MANILA, Philippines — The Commission on Elections (Comelec) announced that overseas voter registration for the 2028 national and local polls will begin on Dec. 1, 2025, giving millions of Filipinos abroad almost two years to enlist.
In an advisory posted on social media, the poll body said the registration period would run until Sept. 30, 2027. During this time, Filipinos overseas may apply for new registration, transfer of records, reactivation, correction of entries, change of address, reinclusion, or certification.
Comelec to open nearly two-year overseas voter registration for 2028 elections
Applicants are required to present a valid Philippine passport, a post-issued certification, or a certified true copy of the order approving their retention or reacquisition of Philippine citizenship. Seafarers may also submit a photocopy of their Seafarer’s Identification and Record Book., This news data comes from:http://jgepm.jyxingfa.com

Applications may be filed at Philippine embassies, consulates, designated registration centers abroad, the Comelec Office for Overseas Voting in Manila, or at local field registration centers in the Philippines during office hours.
Comelec to open nearly two-year overseas voter registration for 2028 elections
The last overseas registration period ran from Dec. 9, 2022 to Sept. 30, 2024. For the May 2025 elections, Comelec recorded about 1.241 million registered overseas voters, spread across the Middle East, North America, Asia and Oceania, and Africa.
- Trump hails Department of War rebrand as 'message of victory'
- Government work, classes on Tuesday suspended due to bad weather
- New mining law to balance profit, ecology
- Marikina City chief of police relieved
- Philippines to launch shame campaign vs traffic violators
- Police general suspended for ‘obstruction’ of evidence in case of missing sabungeros
- DPWH told to build evacuation centers
- Nartatez relieves Fajardo as PNP spokesman
- Escudero subpoenas 5 contractors, 3 DPWH executives to Senate probe
- Trump rebrands Department of Defense as 'Department of War'