Americans in the Philippines get counted four different ways by four different agencies, and the numbers don’t agree. The Philippine Statistics Authority’s 2020 Census recorded 30,033 US-citizen household residents.
The Bureau of Immigration’s 2026 Annual Report counted 11,519 Americans with active immigrant or non-immigrant visas. The US State Department estimates 220,000 to 270,000 Americans live in the country. The Department of Tourism logged 1.3 million US-citizen arrivals in 2025, but those are tourists.
The figures don’t conflict. They measure different populations.
Why the same population produces a 23-fold range
Each figure measures a different population, which is why they don’t reconcile:
- PSA Census (2020): Counts people who answered the 2020 household enumeration as US citizens. It captures self-reported residents, including dual citizens, retirees on long-term visas, military families and missionaries. It’s the most defensible single Philippine-government figure, though it’s five years old.
- Bureau of Immigration count: Tracks only Americans with formally registered visas. It excludes Filipino-American dual citizens, who hold Philippine passports and don’t need to register as aliens. It also excludes Americans living on rolling tourist-visa extensions, a common arrangement in retiree-heavy provinces, and anyone who let their registration lapse. The 11,519 figure is precise but narrow.
- State Department estimate: The widest of the three, covering the full US-national community: registered residents, dual citizens, long-stay visitors and Americans who never registered with the embassy. It’s a working figure rather than a counted one, and US embassy estimates of overseas American populations aren’t built from a single Philippine-government dataset. For comparative work it’s still the closest available proxy for total community size.
The PSA also published a separate 2020 Census table identifying 23,727 Filipinos with reacquired US-Philippine dual citizenship under Republic Act 9225, the 2003 law that lets former Filipinos regain citizenship without losing US nationality. That population is invisible to the BI count and only partially captured by the State Department figure.
What the marriage records reveal
The PSA’s 2024 Vital Statistics Report registered 4,062 marriages where one party was a US national. The male-to-female ratio was 15.5 to one: 3,815 American men, 247 American women. That skew shapes the resident community more than any of the headline counts suggest. The Philippine-American population isn’t evenly distributed across age, gender, or geography. It clusters in retirement-age men, often partnered with Filipina spouses, often outside Manila.
The SRRV restructure narrowed who counts
The visa most associated with retired Americans in the Philippines, the Special Resident Retiree’s Visa, was restructured by the Philippine Retirement Authority effective September 1, 2025. The PRA dropped the minimum age from 50 to 40, raised application fees from $1,400 to $1,500, and abolished the SRRV Smile and SRRV Human Touch categories. Only SRRV Classic and SRRV Courtesy remain.
Deposit requirements vary by age bracket. SRRV Classic applicants aged 50 and above with a qualifying lifetime pension deposit $15,000, or $30,000 without a pension. The 40-to-49 bracket deposits $25,000 with pension, $50,000 without. As of July 2025 the program had roughly 60,000 active holders, with Americans among the top source nationalities alongside Chinese, South Korean, and Indian retirees.
What this tells us about Americans in the Philippines
The 30,033 number, the 11,519 number, the 23,727 number, and the 220,000-to-270,000 range describe four overlapping populations: census-resident Americans, immigration-registered Americans, dual-national Filipino-Americans, and the wider American-origin community. They aren’t competing answers to the same question. They’re answers to four different questions, and the gap between them is itself the data point.
For research and journalism, which figure to use depends on the question being asked. Population-of-residents work goes through PSA Census. Visa-flow work goes through BI. Heritage and diaspora questions go through the RA 9225 count. Community-size questions, where census coverage and dual-national invisibility matter, default to the State Department estimate. None of them is wrong. Treating any single one as the headline number is.