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Real Estate Projects in the Philippines

Browse 249 real estate development projects with active listings across the Philippines on Filipino Homes. Project types include high-rise condominiums, mid-rise residences, house-and-lot subdivisions, townhouse communities, and pre-selling developments from major Philippine developers. Use the search bar to filter by project name or address, then open a project to see floor plans, available units, and the agent assigned to coordinate viewings.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a pre-selling real estate project in the Philippines?

Pre-selling means units are sold before the project is fully built. Buyers reserve a unit at a launch price, pay a structured down payment over the construction period, and take possession at turnover. Pre-selling units are usually 20-30% cheaper than ready-for-occupancy (RFO) units in the same project, but you wait 2-5 years for delivery and carry construction-completion risk.

What is the difference between RFO and pre-selling units?

RFO (ready-for-occupancy) units are completed and turnover-ready — you can move in or rent out immediately. Pre-selling units are still under construction with structured payment terms and a future turnover date. RFO commands a premium for the convenience and zero construction risk; pre-selling rewards patience with a lower entry price and longer payment runway.

Can foreigners buy a unit in a real estate project in the Philippines?

Yes, with limits. Foreigners can buy condominium units as long as foreign ownership in the building stays at or below 40 percent — Philippine law caps foreign equity in any condominium corporation. Foreigners cannot directly own land, so house-and-lot or subdivision units typically require a Filipino spouse, a long-term lease, or a corporate structure. Always confirm titling arrangements with the developer and a Philippine lawyer.

What financing options are available for buying a project unit?

Common options: bank home loans (typically up to 80 percent loan-to-value, 10-25 year terms), Pag-IBIG Fund housing loans (up to ₱6M for qualified members), in-house developer financing (faster approval but higher interest), and deferred cash with a discount for full payment within 12-36 months. Pre-selling buyers usually pay 10-20 percent equity over the construction period and bank-finance the remainder at turnover.

Do I need a real estate agent to buy a unit in a project?

No, but using one costs you nothing extra and is strongly recommended. Developer commissions are paid by the developer, not the buyer, so the price is the same whether you buy direct or through an agent. An agent helps with paperwork, reviews the contract to sell, schedules site visits, and represents your interest during turnover inspections. Open any project on this page and contact the assigned Filipino Homes agent.