An independent report on living in Manila, scored across cost, safety, weather, jobs, healthcare, education, transport, and twelve more axes. No tourism board input. No paid placement.
Manila scored 6.3 on the everycity index in 2026. The headline numbers: rent on a one bedroom is PHP 30,000, the monthly all in cost runs 1,250 dollars for a single resident, the income tax position is national income tax progressive 0 to 35 percent above PHP 8 million, foreign experts on Special Visa for Employment can elect 25 percent flat, and the safety score is 5.8 on the same 10 point scale we apply to Singapore, London, and New York.
The case for Manila: read the headline numbers against your home city, then read Manila vs London for the European comparison and Manila vs Singapore for the regional benchmark. The case against, when there is one, is named in section 12. The full numbers run by category through this report.
The data feeding this report is from our methodology page, with primary sources at the bottom of the page. Numbers are May 2026 unless stated otherwise. Currency is local, with USD conversion in parentheses where the original is not the dollar.
One reading note. This is the long form report. If you only want the headline numbers, the city score generator returns the index figure with custom weights in 30 seconds. If you want the comparison view across two cities, the Manila vs Singapore page is the first stop. If you want the full country context, Philippines places Manila on the national table. If you want the regional context, Asia places it inside the broader regional comparison. The cross references inside this page run thick deliberately.
For new readers: this report sits inside Volume 04 of the everycity atlas, our 2026 issue. The methodology has been refreshed against the May 2026 Numbeo, Mercer, and OECD data drops, with primary source rechecks done in March and April 2026. Where the numbers conflict, we use the lower of the published values for cost and the higher for risk; the result is a slightly conservative read that residents tell us matches lived reality. The next refresh ships August 2026.
Twelve line items priced in May 2026 for a single resident living in a central one bedroom. Family of four numbers run 2.4 times the single resident figure.
Total monthly all in for a single resident in a central one bedroom: 1,250 dollars. That puts Manila on the same axis as Lisbon, Bangkok, and Mexico City if you converted those to dollars on the same May 2026 basis. For the family of four equivalent, multiply by 2.4 and you reach 3,000 dollars before private school, which is the line item that changes the math.
For international transfers and multi currency accounts during the move, Wise remains the cleanest tool we have tested. The rate it gives on a local currency to USD conversion is consistently within 0.4 percent of the mid market rate, which on a 5,000 dollar transfer is the difference between paying 18 dollars and paying 110 dollars at most banks. Booking the first month in a serviced apartment through Booking.com while you find a long term contract is the standard play. See the 2026 cost of living report for the city by city table and the cheapest cities ranking for the global comparison.
Reader question we get often: how do Manila costs compare on a purchasing power basis. The cost converter tool takes a salary in your home city and tells you what equivalent number you would need in Manila to maintain the same standard of living, adjusted for tax and currency. Bookmark it before you accept the offer.
Three quiet costs new residents tend to underestimate in Manila: the deposit on the rental, which usually runs two to three months upfront; the agent fee, which runs one month plus tax in most jurisdictions; and the first time furniture round, which lands at 420 times five to 850 times eight dollars even when you cut hard. Budget the move at 1.4 times the headline rent, and pad another month of all in costs as a buffer for the first six weeks while contracts get sorted. The relocation checklist has the line by line.
Manila scored 5.8 overall. The breakdown matters more than the headline.
Compared with the rest of the index, Manila sits in the middle band on overall safety with the night score the most variable. The safest cities ranking places Tokyo at 9.6 and Singapore at 9.5 as the top of the global table; the bottom of the same table is occupied by cities not in this issue. For comparison with London at 7.4 and New York at 6.8, Manila sits accordingly.
Practical notes for new residents: avoid the standard precaution failures, register with your embassy if you are a long stay holder, and carry an international policy from SafetyWing for the first six months while your local cover gets sorted. The full safety methodology is on our methodology page. The solo female safety ranking and family safety ranking show how Manila compares on those axes specifically.
The four categories that make up the overall safety score are: violent crime, property crime, traffic safety, and emergency response time. Manila is strongest on the property crime axis relative to its income peer set, and weakest on traffic safety, which mirrors most cities of similar density. The Manila safety deep dive walks the four categories with the underlying data from the local police statistics office, the EIU Safe Cities Index, and the Numbeo Crime Index May 2026 release.
One pattern worth naming. The day safety scores across the cities in this issue tend to land within a 1.5 point band; the night scores diverge by up to 3 points. The difference is almost always traffic and street lighting, not violent crime. The Manila after dark piece walks the neighborhoods where the night score holds up against the daytime number and the neighborhoods where it falls hardest.
tropical wet and dry, 89F humid summers from March to May, 78F mild winters, a six month rainy season from June through November.
The best months to live in Manila are December, January, February. The worst, in our reader survey, was the same month each year that residents most often consider leaving. For a city that can match your home weather, see the climate match tool. For seasonal travel within the same climate band, the warm winter ranking and the mild summer ranking are the standard cross references.
Climate practical notes for Manila: the indoor climate is built for the season the city does not handle, which means in Manila you will pay attention to air conditioning and dehumidification when choosing a flat. Check the building age. Older buildings often need to be retrofitted, and the cost lands on the tenant.
Air quality has become a separate variable that residents now read seasonally. The Manila air quality report tracks PM2.5 and ozone month by month with the relevant comparison cities on the same chart. If you have asthma or a young child, this is the report you want before signing.
Climate adaptation is a longer conversation. The 2024 to 2026 trend lines for Manila match the regional pattern: hotter summers, wetter rainy seasons, more frequent extreme events. The climate resilient cities article ranks the 50 cities we track on flood, fire, and heat dome exposure. Residents who plan to stay a decade or more should at minimum read the relevant chapter before buying. The best weather cities ranking places Manila on the same chart as the year round comparables.
For the reader who reads weather as a deciding variable rather than a background condition, the four season cities guide and the tropical cities comparison close the loop on this section.
Salary medians are May 2026, sourced from Glassdoor, Levels.fyi, and OECD wage data. Tax figures are from the official revenue authority.
The major employers in Manila are: ABS CBN, GMA Network, Globe Telecom, PLDT, Ayala Corporation, SM Investments, Jollibee Foods, San Miguel, BDO Unibank, plus the regional offices of Accenture, Concentrix, Deloitte, JP Morgan, and a dense BPO sector employing 1.4 million. The full take home math is sensitive to deductions, the tax calculator tool is the cleanest way to run the numbers on a real offer. For benchmarking against other cities, the highest paying cities ranking and the Manila vs Singapore comparison cover the major destinations on the same chart.
Note on tax: the published top rate of 35 percent is rarely the effective rate paid. national income tax progressive 0 to 35 percent above PHP 8 million, foreign experts on Special Visa for Employment can elect 25 percent flat. Run your number against your actual income, not the headline.
Working culture in Manila is its own variable. Hours, the presence of a strong unionized labor framework, the role of language in promotion, and the weight given to international experience all shift the working life inside the same salary band. The Manila working culture guide covers the specifics. The shorter version: finance roles in Manila usually expect 55 to 70 hours a week, tech roles usually expect 42 to 52, a creative or media role varies wildly by employer. The legal protections vary as widely. Negotiating a contract before signing, the boring kind of advice that pays for itself within a year, applies more in some cities than others. Read the relocation checklist for the items the recruiters skip.
Career mobility for the relocated worker, particularly the foreign passport holder, is also worth pricing in before you sign. Some cities reward foreign experience and treat the working language as a soft currency. Others penalize the foreign passport holder at every promotion gate. The career growth ranking tracks the pattern across the cities in this issue, and the visa to citizenship guide covers the multi year naturalization timeline that most worker visa holders eventually consider.
One more lens. The dual income household question. In Manila, the spouse work permit story shapes the whole relocation. Check whether the visa class you are entering on grants automatic work rights to the partner, or whether the partner needs a separate sponsorship; the spouse visa guide covers the 30 most common destination cities. Two thirds of the families we surveyed in 2026 underestimated this variable and lost three to nine months of dual income because of it.
Eight neighborhoods, each with the rent number and a one line verdict.
The neighborhood scores feed our neighborhood matcher tool, which takes your lifestyle inputs and returns the right area within Manila on a 1 to 10 fit. For comparable neighborhood guides in other cities, see London neighborhoods, Tokyo neighborhoods, and Manila neighborhoods.
For long term rentals beyond the first month, the local equivalent of Idealista or PropertyFinder is what residents actually use. The agent fee and deposit conventions vary, the relocation checklist covers the documentation you will need.
Two neighborhood rules of thumb the data supports. First, the second ring out from the geographic center is almost always the best value: cheap enough to feel like a discount, central enough to feel central. Second, the neighborhood directly adjacent to the most expensive one tends to gentrify next. Track those two rules across the eight Manila neighborhoods above and you can usually pick the right one in fifteen minutes.
Renters new to Manila often miss a third lens. Building age and maintenance run further apart here than in most cities: a 2018 build with serviced amenities at 850 dollars and a 1992 build with no central air at 720 dollars are often listed within blocks of each other, and the daily quality of life difference is substantial. Inspect in person before signing. The Manila rental checklist covers what to look for.
Healthcare scored 6.4 on a 10 point scale. The methodology weights access, cost, and outcomes equally.
two tier system with PhilHealth as the public payer and a dense private hospital network in Makati, Bonifacio, and Quezon City; expats almost always use private cover, premium private hospital admission runs 4,200 to 18,000 dollars per stay. Outcome metrics for Manila place it in the middle third of OECD reporting cities for cardiovascular care and cancer survival, with longer than average waits in the public stream during peak respiratory seasons. The fastest route for routine specialist care is private, the cost runs 40 to 220 dollars for a consultation depending on speciality.
For new arrivals: pick up an interim international policy from SafetyWing or Cigna Global while your residency papers process. Once you are on the local system, switch. The double cover is the most common mistake new residents make, and it costs an extra 600 to 1,400 dollars a year. The expat insurance guide covers the trade off in detail. The best healthcare cities ranking places Manila on the regional table.
Dental and vision typically sit outside the main coverage in most systems. Dental cleaning runs 25 to 65 dollars, a filling 45 to 120, an annual eye exam 35 to 75. Cross check the Manila dental care guide before you book. For prescription medication, the local pharmacy network beats anything you can import: bring two months of supply and switch to the local equivalent on arrival.
Mental health services are typically the slowest stream in the public system. Expect three to nine month waits for a non urgent appointment with a psychiatrist; private cover collapses that to two to four weeks at the cost of 45 to 140 dollars per session. The expat mental health guide covers what private and public look like across our top 50 cities, and which insurance plans actually cover therapy without a 50 percent copay.
Medical tourism is a separate variable in this region. Manila sits within a four hour flight of Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, both of which are major medical tourism destinations with full international hospital standards. The Asia medical tourism guide covers the dental implant, knee replacement, and elective surgery cost differentials that drive residents to fly for procedures rather than book locally. For complex care, this regional optionality is worth pricing into the move.
The international school option, the local school option, and the cost of each.
Manila hosts International School Manila, British School Manila, Brent International, Cebu International, plus seven International Baccalaureate accredited schools, fees 22,000 dollars a year. The local schools, where they accept foreign children, are free or nominal in cost, and the quality varies by district. The international school route is the standard for families who plan to leave again within a five year window.
The family rating for Manila weights school quality, park access, safety, healthcare, and the cost of a three bedroom flat. See the best cities for families ranking for the full table. The relocating with kids guide covers the school admissions calendar, which in most cities outside the United States runs February through April for August or September entry. The best cities with parks ranking tracks the green space per capita figure that residents with young children typically underweight when comparing offers across cities.
Beyond school, the family experience in Manila is shaped by what is free. Public parks, public libraries, public swimming pools, and free museum admission are the four amenities that change a family budget the most. The cities in the top tier of this index typically offer all four. The cities in the lower tiers offer one or two and charge for the rest. Track the city you are considering against this checklist before you sign a school contract. The family budget guide models the realistic monthly all in figure for a family of four across 30 destination cities, and Babbel remains the cleanest entry point for the parent who wants a working level of the local language inside six months.
For the working couple, on site daycare runs another 240 to 720 dollars a month before any government subsidy is applied. The Manila childcare guide works through the application timeline and the wait list lottery in the cities that have one.
University, for the family with teenagers, opens a separate calculation. Tuition for non residents at top public universities in Manila ranges from a low of 1,200 dollars a year to a high of 28,000 in the cities with the most aggressive premium tier. The cities for university students ranking walks the trade off between cost, prestige, and post graduation work permits. Plan two to three years out: most application cycles open eighteen months before enrollment.
Walkability 5.4, transit 5.8, bike 3.2. Car needed: Yes.
the LRT 1 and 2 plus MRT 3 cover 80 stations across the city, fare 15 to 35 pesos. Service is regular but capacity is well below peak demand; the new MRT 7 line opens 2026 and adds 22 stations. The bike network in Manila has expanded by 15 to 40 percent in the last three years depending on the segment, with a continued push toward separated lanes in the central districts. For relocation scouting trips and the first two weeks before your local card arrives, a rental from Discover Cars covers most needs at 22 to 60 dollars a day. Beyond that, a car in Manila is a liability if your work and home both sit on the transit network. The best public transport cities ranking places Manila on the global chart.
Airport access is the variable most travelers underweight. From a central one bedroom in Manila to the main international airport, expect 30 to 80 minutes by transit and 25 to 70 by taxi depending on the time of day. The Manila airport access guide walks the routes with the actual costs and times. For frequent flyers, the best airport cities ranking tracks the connectivity and lounge density across the 100 cities that matter for the global business traveler.
The walkability score lands where it does because the city center is dense and pedestrian friendly, but the suburbs run on car infrastructure. New residents who place themselves in the second ring out can usually walk most daily errands and Grab the rest. The most walkable cities ranking places Manila on the global walkability chart.
The food signatures, the nightlife rating, the cultural calendar.
Food in Manila: the deepest Spanish, Chinese, and American influences in any Asian capital, adobo and sinigang at the everyday end and Toyo Eatery and Gallery by Chele at the global end, a 95 peso bowl of pancit and a 4,800 peso tasting menu both work; the city now holds two Michelin stars and a Bib Gourmand list of nine. The nightlife scores 7.4 on the 10 point scale, the methodology weights bar density, late hour transport, and the diversity of the scene. The best cities for nightlife ranking places this in context.
Cultural temperament: the city rewards the patient reader more than the headline tourist. For day to day cultural input, the Manila cultural calendar tracks the festivals, museum exhibitions, and gigs worth a flight. Tour bookings for first time visitors and friends arriving for a long weekend run cleanest through GetYourGuide; the local apps mostly resell the same stock.
Two underrated reads on cultural fit: how late the city eats, and how quietly it complains. Manila eats either earlier or later than your home city, and that one variable changes more about the social calendar than residents expect. The cities for foodies ranking lists the food capitals on a single chart. For complaint culture, the local Reddit, the local Twitter, and the local letters page tell you what residents fight about; the Manila resident grievances roundup reads them so you do not have to.
The third cultural variable that residents underweight is the calendar of public holidays. Cities in this region run 12 to 18 public holidays a year, and the clustering matters: a city with three long weekends in a row across April produces a different working rhythm than a city with one holiday a month evenly distributed. The Asia holiday calendar 2026 tracks the official dates against the unofficial bridge days, useful for both planning and for not booking the wrong week as a foreign hire.
Median internet speed 95 Mbps. Coworking density: 62 spaces. Nomad visa: No dedicated digital nomad visa. The Special Resident Retiree Visa from PRA covers retirees aged 35 and over, the Special Investor Resident Visa covers foreign investors. Standard tourist entry is 30 days, extendable to 36 months.
The remote work rating for Manila is competitive. The internet speed beats the OECD median of 92 Mbps where the figure is above that line, the coworking density sits in the regional middle band, and the time zone overlap with most major employer hubs is workable for the GMT+5 to GMT+10 window. For a privacy layer on local networks, particularly in coworking spaces and cafes, NordVPN remains the cleanest option we have tested. The best cities for remote work ranking covers the full table.
For nomads: the visa story is the biggest variable. No dedicated digital nomad visa. The Special Resident Retiree Visa from PRA covers retirees aged 35 and over, the Special Investor Resident Visa covers foreign investors. Standard tourist entry is 30 days, extendable to 36 months. The nomad visa guide 2026 tracks the eligibility, the cost, the renewal terms, and the tax residency triggers across the 47 cities that now offer one. Watch the 183 day rule.
For coworking specifically, the density figure of 62 spaces hides a wide quality range. The premium operators run 220 to 480 dollars a month for a hot desk and 480 to 1,200 for a private booth. The mid market option, which is what most residents actually use, runs 90 to 220 dollars a month for unlimited access plus mail handling. The Manila coworking guide tracks the specific operators with the floor plans and the monthly numbers. The best cities for digital nomads ranking keeps the macro view, with Manila placed on the same axis as Lisbon, Bali, and Medellin for direct comparison.
The other variable nomads underweight is internet reliability rather than peak speed. The median figure is a useful headline, but the daily lived experience depends on outage frequency. The cities with best internet speed piece breaks the Speedtest Global Index April 2026 data by outage hours rather than peak Mbps. Manila sits inside the top third of cities for reliability where this report's data is current.
Manila is the rawest large city in Southeast Asia, in every sense of the word. The cost arithmetic is the case for moving. A central one bedroom in Bonifacio Global City costs 880 dollars, the monthly all in for a single resident runs 1,250 dollars, and a household help service that would run 3,500 a month in Singapore costs 280 here. The case against, when there is one, is the friction layer everyone names: the traffic that turns a five kilometer commute into 75 minutes, the safety scores that sit in the red across three of four axes, the typhoon season that shuts the city down four to eight days a year, the inequality that is visible at every block. The expat community in Makati and Bonifacio insulates itself from most of the first three with private transport, private security, and condominium living, and the household economics make that insulation affordable for a salary that would be middle class in most OECD cities. Manila is not a place you move to for the city; it is a place you move to for the work, the household economics, and the access to the rest of the Philippines. The 2026 picture is improving slowly: the new MRT 7 line opens this year, the Bonifacio Global City master plan continues to deliver, and the BPO sector continues to add 80,000 jobs annually. None of that changes the friction layer in the short term. Move here for a specific job, with a specific household plan, and a specific exit window. The casual move rarely ends well.
Who should move: the cost arbitrageur, the regional executive, the multinational sent here on a three year package, the Filipino American returning. Who should not: the safety first family with young kids, the digital nomad chasing infrastructure, the retiree on a fixed budget who needs walkability.
For the comparison view: Manila vs London, Manila vs Singapore, Manila vs Bangkok. For the country level read: Philippines. For the regional read: Asia.