PH gov't limits number of ports as rice importation resumes
Photo from Department of Agriculture
  • Importation of milled rice, which resumed this year, is only allowed in initially 17 ports of entry, according to the guidelines set by the Bureau of Plant Industry
  • By February 1, the entry points will be reduced to 12
  • All incoming imported milled rice from the ports of Zamboanga and Tacloban are required to undergo 100% inspection
  • Shipments in other ports will be subjected to random inspection by authorities

Importation of milled rice, which resumed this year, is only allowed in initially 17 ports of entry as part of measures to protect local farmers, according to the guidelines set by the Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI).

Based on the guidelines under a BPI memorandum dated December 15, 2025, importation of milled rice is restricted to the following ports:

  1. Bacolod
  2. Batangas
  3. Cagayan de Oro
  4. Calbayog
  5. Cebu
  6. Davao
  7. Dumaguete
  8. General Santos
  9. Iligan
  10. Iloilo
  11. Manila International Container Port
  12. Port of Manila
  13. Subic
  14. Tabaco, Albay
  15. Tacloban
  16. Tagbilaran
  17. Zamboanga

By February 1, the ports of Iloilo, Capiz, Aklan, Antique, and Guimaras will no longer be allowed to handle imported milled rice.

All incoming imported milled rice from the ports of Zamboanga and Tacloban are required to undergo 100% inspection while shipments in other ports will be subjected to random inspection by plant quarantine inspectors at the respective port of entry prior to clearance.

Any change in port of entry will require prior approval from BPI.

Application for sanitary and phytosanitary import clearance (SPSIC) and ship out date was allowed even before January 1, but the arrival of any imported milled rice at the designated ports was to begin only on January 1.

All shipments of imported milled rice must arrive within 60 days from the date of issuance of the SPSIC. Shipments arriving beyond the prescribed period will not be accepted and will be required to return to the country of origin at the expense of the importer.

All imported shipments of milled rice should undergo regular plant quarantine document verification, validation. and commodity inspection prior to release at the respective port of entry. Audit of importers, and the mandatory reporting of rice stocks to BPI’s Online System for Integrated Rice Information System and other DA platforms will continue to be implemented.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. last year ordered a 60-day suspension of imports of regular milled and well-milled rice starting September 1, 2025, to protect local farmers from falling palay prices during the harvest season. This was later extended to December 31, 2025.

READ: PH rice import ban to be extended to end-2025

The Inter-Agency Group on Rice Tariff Adjustment also released the guidelines for implementing adjustments of import duty on rice beginning 2026.

Adjustments will be based on movements in international rice prices, with rates ranging from 15% to 35%.

READ: Guidelines out on rice import duty adjustments effective Jan

 

 

You May Also Like