Return Ticket Exemptions
"11. Who are exempt from the return ticket requirement?
1. Philippine passport holders;
2. Former Filipinos and their dependents (immediate family members);"
There is a #3 but it doesn't apply. Am I safe in assuming #2 exempts me from purchasing a return ticket? Does anyone have first hand experience entering on a balikbayan visa without a return ticket?
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When my wife and I were in immigration we asked about leaving the country and re-entering together to get a balikbayan visa the staff there insisted that balikbayan visas were not being issued at this time. I just wonder if anyone on this forum has, or know of anyone who has arrived in Phils recently and been given a balikbayan visa?
BI does not issue such visas.
It's just a stamp, placed in the pp of a foreigner upon entering the country together with his/her spouse. Validity is limited, but extendable.
During the height of the pandemic foreigners were not allowed in. Later it changed that foreigners accompanied with their spouse were allowed.
Moon Dog wrote:This will be the first time I will enter the Philippines without needing a return ticket. I will be availing of the balikbayan visa. This is stated in article 11 of the BI Travel Requirements:
"11. Who are exempt from the return ticket requirement?
1. Philippine passport holders;
2. Former Filipinos and their dependents (immediate family members);"
There is a #3 but it doesn't apply. Am I safe in assuming #2 exempts me from purchasing a return ticket? Does anyone have first hand experience entering on a balikbayan visa without a return ticket?
This is in reply to both Findlaymacd,
Whatever avenue you pursue make sure it is the correct one or it could be a costly mistake. I really don't know the ins and outs of everything regarding Balikbayan entry or exit.
I arrived three years ago on a Balikbayan Visa not knowing I was the recipient of that type of visa. I had read horror stories of people barred leaving on their trip to the Philippines by the airline because of not having a return flight. Our flight was nonstop on PAL.
I had a return throwaway ticket. My wifes one way flight ticket was hundreds of dollars more than my first leg of my return ticket. You could possibly buy a one way ticket that is more expensive than the complete ticket with exit.
I should have had a throwaway ticket to a cheaper destination. If in doubt buy a throwaway ticket somewhere cheap, think of it as insurance, something that you need and never have to use.
YMMV so be careful.
Okieboy wrote:I use to get a throwaway ticket from Philippines to Malaysia it was $ 28 USD, I never bought a round trip ticket, you can see what happens if their is a Pandemic, and the Airline cancels your ticket, you could be stranded, I heard of cases where individuals could not afford another ticket, and had to resort to ask US Embassy for return ticket, if your one way you leave any time
Yes throw away (if not plan to use the return.)
BUT I suppouse if an Airline cancel the trip you have paid, then they have to compensate you. (If they havent gone bankruptcy.)
...they smiled and let me board.So yes best not to assume anything if you are not sure...especially these days when you here that even SRRV holders were being barred fm entering without an ECC???? If a throw away ticket that costs less <$50 to a nearby destination.... is the price to pay I would gladly. Infact if you are lucky due to many airline flights being postponed/cancelled by the day you may infact get to have your free re-booking option/refund at your disposal. (omo)
Stay Safe
Also pay heed to what FindlayMacD observed with Balakbayan visas and also if not available, entry status on a tourist visas with an exit ticket.
Difficult times Moon Dog but I'm sure you will navigate the correct path, good luck.
Cheers, Steve.
Moon Dog wrote:The cheapest tickets I can find is $150 each and that is with PAL. If the consulate in DC calls the wife for oath taking soon I will only need one but then I will need two round trip tickets from Atlanta to DC and that will cost even more. I can't find any Cebu Pacific flights to Malaysia. I would like to contact Delta to see if they require return tickets for former and spouse but hold time is 4 hours, I would rather spend the $300.
The cheapest someoine had found BEFORE covid was FERRY from Luzon to HongKong.
I suppouse Palawan - Malaysia will be the cheapest, because its much shorter,, but it seem they have postponed opening that line because of covid.
The balikbayan visa program (REPUBLIC ACT NO. 6768) was shut down for a while but it is back in effect.
I don't think I'm going to find a ticket much cheaper during the pandemic. My tickets from Atlanta to Manila are $2,250 each and normally cost around $900.
Note: When I entered they asked me (immigration officials at the airport) about the flight out, I didn't have one. I simply told them when I travel I stay for a few weeks and then decide when to fly out. Its all over my visa stamps in my passport which was so filled there was little space to stamp an entry visa on it. So they let me in without an exit "return" flight (3x I entered the Philippines). I look like a tourist, I don't look like a retired pensioner or poor immigrant wanting to game the immigration system IMHO. I actually do travel this way all over the world. I never have these return flights out. I've been asked about it, but I just have them look at all the countries I do this in and no one asks a second time. Some don't smile about it, but are they really going to block entry just for a tourist traveling this way? Not one yet in 20+ countries.
neopal wrote:Plus, if they went hardball on me and actually did block me? I'd turn around get on the Internet and book a flight. Cheapest one in the 30 day time period of a free-visa entry stamp. Then show it, and that would solve the entire situation if I'm facing a hard-baller official.
Sounds a little too easy especially trying to board a flight without a return ticket. Just pull out your laptop at check in, research all the possibilities, which are more expensive than if you booked a exit flight several months in advance, then pull a printer out of your back pocket print the ticket and try to calm down the screaming crowd behind you who have been waiting to check in.
In the day of AirBnB and extended staycations, its a lot more common to book a 1-way flight. Especially for freelance consultants who don't know the exact dates. its not like the old days when you had to give months notice to take a vacation and knew when you had to come back. I've been doing 1-ways into major countries for hmm.. 20 years now, and not once was demanded to show a return trip or get kicked out from entering a country. As I said, if I'm faced with that and the supervisor doesn't relent, I'd just go logon to Expedia or some local cheap flights, find the cheapest flight, we're talking its not same day flight, but one 30 days out, which is going to be pretty cheap if you find the right travel package and they want to close it out. Ever book a flight months in advance for what you thought was the best price and then see one half the price. That's the booking packages and routes they have to settle up and sell out. Just don't try it during the holidays...
neopal wrote:I hear stories of someone saying airlines prevent it at the gate. But I never have gotten into that situation, not once. What airlines plays the role of immigration officer? That sounds fishy in itself. Like someone making stuff up...
Singapore actually joined a number of other countries by *ending passport stamping at immigration exit counters w.e.f 2019.
They have this auto biometric passport clearance system
(*Travellers must have already enrolled with their iris and facial biometrics)
which I then used to exit without the need for any immigration attendance/stamp. Its the respective airline crew that actually get involved with some immigration matters e.g : concerning my exit flight fm my respective destination country.
https://loyaltylobby.com/2019/04/22/sin … l-22-2019/
Nothing fishy about the quest for my freeeddddoooommm.

neopal wrote:hat airlines plays the role of immigration officer? .
It isnt that. If the ARRIIVING country refuse someone to get in,
then the AIRLINE, which fly that passenger, risk to need to pay the costs
neopal wrote:I hear stories of someone saying airlines prevent it at the gate. But I never have gotten into that situation, not once. What airlines plays the role of immigration officer? That sounds fishy in itself. Like someone making stuff up...
Its already been said. The airlines risk the cost of returning an errant passenger. I have had to show proof of return tickets when leaving UK, Hong Kong, Oman, Qatar, UAE and Singapore. I've never been asked for proof of return in the arrival country.
neopal wrote:I hear stories of someone saying airlines prevent it at the gate. But I never have gotten into that situation, not once. What airlines plays the role of immigration officer? That sounds fishy in itself. Like someone making stuff up...
It's happened to me twice. The last time I was on a short fun trip from PI to Malaysia or Thailand, I forget, and was returning to PI. Anyway.. the gate agent asked me to verify how I was going to leave the Philippines. Oops.. my original roundtrip e-ticket from US to Philippines from a couple of months earlier was in a gmail folder.. that I couldn't access.. because I couldn't get on the airport wifi.
I was basically screwed, they were not going to let me board, the supervisor was involved, etc. Finally the gate agent let me use HER wi-fi logon credentials to get online and dig into my gmail folders so I could locate my ORIGINAL e-ticket from US to PI to prove I had a way out of the country.
So yes, it does happen, and it IS the airline that checks, and as Coach mentions, it is because THEY pay the penalty.
The only time I was asked about a outward bound ticket was by the check-in desk of the airline at the airport (Singapore) and I had to purchase one before I was allowed on my flight. I don't have to worry now, 13a visa but before that I would book as cheap a flight as far in advance as I could. I may have been able to use that ticket multiple times until it expired.
regards Bruce
That said, their list was not as specific as what BI was looking for when I arrived in Manila. For example, the list said chest x-ray but didn't say I also needed a doctor's report on the x-ray. The list asked for a stool test but didn't say what the stool should be tested for.
Also, they neglected to tell me that upon arriving I needed to go to the main BI office to start the process of getting an ACR-I (alien registration) card. I ignorantly caught a flight to Cagayan de Oro the next day and only found out about my mistake when I tried to return to the US two weeks later.
Good luck!
-- Rich
Looks like we will have to do everything in the Philippines. After submitting my wife's dual citizenship papers there were no slots for oath taking available in July by the time she was approved. They do not answer phones or email so we wasted our time, can't even get them to return her papers. We are flying out this Thursday, July 22th.
I have all the medical stuff completed for the 13a but she needs her dual first. Sounds like it's simpler in Manila, just hate traveling to Manila. They can do my 13a in Tacloban but I didn't know about having to do the ACR-I at the main BI, thanks for that. I was reading a blog about an expat doing his 13a at the main BI, he said they didn't even ask him for any medical results.
But I found a company--two, actually--that will issue you what appears be a valid ticket confirmation for about $12. Tell them when and where to, they email it to you and you're all set. It really is a throwaway ticket!
And the airline (JAL) didn't even ask for it in Los Angeles.
Patience. Take a deep breath. And another. Patience.
I sent our original marriage certificate to Austin, TX to have it apostilled. There was some drama attached to that process but it is done now. I also ordered 2 certified marriage certificates from Harris county, TX just in case. I read that the BI keeps all the documents submitted for dual citizenship so we have a certified copy for them and we can keep the original.
Your wife should enter as a returning Filipina (balikbayan) and you enter as the husband of the Filipina. Be sure to go through the immigration line together. Once you are at your destination, just find the nearest DFA office and take your wife's paperwork there.
Various cities are on various levels of Covid lockdowns, changing every 2 weeks, so it may (will) take a while. But once she is a dual citizen, I suggest going to your local BI office to explain your situation and ask their advice about processing your 13a application. I think I saw something about the main BI office operating by appointment only, but that could be wrong (again, things change frequently). And bring your wife with you everywhere - it will help to smooth out the process.
Lastly, I hope that you are both fully vaccinated. All of the vaccines used in the US are approved in the Philippines. But you may still need to be tested and/or quarantined when you arrive - again a moving target.
And again, bring lots of patience. The government workers you encounter will likely be very friendly and try to be helpful, but they will strictly follow whatever processes they've been given, and no amount of logic or reasoning will change that. And don't be surprised that completing 1 step leads to 2 more that you didn't know about.
I'd love to hear how it goes.
-- Rich
Are you sure the BI doesn't handle dual citizenship? I got this info from the BI website, link below, which states "Where to apply? - BI Main Office". I've been in email contact with the Tacloban BI and they do answer email, unlike the DC consulate. I was told by them that the dual can only be accomplished at the BI main but I can do the 13a at the Tacloban facility.
We were both fully vaccinated here in Georgia. We have a 9 night hotel reservation that happens to be in the same hotel we stayed in for her K1 visa interview 14 years ago so that should add a romantic touch to an otherwise bleak situation.
Our dog Tikla will fly to Manila 4 days after our departure and be delivered to a friend in Manila who will keep her until Aug. 1st. The friend will meet us at the airport with Tikla after quarantine and hopefully the dog fly with us as cargo to Tacloban on PAL. Tikla's ticket was more than both of our tickets combined and she will spend a day at the pet spa in Amsterdam.
https://immigration.gov.ph/services/cit … itizenship
Was number 3 SRRV visa holders? I ask because I just read the SRRV application form and it said one of the benefits of getting an SRRV visa is that you are exempt from the return ticket requirement.
Carl
Tacloban has made an amazing recovery after being flattened by Yolanda in 2013. Our home is actually on Biliran Island which is a 2 1/2 hour drive from the Tacloban airport.
I believe you are correct, here is what it says in the BI travel requirements.
"11. Who are exempt from the return ticket requirement?
Philippine passport holders;
Former Filipinos and their dependents (immediate family members);
Permanent residents and holders of other special visa categories requiring temporary residents (with valid ACR I-Cards);
Passports of recognized foreign-government officials;
Visa under CA 613, Sec. 9, except Sec. 9(a), and 47(a)(2) where visa validity extends beyond passport expiration date, provided, an embassy or consulate is maintained in the Philippines; and
Those admitted by the Commissioner on humanitarian grounds."
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