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Moving from Canada to Philippines

A long sea move across the Pacific to Southeast Asia. Here is what a Canada to Philippines relocation really costs in 2026, how the container reaches Manila, why foreign nationals are usually assessed duty, and the visa routes Canadians actually use.

Last reviewed June 7, 2026
Indicative all in cost
$3,000 to 18,000
Door to door in Canadian dollars, depends on volume and mode (2026)
Door to door by sea
8 to 12 weeks
The ocean leg alone runs about five to seven weeks
Typical route
Vancouver to Manila
Across the Pacific to Luzon
Watch out for
Duty for foreigners
Returning resident relief is for Filipino citizens, not foreign nationals

Moving from Canada to the Philippines is a long ocean move. From the west coast a container leaves Vancouver and crosses the Pacific to the port of Manila, the country's main gateway on the island of Luzon, in roughly five to seven weeks. From eastern Canada the routing runs longer, often through a transshipment hub in Asia. Subic and Cebu are alternative ports for some shipments, but Manila handles most household goods.

The point that surprises Canadians is customs. The generous returning resident and balikbayan duty exemptions that you read about apply to Filipino citizens and former Filipinos coming home, not to foreign nationals. As a Canadian moving to the Philippines you will usually be assessed customs duty and twelve percent value added tax on your shipment unless you qualify under a specific status. Plan for that cost honestly rather than assuming a clean duty free entry.

AThe real number

What it costs to move from Canada to Philippines.

These are indicative ranges for 2026 in Canadian dollars, for a door to door international move from Canada to the Philippines. Your real quote depends on volume, your exact origin and Philippine delivery address, the season, and any duty and tax assessed on arrival.

Home sizeShared containerSole use 20ftSole use 40ft
Studio or 1 bedroom$3,000 to 5,200$5,000 to 7,800$7,000 to 10,000
2 to 3 bedrooms$5,200 to 9,000$9,000 to 13,000$11,000 to 15,500
4 plus bedrooms$9,000 to 13,500$13,500 to 16,500$16,000 to 18,000

Indicative ranges for 2026 in Canadian dollars and do not include any customs duty and value added tax, which foreign nationals are usually charged on the assessed value of the shipment. A shared container is cheaper but slower and tied to consolidation dates.

Volume is the master lever, because a sea move is priced on cubic metres, so shipping less is the most effective saving. On the Canada to Philippines route the duty and twelve percent value added tax assessed on arrival can be a significant extra for foreign nationals, so build it into the budget rather than treating the shipping quote as the full cost. The inland delivery from Manila to your final address, whether in Metro Manila, Cebu or a province, adds cost too, as does the summer peak when space tightens.

BThe timeline

A realistic schedule, working back from the sailing.

Work back from the sailing date, not the day you want to arrive. On this route the ocean leg alone runs more than a month, so booking early is the difference between a smooth move and an expensive scramble.

8 to 12 weeks out

Book the mover and the survey

Get binding quotes from movers with real Canada to Philippines experience. Insist on a video or in home survey so the volume is measured, not guessed. Ask them to estimate the duty and tax you will face as a foreign national.

4 to 6 weeks out

Sort documents and visa

Settle your Philippine entry plan and visa, gather the passport, the detailed valued inventory, and any documents that support your customs status. Book the sailing.

Packing week

Pack and load in Canada

The crew packs over one to three days depending on home size, then the goods move to the export port for stuffing into the container and the export formalities.

Weeks 1 to 7 at sea

Ocean transit across the Pacific

The vessel crosses the Pacific to Manila, sometimes via an Asian transshipment hub. Track the shipment through your mover and plan your own flight around it.

Arrival plus 1 to 3 weeks

Customs clearance at Manila

Your agent lodges the declaration with the Bureau of Customs. Foreign nationals are usually assessed duty and twelve percent value added tax on the shipment, which must be settled before release.

Final week

Delivery and unpacking

The goods are trucked to your Philippine address, unpacked, and the debris removed. Inspect for damage and note anything for an insurance claim before signing off.

CCustoms and import

Clearing your goods into Philippines.

The Philippines offers generous customs relief on used household goods, but it is aimed at returning Filipino residents and at balikbayans, former Filipino citizens and their families coming home. As a Canadian moving to the Philippines you are a foreign national, so unless you hold a qualifying status you will usually be assessed customs duty and twelve percent value added tax on the assessed value of your shipment by the Bureau of Customs. Some long term visa holders and former Filipinos can access partial relief, so check your exact category.

Whatever your status, your agent lodges the declaration with the Bureau of Customs and you will need a detailed valued inventory, your passport and visa, the bill of lading, and your Alien Certificate of Registration identity card, known as the ACR I Card, once issued. New items, a vehicle, firearms and certain electronics are treated separately and can attract additional duty or require permits, so list everything honestly and budget for the tax.

Verify before you moveCustoms rules change and are applied case by case. Confirm the current duty treatment, exact document list, and restricted items with the Philippine Bureau of Customs or a licensed customs agent before you ship.
DVisa and residency

How Canadians actually move to Philippines.

The Philippines offers several long stay routes for foreign nationals, and your visa also shapes how customs treats your goods. These are the routes Canadians most often use. They change, so treat this as a starting point and confirm the current rules.

13a permanent residentMarried to a Filipino

A non quota immigrant visa for the foreign spouse of a Filipino citizen. It grants permanent residence and is one of the most settled routes, with the spouse petitioning for the visa.

Basis
Filipino spouse
Status
Permanent residence
SRRV retirement visaRetirees and investors

The Special Resident Retiree Visa lets people over a qualifying age reside indefinitely by placing a deposit with the relevant agency. It is popular with retirees and offers multiple entry and stay rights.

Basis
Deposit and age
Stay
Indefinite, renewable
9g work visaEmployment

A pre arranged employment visa for foreign nationals with a job offer from a Philippine employer, who sponsors the application along with a work permit. It is tied to the employment.

Sponsor
Philippine employer
Tied to
The job
Quota and special visasInvestors and others

Quota immigrant visas, investor visas and special work or study permits cover founders, larger investors and specific situations. The right one depends on your funds, your activity and your plans.

Basis
Investment or activity
Varies
By category
Not immigration adviceIncome thresholds and rules change and depend on your circumstances. Confirm the current requirements with the official government source and take professional advice before you apply.
MChoosing a mover

How to choose a mover for this route, with no names attached.

This site never names, ranks, or recommends a moving company. Instead, here is the neutral checklist that separates a safe international mover from a risky one. Apply it to every quote you receive.

1FIDI or IAM affiliation. Membership of FIDI (with the FAIM quality standard) or IAM signals audited financial and operational standards for international household moves.
2Real experience on this exact route. Ask how many moves they ran on this corridor in the last year and which port and clearing agent they use at the destination.
3A binding pre move survey. A proper video or in home survey produces an accurate volume and a quote that will not balloon later. Decline estimates made sight unseen.
4Clear insurance terms. Read what marine transit cover includes, the valuation basis, the excess, and how claims are handled. Get it in writing.
5Independent reviews. Look for consistent, recent reviews that mention customs clearance and delivery, not just collection day.
6Like for like scope. Make every quote cover the same services, the same volume, and the same insurance so the prices are actually comparable.
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QCommon questions

Questions people ask about this move.

How much does it cost to move from Canada to the Philippines?

As an indicative range for 2026, a one bedroom move runs about 3,000 to 7,800 Canadian dollars depending on whether you use a shared or sole use container, while a larger three or four bedroom household in a sole use forty foot container can reach 16,000 to 18,000 Canadian dollars door to door. These figures exclude the customs duty and value added tax foreign nationals usually pay, so budget for that on top.

How long does shipping take from Canada to the Philippines?

The ocean leg across the Pacific to Manila takes roughly five to seven weeks on its own. Once you add packing in Canada, customs clearance and final delivery, a realistic door to door window is eight to twelve weeks. From eastern Canada the routing is longer. Book early, because the sailing date drives the whole schedule.

Do I pay duty on my furniture when moving to the Philippines?

Usually yes, if you are a foreign national. The duty free returning resident and balikbayan relief is for Filipino citizens and former Filipinos, so as a Canadian you will typically be assessed customs duty and twelve percent value added tax on your shipment unless you hold a qualifying status. Confirm your exact treatment with the Philippine Bureau of Customs.

Can I bring my car from Canada to the Philippines?

Importing a vehicle is heavily restricted and taxed, and used car imports often require special clearance or are limited to certain categories such as returning residents. The duty and tax can exceed the value of the car. Most movers buy locally instead, so take specialist advice before planning to ship a vehicle.

What visa do Canadians need to move to the Philippines?

Canadians need a long stay visa matched to their situation. Common routes are the 13a resident visa for the spouse of a Filipino, the SRRV retirement visa, the 9g employment visa sponsored by an employer, and various quota or investor visas. Your visa also affects customs. This is not immigration advice, so confirm current rules with the Philippine authorities.