries—to get pricier in the long run.

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