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Republic Act No. 10172· Enacted 2012-08-15

Birthdate & Sex Correction Without Court (RA 10172) — BatasKo ELI5

RA 10172 allows you to fix wrong day/month of birth or sex in your birth certificate at the civil registry — walang kailangan pang pumunta sa korte. Step-by-step guide.

ELI5civil-registryOFW RelevantRA-10172civil-registrybirth-certificate

Ang Batas sa Madaling Salita— ELI5

RA 10172 lets you fix a wrong day or month in your birthday, or a wrong sex entry in your birth certificate, just by going to your local Civil Registrar — no court order needed. You need to show at least 2 supporting documents proving the correct details.

Official text — Republic Act No. 10172

Jump to section ↓8 sections

Preamble

Fifteenth Congress

Second Regular Session

Begun and held in Metro Manila, on Monday, the twenty-fifth day of July, two thousand eleven.

REPUBLIC ACT NO. 10172

AN ACT FURTHER AUTHORIZING THE CITY OR MUNICIPAL CIVIL REGISTRAR OR THE CONSUL GENERAL TO CORRECT CLERICAL OR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS IN THE DAY AND MONTH IN THE DATE OF BIRTH OR SEX OF A PERSON APPEARING IN THE CIVIL REGISTER WITHOUT NEED OF A JUDICIAL ORDER, AMENDING FOR THIS PURPOSE REPUBLIC ACT NUMBERED NINETY FORTY-EIGHT

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Philippines in Congress assembled:

Section 1 — of Republic Act No. 9048, hereinafter referred to as the Act, is hereby amended to read as follows:

Section 1 of Republic Act No. 9048, hereinafter referred to as the Act, is hereby amended to read as follows:

"SECTION 1.

Authority to Correct Clerical or Typographical Error and Change of First Name or Nickname. –

No entry in a civil register shall be changed or corrected without a judicial order, except for clerical or typographical errors and change of first name or nickname, the day and month in the date of birth or sex of a person where it is patently clear that there was a clerical or typographical error or mistake in the entry, which can be corrected or changed by the concerned city or municipal civil registrar or consul general in accordance with the provisions of this Act and its implementing rules and regulations."

Section 2 — , paragraph (3) of the Act is likewise amended to read as follows:

Section 2, paragraph (3) of the Act is likewise amended to read as follows:

"SEC. 2.

Definition of Terms.

– As used in this Act, the following terms shall mean:

(1) xxx xxx

(2) xxx xxx

(3) ‘Clerical or typographical error’ refers to a mistake committed in the performance of clerical work in writing, copying, transcribing or typing an entry in the civil register that is harmless and innocuous, such as misspelled name or misspelled place of birth, mistake in the entry of day and month in the date of birth or the sex of the person or the like, which is visible to the eyes or obvious to the understanding, and can be corrected or changed only by reference to other existing record or records:

Provided, however,

That no correction must involve the change of nationality, age, or status of the petitioner."

Section 5 — of the Act is hereby amended to read as follows:

Section 5 of the Act is hereby amended to read as follows:

"SEC. 5.

Form and Contents of the Petition. –

The petition for correction of a clerical or typographical error, or for change of first name or nickname, as the case may be, shall be in the form of an affidavit, subscribed and sworn to before any person authorized by law to administer oaths. The affidavit shall set forth facts necessary to establish the merits of the petition and shall show affirmatively that the petitioner is competent to testify to the matters stated. The petitioner shall state the particular erroneous entry or entries, which are sought to be corrected and/or the change sought to be made.

The petition shall be supported with the following documents:

(1) A certified true machine copy of the certificate or of the page of the registry book containing the entry or entries sought to be corrected or changed;

(2) At least two (2) public or private documents showing the correct entry or entries upon which the correction or change shall be based; and

(3) Other documents which the petitioner or the city or municipal civil registrar or the consul general may consider relevant and necessary for the approval of the petition.

No petition for correction of erroneous entry concerning the date of birth or the sex of a person shall be entertained except if the petition is accompanied by earliest school record or earliest school documents such as, but not limited to, medical records, baptismal certificate and other documents issued by religious authorities; nor shall any entry involving change of gender corrected except if the petition is accompanied by a certification issued by an accredited government physician attesting to the fact that the petitioner has not undergone sex change or sex transplant. The petition for change of first name or nickname, or for correction of erroneous entry concerning the day and month in the date of birth or the sex of a person, as the case may be, shall be published at least once a week for two (2) consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation.

Furthermore, the petitioner shall submit a certification from the appropriate law enforcements, agencies that he has no pending case or no criminal record.

The petition and its supporting papers shall be filed in three (3) copies to be distributed as follows: first copy to the concerned city or municipal civil registrar, or the consul general; second copy to the Office of the Civil Registrar General; and third copy to the petitioner."

Section 8 — of the Act is hereby amended to read as follows:

Section 8 of the Act is hereby amended to read as follows:

"SEC. 8.

Payment of Fees. –

The city or municipal civil registrar or the consul general shall be authorized to collect reasonable fees as a condition for accepting the petition. An indigent petitioner shall be exempt from the payment of the said fee.

The fees collected by the city or municipal civil registrar or the consul general pursuant to this Act shall accrue to the funds of the Local Civil Registry Office concerned or the Office of the Consul General for modernization of the office and hiring of new personnel and procurement of supplies, subject to government accounting and auditing rules."

Section 5 — Separability Clause.

Section 5.

Separability Clause.

– If any provision of this Act shall at any time be found to be unconstitutional or invalid, the remainder thereof not affected by such declaration shall remain in full force and effect.

Section 6 — Repealing Clause. –

Section 6.

Repealing Clause. –

Any laws, decrees, rules or regulations inconsistent with the provisions of this Act are hereby repealed or modified accordingly.

Show 1 more section +
Section 7 — Effectivity Clause. –

Section 7.

Effectivity Clause. –

This Act shall take effect fifteen (15) days after its publication in the

Official Gazette

or in at least two (2) newspapers of general circulation.

Approved,

(Sgd.)

JUAN PONCE ENRILE

President of the Senate

(Sgd.)

FELICIANO BELMONTE JR.

Speaker of the House of Representatives

This Act which is a consolidation of Senate Bill No. 3113 and House Bill No. 4530 was finally passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives on May 30, 2012 and June 5, 2012, respectively.

(Sgd.)

EMMA LIRIO-REYES

Secretary of Senate

(Sgd.)

MARILYN B. BARUA-YAP

Secretary General

House of Representatives

Approved: AUG 15 2012

(Sgd.) BENIGNO S. AQUINO III

President of the Philippines

Published on the

Philippine Star

and

Manila Bulletin

on August 24, 2012.

The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation

Full text on BatasKo. Original source: Official Gazette / Lawphil.

May kakilala ka bang laging nagkakamali sa edad niya sa passport — hindi dahil nagsisinungaling siya, kundi dahil mali ang petsa sa kanyang birth certificate? Ganyan ang problema ni milyon-milyong Pilipino.

Bago ang RA 10172, kailangan pa pumunta sa korte para ayusin ang ganung error. Mahal, matagal, at nakakainis. Ngayon? Kaya na itong ayusin sa lokal na opisina ng civil registry.

ELI5 / Madaling Sabihin: Kung mali ang araw o buwan ng iyong kaarawan sa iyong birth certificate (hal. nakalagay "June 15" pero dapat "June 5"), o mali ang "sex" na nakalagay (hal. "Male" pero dapat "Female"), pwede mo nang itama ito sa iyong lokal na City o Municipal Civil Registrar — o sa Philippine Consulate kung nasa ibang bansa ka. Hindi na kailangan ng court order, basta typographical o clerical error lang ang mali.


Real Filipino Scenario: Si Marites mula Iloilo

Si Marites, isang 32-taong-gulang na nurse sa Iloilo City, ay nag-apply ng passport para makasama sa isang recruitment drive para sa Canada. Pag-abot ng documents sa DFA, na-flag ang kanyang birth certificate — nakalagay "February 30" ang kanyang birthday. Walang February 30 sa kalendaryo.

Malinaw na clerical error ito — dapat "February 13" ang tama, gaya ng nasa kanyang school records. Pero dahil sa ganitong simpleng typo, hindi siya makakapag-apply ng passport — at maaaring mapigilan ang kanyang career abroad.

Ang solusyon niya sa ilalim ng RA 10172:

  • Pumunta sa Iloilo City Civil Registry
  • Mag-file ng petition kasama ang kanyang earliest school records at baptismal certificate bilang supporting documents
  • Bayaran ang filing fee (libreng-libre kung indigent)
  • Antayin ang proseso — kasama na ang publication ng petisyon sa newspaper ng dalawang beses sa loob ng dalawang linggo
  • Pagkatapos ng pag-apruba, humingi ng bagong PSA copy ng kanyang birth certificate

What the Law Actually Says

RA 10172 ay nag-amend ng Republic Act No. 9048 (ang naunang batas na nagpapahintulot ng correction ng una at apelyido nang walang court order).

Ano ang pwedeng itama sa ilalim ng RA 10172?

  • Mali ang araw o buwan ng petsa ng kapanganakan (hal. "March 3" dapat "March 13")
  • Mali ang sex ng tao sa birth certificate — pero may mahalagang kondisyon (tingnan sa ibaba)

Hindi kasama ang:

  • Pagbabago ng taon ng kapanganakan — kailangan pa ng court order para dito
  • Pagbabago ng nasyonalidad, edad, o status — hindi covered ng RA 10172
  • Ang anumang correction na hindi malinaw na clerical o typographical error

Mga kailangang requirements para sa petition:

  1. Certified true copy ng birth certificate o ng pahina ng registry na may error
  2. At least 2 public o private documents nagpapakita ng tamang detalye (hal. school records, baptismal certificate, medical records)
  3. Clearance mula sa law enforcement na walang pending case o criminal record
  4. Para sa correction ng sex: certification mula sa accredited government physician na ang petitioner ay hindi sumasailalim o sumailalim na ng sex change o sex transplant operation

Publication requirement: Ang petisyon ay dapat i-publish ng isang beses sa isang linggo sa loob ng dalawang magkakasunod na linggo sa isang newspaper of general circulation.

Saan mag-file:

  • Sa iyong City o Municipal Civil Registrar kung nakatira ka sa Pilipinas
  • Sa Philippine Consulate General kung nasa ibang bansa ka

Bayad: Pwedeng magpataw ng reasonable fee ang civil registrar — pero exempt ang mga indigent (mahirap).


What This Means for You

Bago ang RA 10172, kahit simpleng typo sa birthday — "July 5" dapat pero "July 15" ang nakalagay — kailangan pa pumunta ng korte. Buwanang pakikinig, abogado, gastos na maaaring umabot ng ₱20,000 pataas.

Ngayon, ang proseso ay:

  • Punta sa civil registry
  • Mag-file ng petition
  • Maghintay ng publikasyon
  • Makuha ang corrected document

Ang buong proseso ay maaaring tatagal ng ilang buwan — hindi instant. Pero walang kailangan pang korte, walang kailangan pang abogado sa karamihang kaso.

Importanteng tandaan: Ang RA 10172 ay para sa clerical o typographical errors lang — mga mistake na obvious at malinaw kahit sa pagtingin ng iba. Hindi ito para sa mga sitwasyong ang totoong impormasyon ay hindi sigurado o hindi matibay ang ebidensiya.


What Most Filipinos Get Wrong

Mali: "Pwede ko nang baguhin ang taon ng aking kapanganakan sa pamamagitan ng RA 10172." Tama: Hindi. Ang RA 10172 ay para sa araw at buwan lang. Para sa pagbabago ng taon, kailangan pa rin ng judicial petition sa korte.

Mali: "Libre lahat ng correction sa ilalim ng RA 10172." Tama: May filing fee na maaaring ipataw ang civil registrar — libre lang kung ikaw ay officially classified as indigent.

Mali: "Isang beses lang kailangang pumunta sa civil registry para matapos ang correction." Tama: Maraming hakbang ang proseso — pagsumite ng petisyon, publication sa dyaryo ng dalawang beses, at pag-apruba. Maaaring umabot ng ilang buwan bago makuha ang corrected birth certificate mula sa PSA.

Mali: "Kung mali ang sex sa birth certificate ko, simpleng correction lang iyon." Tama: Para sa sex correction, kailangan pa ng certification ng government physician na nagpapatunay na hindi ka sumasailalim ng sex change operation. Mas mahirap itong proseso kumpara sa birthday correction.


Para sa OFWs / For OFWs

Ito ay isa sa pinaka-relevant na batas para sa mga OFW. Bakit? Dahil ang maling detalye sa birth certificate ay nagiging pangunahing hadlang sa:

  • Pagproseso ng passport — Hindi tanggapin ng DFA ang application kung may inconsistency sa birthday
  • Pag-apply ng work visa — Maaaring i-flag ng embahada ang application kung hindi magkakatugma ang mga dokumento
  • POEA/DMW processing — Ang OEC at OWWA benefits ay naka-link sa iyong passport at birth certificate details
  • Pagpapadala ng SSS/PhilHealth/Pag-IBIG benefits pabalik sa Pilipinas kung may inconsistency sa pangalan o petsa

Kung nasa abroad ka na:

  • Pwede kang mag-file ng petition sa Philippine Consulate General sa bansang kinaroroonan mo
  • Ang Consul General ay may parehong kapangyarihang hawak ng City o Municipal Civil Registrar sa Pilipinas
  • Ang publication requirement ay applicable pa rin — pero maaaring mahanap ang dyaryong Philippine Community publication para sa requirement na ito (kausapin ang konsulado)
  • Ang processing ay maaaring mas matagal dahil kailangang i-coordinate ng konsulado sa PSA sa Pilipinas

Praktikong tips para sa OFW:

  • I-check ang lahat ng iyong dokumento bago mag-renew ng kontrata — birth certificate, passport, employment records — para malaman agad kung may inconsistency
  • Ipapaalam sa iyong pamilya sa Pilipinas kung kailangan nilang kumilos para sa proseso habang ikaw ay nasa ibang bansa

What to Do If You Need to Correct Your Birth Certificate

  1. Makakuha ng certified true copy ng iyong birth certificate mula sa PSA o sa iyong lokal na civil registry. Ito ang iyong basehan para malaman kung ano talaga ang nakalagay at ano ang mali.

  2. Kolektahin ang supporting documents. Kailangan ng hindi bababa sa 2 public o private documents na nagpapakita ng tamang araw/buwan ng birthday — hal.: earliest school record (Form 138), baptismal certificate, medical records, o voter's ID. Para sa sex correction, kailangan pa ng medical certification.

  3. Pumunta sa City o Municipal Civil Registrar (o sa Philippine Consulate kung nasa ibang bansa). Humingi ng blank petition form at alamin ang listahan ng requirements ng lokal na opisina — maaaring may dagdag pang requirements depende sa lugar.

  4. Sumubmit ng kumpleto at notarized na petisyon kasama ang lahat ng supporting documents. Siguraduhing lahat ng kopya ay certified true copies kung kinakailangan. Bayaran ang filing fee (o mag-request ng indigent exemption).

  5. Hintayin ang publication at approval. Matapos i-file, ang petisyon ay ipa-publish sa dyaryo. Pagkatapos nito at ng pag-apruba ng civil registrar, makakakuha ka ng corrected civil registry entry at maaari na kang humingi ng bagong PSA copy.


Related Laws

  • RA 9048 — Ang unang batas na nagpapahintulot ng correction ng pangalan nang walang court order; in-amend ng RA 10172 para idagdag ang birthday at sex corrections
  • RA 3753 — Civil Registry Law (ang pangunahing batas na namamahala sa civil registry ng Pilipinas)
  • Executive Order No. 209 — Family Code ng Pilipinas (nag-aatas na ang birth certificate ay pangunahing ebidensiya ng kapanganakan at pagkamamamayan)

FAQs

Q: Maaari ko bang baguhin ang taon ng aking kapanganakan sa ilalim ng RA 10172? A: Hindi. Ang RA 10172 ay nagbibigay-pahintulot lamang sa pagbabago ng araw at buwan, hindi ng taon. Para sa pagbabago ng taon, kailangan ng court petition.

Q: Magkano ang bayad para sa correction ng birth certificate? A: Nagbabago ang bayad depende sa lokal na civil registry. Ang mga indigent ay exempt sa bayad. Makipag-usap sa iyong lokal na civil registry para malaman ang eksaktong halaga.

Q: Gaano katagal ang buong proseso? A: Sa karaniwang kaso, maaaring umabot ng 3 hanggang 6 na buwan o mas matagal, depende sa workload ng civil registry at sa publication schedule. Ang oras ng proseso ay nagbabago-bago.


Sources

  • Republic Act No. 10172 — An Act Further Authorizing the City or Municipal Civil Registrar or the Consul General to Correct Clerical or Typographical Errors in the Day and Month in the Date of Birth or Sex of a Person Appearing in the Civil Register Without Need of a Judicial Order https://lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra2012/ra_10172_2012.html

// TODO: Verify official gazette link for RA 10172 at officialgazette.gov.ph and PSA website for current processing guidelines


General information only. Not legal advice. Para sa legal na tulong, makipag-ugnayan sa Public Attorney's Office (PAO) sa 1-800-10-PAO-8888.

By Irvin Abarca & Claude (AI Research Partner) · Published May 13, 2026 · Updated May 13, 2026 · 6 min read

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