14/04/2026
Boracay Accommodations on Airbnb, Agoda, Booking.com, and Other OTAs: Fix Your Accounting and Tax Compliance for Q1 2026
If you are operating an accommodation business in Boracay through Airbnb, Agoda, Booking.com, or other online travel agencies, this is the reminder many operators need to hear: online bookings are not outside the tax system. The BIR has long said that doing business through digital or online platforms does not remove your obligation to register, keep books, file returns, and pay the correct taxes. In 2021, the BIR went further and formally directed its offices to monitor and verify the tax compliance of online merchants, social media influencers, and other businesses operating through digital platforms.
This means the conversation is no longer just about “hotel tax” or “traditional accommodation income.” It is now part of the digital economy and e-commerce compliance environment. The BIR has already moved from simply reminding taxpayers that online income is taxable to building enforcement rules around platform-based business activity. Revenue Regulations No. 16-2023 imposed withholding tax on gross remittances made by electronic marketplace operators and digital financial services providers to sellers and merchants, and the BIR later clarified the implementation timelines and transition periods through RMC No. 8-2024, RMC No. 55-2024, and RMC No. 79-2024.
For accommodations using OTAs, the practical lesson is simple: do not assume your platform activity is invisible. The compliance direction is already clear. Digital platforms, remittance systems, and online transaction ecosystems are increasingly being pulled into the tax chain through monitoring, withholding, registration checks, and reporting-related obligations. Whether you operate one unit, several units, or a mixed owner-manager setup, the safe approach is to assume that your records can eventually be matched and verified.
One of the biggest accounting mistakes in the accommodation industry is focusing only on net payout. Many operators look only at what arrived in the bank after Airbnb or Agoda fees. That is not enough for proper accounting. A proper review usually starts with gross bookings or gross sales, then looks at platform fees, commissions, cancellations, direct expenses, owner share versus operator share, and the supporting records behind each amount. If your books are based only on net payout, you may end up with returns that do not reconcile, expenses that cannot be matched, and tax exposure that becomes much larger than expected.
This is especially important in Boracay, where many accommodation operations are not simple one-owner, one-business setups. Some units are individually owned. Some are managed by an operator. Some use one TIN for platform activity while utilities, dues, or common charges are billed elsewhere. That kind of structure can still be managed, but only if the accounting is complete and the tax treatment matches the real business arrangement. If the income trail is in one place and the expense trail is in another, the result is weak records, poor reconciliation, and higher tax risk.
Operators should also understand that the strict phase did not begin only in 2023. The BIR had already reminded online businesses about tax compliance years earlier, then pushed harder in 2020, and entered more active monitoring mode in 2021. What happened in 2023 and 2024 is that the rules became more system-based and more difficult to ignore because they started involving e-marketplace operators, digital financial services providers, and clearer implementation timelines. By July 15, 2024, electronic marketplace operators were already set to begin imposing withholding tax on covered sellers and merchants.
And if you keep delaying compliance, the cost does not stay flat. The BIR’s penalties page states that a 25% surcharge may be imposed for failure to file a return and pay the amount due on time, unless a different case specifically applies. On top of the basic tax and surcharge, interest can also apply to unpaid amounts, and BIR materials also point taxpayers to the schedule of compromise penalties for violations involving registration, invoicing, bookkeeping, and other compliance failures.
So the message to Boracay accommodations is straightforward: do not wait for BIR to come knocking before you fix your books. Annual Income Tax for 2025 is already at the deadline, which means many taxpayers no longer have time for deep cleanup of last year’s records. But Q1 2026 is still manageable. This is the right time to reconcile your Airbnb, Agoda, Booking.com, and direct bookings; identify your gross sales properly; separate operator income from owner share where applicable; organize your expenses; and make sure your accounting matches your tax filings.
Proper accounting is no longer optional for OTA-based accommodations. In the present compliance environment, weak records are not a minor bookkeeping problem. They are a tax risk. If you are earning from online travel agencies and digital booking platforms in Boracay, treat Q1 2026 as your opportunity to correct, reconcile, and comply — while it is still manageable.