The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has introduced new rules aimed at making residential land titling faster, fairer, and more accessible for Filipino families.
Through Administrative Order (DAO) No. 2025-35, the agency overhauled the residential free patent system, addressing long-standing delays that have affected inheritance, property rights, and infrastructure projects across the country.
“We are fixing a system that has left too many families in uncertainty for too long,” said Environment Secretary Raphael M. Lotilla. “A title is more than a document – it is stability, dignity, and protection from abuse. Our duty is to ensure that land governance is not only efficient but truly responsive to the realities ordinary Filipinos face.”
The reforms are particularly significant in a country where millions still reside on lands passed down through generations but remain untitled. Untitled properties cannot serve as collateral for loans, complicate reconstruction after disasters, and are vulnerable to disputes from opportunistic claimants. DAO No. 2025-35 also clarifies eligibility, allowing heirs, spouses, returning Filipinos, and those whose occupation was interrupted by valid circumstances to apply.
To accelerate processing and improve transparency, the order mandates a 120-day processing period and allows electronic filing and tracking through the Land Administration and Management System (LAMS Philippines).
Applicants can defer submission of the Land Registration Authority certification for up to 90 days. The standardized ₱150 application fee is retained, and cadastral survey costs are removed, protecting low-income applicants from excessive charges.
Beyond residential land, the DENR highlighted the importance of foreshore management reforms to protect coastal zones from climate change, storm surges, and unregulated development. Strengthened governance of public coastal lands is seen as vital for coastal communities’ economic resilience and climate adaptation.
Secretary Lotilla urged land officials to adopt a balanced, modern, and climate-responsive approach to land administration. “2026 is a pivotal year for delivering faster, more predictable services, safeguarding public land assets, and ensuring that land governance contributes meaningfully to national development and public welfare,” he said.
The move signals a major step toward resolving longstanding land disputes, protecting Filipino families, and supporting sustainable development nationwide, while promoting equity and transparency in property administration.