January 3 – Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin announces President Marcos' enactment four days earlier of Executive Order No. 81 which reorganizes the National Security Council, with the Vice President and former presidents being stripped of their membership.[1]
Philippines–United States relations: The Philippines begins hosting Afghan refugees seeking to resettle in the United States as part of a July 2024 agreement between the Philippines and the U.S. to temporarily host a U.S. immigrant visa processing center.[2]
The Supreme Court strikes down the Commission on Elections' policy of disqualifying prospective national candidates for lack of campaign funds as nuisance candidates following an appeal from Juan Juan Ollesca, who was deemed as such in the 2022 presidential election.[8]
January 14 – The Supreme Court strikes down a 25-year moratorium on large-scale mining in Occidental Mindoro introduced in 2008, saying that the local governments can prohibit specific mining projects but cannot do so for all large-scale mining activities within their jurisdiction.[9]
The Sandiganbayan convicts former Quezon City mayor Herbert Bautista and former city administrator Aldrin Cuña of graft over the procurement of an Online Occupational Permitting Tracking System in 2019 and sentences them to up to ten years' imprisonment.[10]
January 28 – The Sandiganbayan convicts Mary Ann Maslog of graft in relation to a 1998 textbook scam involving officials of the Department of Education, Culture, and Sports and sentences her to up to ten years' imprisonment. The conviction is issued after its original 2019 date had been postponed due to Maslog faking her death and going into hiding under a false name until her discovery and arrest in 2024.[16]
President Marcos signs into law Republic Act No. 12122, fixing the term of the Commandant of the Philippine Coast Guard to a maximum of three years.[26]
The Sandiganbayan dismisses a petition by the United Coconut Planters Life Assurance Corporation (COCOLIFE) against the transfer of the company's 255 million shares in the United Coconut Planters Bank to the government, saying that the said assets were acquired as part of government-imposed coconut levies.[29]
The municipality of Baggao, Cagayan, is declared "insurgency-free" by the government.[30]
March 5 – President Marcos signs into law Republic Act No. 12124 or the Expanded Tertiary Education Equivalency and Accreditation Program (ETEEAP) Act, expanding access to tertiary education particularly among working professionals.[34]
The Supreme Court orders the eviction of Romeo Jalosjos and Dakak Beach Resort Corporation from the Dakak Beach Resort in Dapitan, Zamboanga del Norte, after ruling that they had profited from the property despite not paying rent to the landowner in the preceding 20 years.[39]
President Marcos signs into law Republic Act No. 12145, reorganizing and renaming the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) into the Department of Economy, Planning and Development (DepDev).[47]
The Ombudsman orders the dismissal of Albay Governor Edcel Greco Lagman for receiving money from jueteng operations when he was Vice Governor.[48]
April 11 – President Marcos signs into law Republic Act No. 12160 or the Philippine Islamic Burial Act, regulating Islamic funerals in the Philippines.[49]
President Marcos issues Executive Order No. 86, authorizing the issuance of specific visas for digital nomads to the Philippines.[51]
President Marcos signs into law Republic Act No. 12180 or the Phivolcs Modernization Act, allotting ₱7 billion to upgrade the facilities and services of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS).[52]
The Sandiganbayan convicts former Bacolod mayor Luzviminda Valdez and an aide of falsifying cash slips to inflate reimbursements and sentences them to 42 years' imprisonment.[58]
May 2 – Philippine Infradev Holdings announces the cancellation of the Makati Intra-city Subway project, citing complications caused by the transfer of territory to be traversed by the line and related infrastructure from Makati to Taguig following the Supreme Court's ruling on the Makati–Taguig boundary dispute.[60]
May 5 – The decommissioned Philippine Navy vessel BRP Miguel Malvar sinks off the coast of Zambales while being towed to be sunk in target practice as part of joint exercises with the US military.[62]
May 20 – The mayor of South Upi, Maguindanao del Sur, Reynalbert Insular, is arrested along with his wife on suspicion of masterminding the killing of his vice mayor, Roldan Benito, in 2024.[69]
May 22 – The Sandiganbayan acquits former agriculture secretaries Bernie Fondevilla and Proceso Alcala of graft over the anomalous procurement of 1,500 well pumps and engines valued at a total of ₱144.405 million in 2010.[70]
A court-martial acquits former Presidential Security Group commander Brigadier General Jesus Durante III of involvement in the 2022 murder of businesswoman Yvonette Chua Plaza in Davao City.[73]
The European Union removes the Philippines from its list of high risk jurisdictions for money laundering and terrorism financing.[81]
The Sandiganbayan convicts former Misamis Occidental representative Loreto Leo Ocampos of graft and fraud in a case of the PDAF scam involving ₱2.1 million in public funds and sentences him to up to 10 years' imprisonment.[82]
June 13 – A court in Pasig acquits Rappler CEO Maria Ressa and five other Rappler executives of violating restrictions on foreigners owning companies under the Anti-Dummy Law.[83]
June 16 – The academic year (2025–2026) is started by the Department of Education, as part of their efforts to revert to the old school calendar.[84][85]
June 17 – The Sandiganbayan dismisses an ill-gotten wealth case filed in 2014 by the Ombudsman against former Justice Secretary Hernando Perez concerning the extortion of $2 million from former Manila representative Mark Jimenez during a plunder investigation in 2001, citing insufficient evidence.[86]
June 20 – The Supreme Court strikes down the practice of proclaiming second-place finishers in elections as winners in the event of their rival's disqualification and orders the application of succession rules in dismissing an electoral protest filed by Sultan Kudarat Governor Pax Ali Mangudadatu against COMELEC and his rival, Sharifa Akeel, regarding the outcome of the 2022 gubernatorial election.[87]
June 23 – A court in Manila acquits 12 Philippine National Police officers of murder over the deaths of 13 people in a 2013 shootout against a suspected jueteng lord in Atimonan, Quezon, that was marred by allegations that it was a rubout.[88]
June 26 – The Sandiganbayan dismisses the last remaining civil case under the Coco Levy Fund scam pertaining to the ownership of PepsiCo's subsidiaries in the Philippines, citing the PCGG's argument that pursuing the case is now "unwarranted".[89]
A court in Muntinlupa acquits former senator Leila de Lima of drug trafficking charges a month after the Court of Appeals voided an earlier acquittal issued in 2023 and ordered a new decision.[90]
A court in Manila rules that former Bamban, Tarlac mayor Alice Guo is a Chinese citizen and therefore ineligible to hold public office in the Philippines, leading to the voiding of her term as mayor.[91]
The Sandiganbayan convicts former Philippine Tourism Authority general manager Robert Dean Barbers of graft over the unauthorized construction of a P3.7-million sports complex in Intramuros, Manila in 2005 and sentences him to up to eight years' imprisonment.[92]
The Sandiganbayan convicts former Narvacan, Ilocos Sur mayor Zuriel Zaragosa of graft over the embezzlement of P81 million in tobacco excise tax intended for local farmers in 2016 and sentences him to 10 years' imprisonment.[94]
The Ombudsman imposes an 18-month suspension on Camarines Norte governor Ricarte Padilla for appointing personnel to government positions without legal basis.[95]
July 8 (PHT) – The bulk carrierMV Eternity C is attacked by Houthis in the Red Sea. Among the 25 people on board are 21 Filipino crew members, eight of them have been rescued (as of July 10). Four sailors are killed, while the rest are either abducted by the rebels or still missing.[98]
July 15 – The Supreme Court rules that the concealment of one's homosexuality from their spouse constitutes a valid basis for the annulment of a marriage on the grounds of fraud.[101]
The Supreme Court releases an April ruling allowing COMELEC to hold special elections in vacated congressional districts without a resolution from the House of Representatives in a case involving the 3rd district of Palawan.[103]
December 1 – The Barangay and SK elections will be held. House Bill No. 10344 was filed for its postponement on October 26, 2026.[110] Another bill which seeks to postpone the election in May 2029 and to extend the current barangay officials elected in October 2023 for a total of six years term, both are pending approval.[111]
In August 2024, the Senate discussed reducing holidays to boost productivity during the remaining sessions of Congress, with a focus on legislation addressing the number of holidays from different cities, municipalities, provinces including those of national level (besides religious) in the country.[119]
On October 31, the national government publicly released the list of holidays and non-working days, which are indicated by proclamations signed by the president a day earlier. Proclamation No. 727, series of 2024, contains the general list,[120] with the People Power anniversary, which was not declared a holiday for 2024, being returned but as a working day.[121]A day prior to All Saints' Day (October 31) is included in the list, while All Souls' Day (November 2) is excluded.[121][122]
Meanwhile, Proclamation No. 729, s. 2024, declared July 27 as a special non-working day in commemoration of the founding anniversary of the Iglesia ni Cristo.[123]
March 20 – President Marcos vetoes a bill recognizing Pampanga as the "culinary capital of the Philippines", citing a lack of historical basis and concerns over offending other provinces.[136]
June 10 – A court in Manila acquits drag artist Pura Luka Vega on charges of offending moral and religious sensibilities over a rendition of the Lord's Prayer in 2023, citing failure to establish reasonable guilt.[148]
June 18 – President Marcos signs into law Republic Act No. 12224 designating February 1 as the National Day of Awareness on Hijab and other Traditional Garments and Attire.[150]