SUBSCRIBE NOW SUPPORT US

OFW’s April remittances reach $2.72B — BSP

OVERSEAS Filipino workers line up at the new Immigration Annex and Lounge at the NAIA Terminal 3. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said OFW remittances in April reached $2.72 billion in April, improving 0.4 percent from $2.67 billion in March.
OVERSEAS Filipino workers line up at the new Immigration Annex and Lounge at the NAIA Terminal 3. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said OFW remittances in April reached $2.72 billion in April, improving 0.4 percent from $2.67 billion in March.PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF PCO
Published on

Hard-earned cash remittances overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) rose modestly in April despite heightened global economic uncertainty, preliminary data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said.

The BSP data showed cash remittances coursed through banks reached $2.72 billion in April, up from $2.67 billion in March.

OVERSEAS Filipino workers line up at the new Immigration Annex and Lounge at the NAIA Terminal 3. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas said OFW remittances in April reached $2.72 billion in April, improving 0.4 percent from $2.67 billion in March.
OFW remittances post modest April increase — BSP

On a seasonally adjusted basis, money sent by OFWs increased by 0.4 percent month on month.

Personal remittances, which include cash transfers through formal and informal channels as well as remittances in kind, climbed to $3.04 billion from $2.97 billion a month earlier.

Seasonally adjusted personal remittances rose 0.4 percent month on month to $3.34 billion.

Further, the BSP said the sustained growth reflects the resilience of OFWs and their continued support for household spending and domestic consumption.

For the first four months of 2026, cash remittances increased 2.6 percent to $11.40 billion from $11.11 billion a year earlier, while personal remittances grew 2.7 percent to $12.70 billion from $12.37 billion.

The United States remained the largest source of remittances, accounting for 39.7 percent of total inflows during the January-to-April period, followed by Singapore at 7.3 percent and Saudi Arabia at 6.4 percent.

The latest figures underscore the continued resilience of remittance flows despite global economic uncertainties, according to the central bank.

Moreover, the Financial Stability Coordination Council (FSCC), chaired by the BSP, noted that around 49 percent of OFWs work in the Middle East, accounting for roughly 18 percent of total remittances.

“While OFWs in Israel and Iran remain limited (estimated in the tens of thousands), escalation affecting Gulf airspace, maritime routes, or economic activity could pose broader risks given the concentration of Filipino workers across Gulf Cooperation Council markets and their importance as a source of household income,” the FSCC said.

logo
Daily Tribune
tribune.net.ph