Jamaica C5 Form: The Free Form Scammers Charge $100 For
Philippines eTravel is free. Always has been. The entire form takes about five minutes, the portal is at etravel.gov.ph — the only official .gov.ph domain — and it never asks for payment. Yet scam sites charging $30 to $100 to “process” this same form have flooded Google results hard enough that both the Philippine Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) and the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) have issued formal public warnings.
Americans planning trips to the Philippines for 2026 are landing in this scam with some regularity. The Philippines is visa-free for US citizens (30 days on arrival, no application), and that frictionless reputation makes the eTravel requirement easy to miss. It’s not a visa. It’s not a fee. It’s pre-arrival registration that takes five minutes on your phone the night before your flight. But it’s mandatory, it’s verified at boarding, and finding out about it at the airport gate is a very bad outcome.
Quick Facts — Philippines eTravel 2026
Detail Info Who needs it All foreign visitors entering the Philippines Americans Visa-free 30 days on arrival, but eTravel still mandatory Submission window Within 72 hours before scheduled arrival Submit too early System rejects submissions outside the 72-hour window Cost Free — no exceptions, no processing fees What it generates QR code verified by airline at boarding Official portal etravel.gov.ph (.gov.ph domain only) Scam site pricing $30–$100 for a free government form Official warnings issued Philippine CICC and DFA Documents needed Passport, flight details, accommodation address, active email Uploads required None In one sentence: Philippines eTravel is a free, five-minute pre-arrival registration at etravel.gov.ph, required within 72 hours before landing — any site charging for this form is unauthorized.
eTravel is the Philippine government’s mandatory pre-arrival health and passenger data system, run through etravel.gov.ph. It replaced the old paper arrival forms that used to be handed out on the plane. Same data collected from every arriving passenger — now gathered before boarding rather than after landing.
The form asks for your passport details, your flight information, your accommodation address for the first night in the Philippines, and a basic health declaration. No documents to upload. No biometrics. No payment. The system generates a QR code on submission, which the airline checks before issuing a boarding pass.
If you don’t have the QR code, you don’t get a boarding pass. This is where the “I’ll deal with it when I get there” plan breaks down.
This is the detail that catches people off guard more than anything else.
You cannot submit eTravel more than 72 hours before your scheduled arrival time in the Philippines. The system hard-rejects early submissions — not because of a bug, but by design. Submit on Monday for a Wednesday night landing, and the portal won’t take it.
You also can’t leave it to the last minute. The airline needs to verify your QR code at check-in. Scrambling to complete an online form while standing in the check-in queue with luggage is not a viable plan.
The practical approach: the evening before your flight departs, once you’ve done online check-in and your seat and flight number are confirmed. Open etravel.gov.ph, fill out the form, save the QR code to your camera roll (screenshot it — don’t rely on cellular data at the airport), and you’re done.
Long itineraries with layovers: the 72-hour window runs against your scheduled arrival time in the Philippines, not your departure time from the US. Flying LAX to Manila via Tokyo on a 20-hour itinerary? The clock starts from your Manila landing time.
If your flights change after you’ve submitted — reschedule, missed connection, rerouted itinerary — fill out a new eTravel with the updated details. The QR code from the first submission is tied to the original flight information.
The official process at etravel.gov.ph runs about five minutes. No account creation. No payment at any point.
That’s the complete process. No follow-up steps, no approval period. The QR code is generated immediately on submission.
Search “Philippines eTravel application” and you’ll find the problem within about three results.
Third-party sites — operating on .com, .net, and .org domains that have nothing to do with the Philippine government — rank for eTravel search terms and charge $30 to $100 to submit a form the government makes available at no cost. The Philippine CICC and DFA have both issued formal public warnings about these unauthorized services. Those warnings have not filtered into the American travel press, which is how the information gap that enables the scam persists.
The tactics are consistent across all these sites. They copy the visual design of the official portal closely enough to look legitimate. They mirror the form fields — same questions, same structure — and insert a payment step that doesn’t exist on the real portal. Some deliver a QR code that actually works. Some deliver something that looks like a QR code but won’t clear Philippine immigration verification. Some process the payment and disappear.
None of them are authorized to submit eTravel on your behalf. The CICC’s formal warnings make that explicit. The DFA has echoed the same guidance.
The tell is the domain. etravel.gov.ph is a Philippine government domain. Any URL without .gov.ph in it is not the Philippine government. A .com or .org URL charging you for eTravel submission is not a government service — regardless of how official it looks, how high it ranks, or whether it has “Philippines” or “eTravel” in the domain name.
This is the same scam pattern documented across Singapore’s SGAC, Vietnam’s digital arrival card, Malaysia’s MDAC, and India’s e-Arrival Card — third-party sites occupy the search space between travelers who know a form exists and travelers who know where the official form lives. The Philippines version is particularly aggressive (the $100 ceiling on scam fees is higher than most equivalents) because the Philippines is a high-traffic destination with strong American demand and a visa-free entry reputation that leaves travelers less alert to paperwork requirements.
Philippines eTravel does not replace a visa, and for Americans it doesn’t need to — US passport holders enter the Philippines visa-free for up to 30 days on arrival. No advance visa application, no fee.
Two things happen at the boarding gate:
1. eTravel QR code — submitted within 72 hours before arrival, verified by your airline before a boarding pass is issued. Free. Done at etravel.gov.ph.
2. Passport — valid US passport. The Philippines generally requires it to be valid for at least six months beyond your intended stay, though you should verify current entry requirements with the US State Department before you travel.
That’s it for a standard tourist visit. No advance visa. One free form submitted the evening before departure.
If you plan to stay longer than 30 days, you can extend through the Bureau of Immigration in the Philippines — that process is separate from eTravel and handled after arrival. The 30-day limit is for initial visa-free entry; the extension process doesn’t change the eTravel requirement for getting on the plane.
The Philippines sits in a consistent 2026 trend. Mandatory pre-departure registration with airline-level enforcement is now standard policy across most of Southeast Asia and spreading globally.
Malaysia’s MDAC runs the same 72-hour window and the same free model. Singapore’s SGAC tightened enforcement on January 30, 2026, with No-Boarding Directives and fines of up to SGD 10,000 per non-compliant passenger; airlines check SGAC status the same way they check visas. Vietnam’s digital arrival card launched April 15, 2026, free at prearrival.immigration.gov.vn. Outside the region, ETIAS for Europe lands later in 2026 at €20 per application.
The Philippines version is free, which puts it at the easier end of the compliance spectrum. Five minutes and zero dollars, within the 72-hour window before your flight. The gap is purely informational — most Americans planning Philippines trips haven’t encountered eTravel in any of the travel guides or booking flows they’ve used.
What makes Philippines eTravel slightly more consequential than it looks: the QR code is verified before boarding in the US or wherever you’re departing from. A missed form isn’t something you fix at Philippine immigration. It’s something that prevents you from boarding a flight you paid for.
Boracay’s White Beach in the early morning. Palawan’s limestone cliffs and turquoise lagoons, consistently ranked among the best island destinations on earth. The Chocolate Hills in Bohol. Siargao for surfing without the Bali price tag or the crowds. Batanes for something genuinely off the usual circuit.
The Philippines is an archipelago of over 7,000 islands. The diversity of what’s accessible within a single trip (beach, mountain, volcanic landscape, colonial history, food culture that absorbed Spanish, Chinese, and American influences into something distinct) makes it one of the more unexpectedly deep destinations in Southeast Asia for travelers who give it more than a few nights.
Five minutes of form-filling the night before you fly doesn’t change any of that.
What does change things is getting to the airport and discovering you can’t board. That’s the scenario a correct understanding of eTravel prevents.
Philippines eTravel is free at etravel.gov.ph. It has always been free. The Philippine government has issued formal warnings through the CICC and DFA confirming that no authorized service charges for eTravel submission.
Submit within 72 hours before your scheduled arrival. The system won’t accept submissions outside that window. Fill it out the evening before departure, save the QR code offline, present it at check-in. Five minutes. Zero dollars.
Americans get 30 days visa-free. The eTravel QR code is what stands between you and a boarding pass for that trip. The scam sites charging $30 to $100 for this form are banking on the information gap between “I know I need something” and “I know where to get it free.”
You know where to get it free. etravel.gov.ph.
Philippines eTravel official portal: etravel.gov.ph. US State Department Philippines travel information: travel.state.gov — Philippines. Verify current entry requirements before travel — policy details can change.