SRRV some basic questions
Basically, I will get a 59 day visa for my next trip out there. Before going will do all the SRRV paperwork that I can here in UK. On arrival will do medical etc and submit my SRRV application.
BUT. I am unsure about:-
1. Pension, I meet the pension requirements but do I have to have it all paid to a Philippines bank, or continue to have it paid in UK and transfer it myself each month. (I have pensions from 2 or 3 sources and want to maintain some savings in UK in case all goes wrong and I need to return.
2. Paying the $10k or whatever deposit for the visa. Looking at the details on the PRB site it says about paying through a NY bank into the PRB account. Surely I can pay that directly from my UK bank not go through a US intermediary. Also do I just pay that before going, before submitting any forms? Obviously it will have my name as a reference and I will have records of the payment from my UK bank.
Thanks in advance for any advice
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UK State pension can be payed into a Bank in the Philippines. But my other Pensions can only be payed into a UK Bank account.
There are some good online sites for transfering Money from a European Bank to the Philippines. I use World Remit. a UK company. It's very quick, and not as expensive as a Bank transfer.
I have a lot of experience with this VISA.
First thing I can tell you is under no circumstances use the online SRRV aplication... Where you recieve a SRRV #. You might get assigned to a totally incompetent associate who will make your life miserable. They will be useless by email and when you make it in to the office they will duck you... Making you take unnecessary trips. I had to demand to be released from an assigned agent directly to the supervisor... they wouldn't volunteer releasing our account even though I had a recommended agent offering to take it.
Instead use the information you find online to help you collect all the documentation you need before you arrive in the Philippines, police reports, wedding certificate etc. You can also find the application online for download, even though it may be outdated before you arrive... But at least you will be prepared.
Go into the SRRV office in Makati and get an assigned a representative or request a specific representative if you have the name of someone recommended by someone you trust.
Message me personally for specific questions.
Best Regards.
Thanks
Buzzardman wrote:I am started on the process, there do seem to be one or two catch 22s at the moment. As the process continues I will be clearer about these and ask more specific questions. A lot of the info I am getting on the web seems to be contradictory though. I expect to fly out in April to do the actual application. Therein lies one of the catch 22 situations. It asks for an address NOT a hotel, but until the visa is in my hands as it were, I will not be able to get a more permanent address than a hotel room, but how to get the visa without the more permanent address... grrr confusion
Hi Buzzardman,
I was able to rent a unit with no problems, while I was still only in the Philippines as a tourist.
If you do like it here you, you will probably have a wife in which case you can get a marriage visa then you can spend your $10,000 on something worthwhile like maybe an emergency fund for when you are desperate for some real tea and crumpets back in merry ole England. You cannot get crumpets here and even if you taught some Philippino to make your crumpets they would screw it up because the Philippino does not know what a real crumpet tastes like. And that, foregoing, silly diatribe pretty much sums up what is wrong with the Philippines. That is: this is a real foreign country and though someone may try to tell you otherwise with words like paradise and cheap women and warm weather, you will learn soon enough that this is a very strange land with very strange people. And every one of the words used to sell you on this country has a serious downside.
I have visited The Philippines many many times. Usually on tourist visas and for limited times (usually a month at a time, but upto 59 days)
On those visits I have spent time in many areas from the biggest cities to very tiny townships. This last holiday period, for example I was in a small barangay in a very rural area of Mindanao where I was the only foreigner for miles around, and from there to Manila. A couple of months previously I was mainly in Cebu (not expat Ayala but more downtown Lapu-lapu) I have travelled around quite a bit have some very dear and close Filipino friends. So I do know something about living there, and not just tourist living and certainly not related to sexpat activities.
Yes I do know quite a lot about living in foreign lands especially in South East Asia. Way back in the 70's I lived for a number of years in a small bush town in central Africa and have lived for varying amounts of time in Indonesia (Java) and Thailand (Northern Thailand) I have quite an understanding of cultural differences in many of these countries and how these differ from my own home culture. I also have a good understanding of how "culture shock" works and how an expat will tend to go through many phases of cultural adjustment from rose-tinted glasses to final acceptance, though some do appear to get rather stuck in a disgruntled intermediate phase.
No one has "sold it to me" with honeyed words. The decision is based on careful 1st hand research, visiting a number of places, spending time in them (not 2 weeks at a beach resort or as a sex-tourist or whatever else you were hinting at.
No I don't have a pinay wife, nor will I be seeking one. 11 years of widowhood following on from 36 years of very happy marriage has made me a confirmed and very happy batchelor with a wide range of good friends who have proven that friendship over and again.
You say that SRRV is expensive. Is it? Do you consider it to be more expensive than marriage? Yes one has to make a deposit of $10,000 or $20,000 but that is not a payment. After a period of 6 months that money can be used to invest in a property. I know one can not own a property outright, but that is the same in many countries. At the moment I have that money sitting in an account here earning less than 0.1% So depositing it in a SRRV account at present rates would be a more than 10-fold increase. Then later investing in purchase of a condo will be an investment not outright expenditure.
Finally, I don't think I have eaten a crumpet for nigh on 50 years, and as for beverages Bos Benguet beans make a very nice coffee. I always bring a good supply back with me when I return to UK
I have discovered that there is a very simple solution to the difficulties that I seemed to be meeting up with, and that was to contact a PRA Marketer. Hopefully all will now go smoothly!
My partner from Netherlands is staying here in Coron, Palawan on an SRRV. I helped him in completing and submitting his application for SRRV at PRA. Afterwards, I helped a Dutch friend of him get his SRRV also, then I applied and was accepted as PRA Marketer.
Getting an SRRV is not a complicated matter. The required deposit of US$10,000-20,000 can be converted into investment like purchase of condo unit or long-term lease of property.
Per our experience, having an SRRV is a very convenient way of staying indefinitely in the Philippines. Easy for a non-Filipino to get in and out of the Philippines
The SRRV is stamped on your passport, and you will also be issued an ID from PRA. This ID you need to renew every year. If you live far from Manila like us, you only need to deposit the US$360 annual fee in any Landbank branch, scan the deposit slip, then send it via email to PRA. PRA will send to you your new ID via LBC or any courier.
Pops
Anywho, I didn't mean to rain on your parade. As foreign digs go, Philippines is about par. Heck, I live here and the main attraction for me is the weather (especially when I think of February in most of US).. The other good thing is a wife, 20 years my junior. Aside from that....uhh... other pluses....hmm...wala and that means "nothing" in Tagalog. But those two are enough for I've learned that most times a compromise for happiness is nearer than you think and to use a quite tired cliche--the grass is not always greener on the other siide of the world.
But good luck in your transplant--just do not burn all your bridges (or money) behind you. After truly living here with naught but a Filipino gravestone on your horizon you may find yourself longing for fish, chips. and your disappeared
$ 10,000. Can you hear the echo in the distance, "I told you so."
1. i believe you merely have to show evidence of having the pension - it is not a requirement to remit it all to a philippine bank
2. you should wait until you are here and have made progress in your application before you open a bank account in your name at an approved bank with the required deposit - it does not matter how the funds get into the bank, only that the bank has the ssrv account in your name - i use Landbank which is a government bank
hope this helps
From UK government website "You usually have to pay tax on your UK income even if you’re not a UK resident. Income includes things like:
pension
rental income
savings interest
wages
If you’re eligible for a Personal Allowance you pay Income Tax on your income above that amount. Otherwise, you pay tax on all your income."
Can you explain what you mean by the statement about paying tax?
As far as I can tell, non-resident tax is for income earned in the Philippines and for someone who is NOT resident in Philippines, not for someone who is resident as part of the SRRV. Am I incorrect?
Thank you!
Perhaps someone will suggest marrying a Filipino as an option but then I lose 25% of my Australian pension!
I'd give it a year before you hand over 10-20k dollars.
I lived in Spain for twenty years. This is where they get their ways from. It was good training but it still didn't completely prepare me. A number of one month visits & endless research & forums does open your eyes a little but being here in the system is so different ha ha. That's ha ha slightly hysterical😂
In Spain I refused to lower my standards & generally got the service I paid for.......in the end.
Here if you refuse to lower the bar you are going to be miserable. Assume the worst & expect a shoddy service. Then you will be pleasantly surprised when things go right.
Take it slowly mate. Good luck!
I've been trying to get 10k pesos back from BDO bank whose ATM failed to pay out. This has happened four times in nine months. The last time was 14th February & im still spending a few hours a week trying to get it back.
Good luck trying to get 10-20k dollars back. You'll find that they are masters of ineptitude, incompetence & making people jump through rings.
My wife deals with it. She's used to being treated like trash. She's an angel or a saint I think.
We signed up for GLOBE internet. With a free SKYPE phone, a chromcast dongle & free 6 months NETFLIX. Where's my phone & chromcast?? No stock Siiiiiiir!
So they're happy to take the money now try customer services. Ha ha Good luck with that too. I just bought my own chromecast for 1500 pesos. Life is too short to waste time on these retards.
Dont make assumptions about people you do not know and about whom you know nothing at all. Your arrogance in the way that you referred to me "...or whatever his name is." speaks volumes about you.
Guess it might be something to do with me dealing with everyone involved in a polite and courteous manner and following procedures exactly.
Nothing as exciting as that. I come from a small English market town called Leighton Buzzard
Much nicer climate here, the locals at our beach house thought I was mad out on the balcony drinking tea during the typhoons ... bending coconut palms and waves over our sea wall.
I wished sometimes that I had just Leased not buy and build . But I have a home and that’s where I will live and at least no Government and other pressures from Australia . . I have friends there Retired with nothing to do bored with life . Sure not boring in the Philippines . Lots of fun and new adventures available to reach out to here many islands to explore different ways of life
Ha something to say !!
SRRV payment is done to a nominee bank account that belongs to the immigration so the holder of the SRRV ends up without any bank account. One of the banks even recommended to open a company here and to visit their branch again when the company is operating. However SRRV is for retirees. Why should I open a company? Another bank requested tons of documents related to my pas jobs. Not copies, they requested translated originals! They ask for anything just not to open a basic saving account. What a shame.
HSBC in Manila is very central and 10 mins walk from the city Bank Towers of the PRA office. When u r settled, u can change banks to wherever. We would recommend BPI.
Why not become a Philippine citizen then you'd not pay tax on your gov pension!
Yes the local banks ask for the ACR card that you don't need with the PRA visa and as you say do not recognise the SRRV as a permanent visa.
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