Pumunta ka sa gobyerno para kumuha ng permit. Sinabi sa iyo: "Bukas na lang." Bumalik ka bukas. "Kulang pa ang requirements." Kinukumpleto mo. "Bayad muna dito." Lahat ng ito — illegal na sa ilalim ng RA 9485.
ELI5: RA 9485, the Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007, gives you a legal right to fast government service. Simple transactions must be done in 5 working days. Complex ones — 10 days. Every office must post a Citizen's Charter that tells you exactly what to bring, how long it takes, and what it costs. Fixers who charge to speed things up can be imprisoned up to 6 years.
Real Filipino Scenario
Aling Rosa, a 52-year-old sari-sari store owner in Iloilo City, needed a business permit renewal from the city hall. The clerk told her she needed seven different documents — but the list on the wall only showed five. She came back three times, each time being told something different was missing.
On her fourth visit, a man outside offered to "fix it for ₱2,000."
Under RA 9485, every single thing that happened to Aling Rosa was illegal:
- The clerk cannot demand documents not listed in the official requirements (Section 11[a][6])
- The office must act on her request within the prescribed period (Section 8[b])
- The "fixer" outside faces up to 6 years in prison and a fine of up to ₱200,000 (Section 12)
What the Law Actually Says
Section 1 establishes the law's name: the "Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007."
Section 4 defines the key terms:
- Simple Transaction — requests requiring only ministerial (routine) action from an employee. Must be resolved within 5 working days.
- Complex Transaction — requests requiring discretion and judgment from the office. Must be resolved within 10 working days.
- Frontline Service — any government process involving applications for permits, licenses, rights, rewards, or renewals.
- Fixer — any person (employed by government or not) who facilitates transactions for money or other gain.
Section 6 — Citizen's Charter: Every government agency must post a Citizen's Charter that tells you:
- The exact step-by-step procedure to get the service
- Who is responsible for each step
- The maximum time to complete the process
- The documents you need to bring
- The fees (if any)
- How to file a complaint
Section 8 — Accessing Services:
- Officials must accept all applications submitted, without turning you away
- They must acknowledge receipt by writing their name, unit, date and time received
- No application shall be returned without appropriate action
- If your application is disapproved, you must receive written notice within 5 working days, including the specific reason and what requirements you failed to submit
Section 9 — Automatic Extension: If a government office fails to act on your license or permit renewal within the prescribed period, your existing license is automatically extended until they decide. Exception: permits covering activities that pose public health or safety risks.
Section 11 — Violations and Penalties:
Light Offense (employee penalties):
- Refusing to accept your application
- Failing to act within the prescribed period
- Failing to serve clients present before the end of working hours
- Adding requirements not in the official notice
Penalties: 1st offense — 30 days suspension + Values Orientation Program; 2nd offense — 3 months suspension; 3rd offense — dismissal + permanent disqualification from government service.
Grave Offense:
- Fixing or colluding with fixers for money or advantage
- Penalty: Immediate dismissal + permanent disqualification
Section 12 — Criminal Liability for Fixers: Fixers face imprisonment of up to 6 years, a fine of ₱20,000 to ₱200,000, or both.
What This Means for You
You have a legal right to government service within a fixed time frame. The Citizen's Charter is not decorative — it is the official contract between the agency and you.
If a clerk demands a document not on the posted list — refuse. Tell them to show it in the Citizen's Charter. If they cannot, they are violating RA 9485.
If a government transaction takes longer than 5 or 10 days without written explanation, that is a violation you can report.
If someone offers to "facilitate" your transaction for money — that person is a fixer. Engaging one may implicate you as well. Report them instead.
What Most Filipinos Get Wrong
"The Citizen's Charter is just a suggestion." No. It is the legally mandated standard for that office. If the Charter says 5 days, you are entitled to service in 5 days.
"Fixers only work outside government offices." RA 9485 defines a fixer as anyone — including government employees — who facilitates transactions for pecuniary gain. A clerk who makes things move faster for money is as guilty as the tao outside the gate.
"If my application is denied, I have no recourse." Wrong. The office must give you written notice stating the specific reason for denial and listing exactly what requirements you are missing. You can resubmit with those requirements or appeal the decision.
"This law does not apply to courts or Congress." Correct — Section 3 explicitly excludes offices performing judicial, quasi-judicial, and legislative functions. But it covers ALL executive agencies, LGUs, and GOCCs that provide frontline services.
For OFWs / Para sa OFW
This law is essential knowledge for OFWs because you often deal with Philippine government offices for documents before and after deployment.
Common government transactions covered under RA 9485 for OFWs:
- Passport renewal or application (DFA)
- NBI clearance
- PSA (birth certificate, marriage certificate, CENOMAR)
- POEA/DMW documents and OEC (Overseas Employment Certificate)
- SSS, Pag-IBIG, PhilHealth records and certifications
- BIR tax clearances
- LTO, business permits for family businesses back home
Your rights under RA 9485 when dealing with these offices:
- You are entitled to a clear list of requirements posted at the office or their website
- You cannot be asked to come back for a missing requirement that was not on the original list
- Transactions must be completed within 5 or 10 days depending on complexity
- If you are abroad, your representative or family member has the same rights on your behalf
If you encounter fixers at DFA, PSA, or POEA/DMW: Report them to:
- The Civil Service Commission (CSC) complaint hotline: (02) 8931-7939
- The Presidential Anti-Graft Commission (PAGC)
- The Office of the Ombudsman: (02) 8479-7300
The OFW community has historically been targeted by fixers — especially for passport and OEC processing. You do not need a fixer. Use the official online systems (ePassport, POEA online) and protect yourself.
What to Do If Your Rights Are Violated
- Document everything. Note the date, time, name of the employee (visible on their ID), and exactly what happened. Write it down.
- Request the Citizen's Charter. Ask the office to show you their official service standards. If they cannot produce it, that itself is a violation.
- File a complaint at the Public Assistance/Complaints Desk. Every office is required to have one under Section 8(g). Ask where it is.
- Escalate to the Civil Service Commission (CSC). File a complaint at csc.gov.ph or call (02) 8931-7939. The CSC has administrative jurisdiction over government employee violations.
- Report fixers to the Ombudsman. The Office of the Ombudsman (ombudsman.gov.ph) handles corruption and misconduct cases. You can file online.
Related Laws
- RA 11032 — Ease of Doing Business Act (amended RA 9485)
- RA 6713 — Code of Conduct for Public Officials
- RA 3019 — Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act
- [RA 9485 was substantially strengthened by RA 11032 in 2018, which shortened timelines and added stronger penalties — TODO: verify RA 11032 amendments]
FAQs
Q: Pwede ba akong mag-complain kung ang government office ay hindi kumpleto ang Citizen's Charter nila? A: Oo. Ang bawat ahensya ay legally required na mag-post ng Citizen's Charter. Kung wala ito o kulang ang impormasyon, pwede kang mag-complain sa Civil Service Commission.
Q: Ang fixer na kasama ko sa pila — maaari ba akong ma-implicate kung nag-bayad ako? A: Possibly. While RA 9485 primarily targets the fixer, paying someone to improperly influence a government transaction can expose you to other laws (like RA 3019 Anti-Graft Act). Avoid fixers entirely — use official channels.
Q: Kung 10 working days na pero wala pa ring update sa aking aplikasyon, anong gagawin ko? A: The office must notify you in writing about any extension and the reason for it. If they fail to act AND fail to notify you, file a complaint with the CSC. Under Section 9, if it is a license renewal, your current license is automatically extended during the pendency.
Sources
- Republic Act No. 9485, "Anti-Red Tape Act of 2007," approved June 2, 2007. https://lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra2007/ra_9485_2007.html
General information only. Not legal advice. Consult the Public Attorney's Office (PAO) at 1-800-10-PAO-8888 or a licensed attorney for specific legal concerns.
By Irvin Abarca & Claude (AI Research Partner) · Published May 2026 · 7 min read