I. Introduction
Borrowing money from lending companies has become common in the Philippines, especially with the rise of online lending platforms, mobile loan applications, salary loans, business loans, and quick-cash services. While many lending companies operate legally, others may be unregistered, abusive, fraudulent, or engaged in unfair debt collection practices.
In the Philippines, lending companies are regulated primarily by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) under the Lending Company Regulation Act of 2007, also known as Republic Act No. 9474. A legitimate lending company must be duly registered and authorized to operate. It must also follow rules on disclosure, interest, fees, privacy, advertisements, and collection practices.
This article explains how to verify whether a lending company is registered and legitimate, what government records to check, what warning signs to watch for, and what remedies are available if a borrower deals with an illegal or abusive lender.
II. The Main Law Governing Lending Companies in the Philippines
The principal law is Republic Act No. 9474, or the Lending Company Regulation Act of 2007.
Under this law, a lending company is a corporation engaged in granting loans from its own capital funds or from funds sourced from not more than nineteen persons. Lending companies are required to register as corporations and obtain the proper authority from the SEC before conducting lending activities.
A person or entity cannot simply call itself a lending company and start offering loans to the public. It must have the legal personality and authority required by law.
III. What Makes a Lending Company Legitimate?
A lending company in the Philippines is generally legitimate if it has the following:
SEC Certificate of Incorporation This means the company is registered as a corporation with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Certificate of Authority to Operate as a Lending Company This is separate from ordinary corporate registration. A company may be incorporated with the SEC but still not authorized to operate as a lending company.
Registered Business Name and Corporate Details The company should have an official corporate name, principal office address, SEC registration number, and authorized representatives.
Compliance with SEC Rules and Regulations The company must follow the SEC’s rules on lending operations, disclosures, advertisements, interest and charges, privacy, and debt collection.
Lawful Loan Documentation It should provide written loan agreements, disclosure statements, schedules of payment, interest rates, penalties, processing fees, and other charges.
Lawful Collection Practices It must not harass, shame, threaten, intimidate, or unlawfully disclose borrower information.
IV. SEC Registration Is Not Enough
One of the most common misunderstandings is that SEC registration alone automatically makes a lending business legal. That is not correct.
A company may be registered with the SEC as a corporation, but that does not necessarily mean it is authorized to lend money to the public.
For lending companies, there are usually two important SEC records:
1. Certificate of Incorporation
This proves that the company legally exists as a corporation.
2. Certificate of Authority to Operate as a Lending Company
This proves that the company is allowed to engage in lending activities.
A borrower should look for both. The more important document for lending operations is the Certificate of Authority.
V. How to Check if a Lending Company Is Registered with the SEC
To verify a lending company, a borrower should check the SEC’s public records and official lists. The SEC commonly maintains lists of:
- Registered lending companies;
- Lending companies with Certificates of Authority;
- Financing companies;
- Online lending platforms connected to registered lending or financing companies;
- Companies whose Certificates of Authority have been revoked, suspended, or cancelled;
- Advisories against unauthorized lenders or abusive online lending applications.
The borrower should confirm the following details:
- Exact corporate name;
- SEC registration number;
- Certificate of Authority number;
- Registered office address;
- Whether the authority is active, suspended, revoked, or cancelled;
- Whether the lending app or online platform is connected to the registered company;
- Whether the company has been the subject of SEC advisories.
The exact spelling of the company name matters. Fraudulent lenders may use names similar to legitimate companies to mislead borrowers.
VI. How to Check an Online Lending App
Online lending apps require extra caution because some illegal lenders operate only through websites, social media pages, messaging apps, or mobile applications.
When checking an online lending app, verify:
- The name of the app;
- The name of the corporation operating the app;
- The SEC registration number of the corporation;
- The Certificate of Authority number;
- Whether the app appears in the SEC’s list of recorded or recognized online lending platforms;
- Whether the app appears in any SEC advisory or enforcement action;
- Whether the app’s privacy policy identifies the real lending company;
- Whether the app has a real physical office in the Philippines;
- Whether it asks for excessive permissions, such as access to contacts, photos, messages, or social media accounts.
A mobile app name is not always the same as the corporate name. A legitimate app should disclose the registered company behind it.
VII. Important Documents to Request from the Lending Company
A borrower may ask the lending company to provide copies or details of the following:
- SEC Certificate of Incorporation;
- SEC Certificate of Authority to Operate as a Lending Company;
- Business permit or mayor’s permit;
- Bureau of Internal Revenue registration;
- Official company address;
- Full loan agreement;
- Disclosure statement;
- Amortization schedule;
- Statement of all fees and charges;
- Privacy notice or privacy policy;
- Contact details of the company’s data protection officer, if applicable;
- Official receipts or proof of payments.
A legitimate lending company should not refuse to identify itself. Refusal to disclose basic registration details is a warning sign.
VIII. Loan Disclosure Requirements
A legitimate lending company should clearly disclose the true cost of borrowing.
The borrower should be informed of:
- Principal loan amount;
- Interest rate;
- Effective interest rate, where applicable;
- Processing fees;
- Service fees;
- Penalties;
- Late payment charges;
- Collection fees;
- Total amount payable;
- Due dates;
- Payment channels;
- Consequences of default;
- Collateral, if any;
- Guarantor or co-maker obligations, if any.
A borrower should be wary of lenders that advertise “low interest” but deduct large hidden charges before releasing the loan proceeds.
For example, if a borrower applies for a ₱10,000 loan but receives only ₱7,000 because ₱3,000 was deducted as processing fees, service fees, or advance interest, the real cost of the loan may be much higher than advertised.
IX. Red Flags of an Illegal or Abusive Lending Company
A lending company may be suspicious if it does any of the following:
1. No SEC Certificate of Authority
A lender that cannot show authority from the SEC to operate as a lending company may be illegal.
2. Uses Only a Facebook Page, Viber, Telegram, or Mobile Number
A legitimate lender should have identifiable corporate details, not just a social media account or anonymous phone number.
3. Requires Advance Fees Before Loan Release
Scammers often ask borrowers to pay “processing fees,” “insurance fees,” “clearance fees,” or “release fees” before giving the loan, then disappear.
4. No Written Loan Agreement
A legitimate lender should issue written documents showing the terms of the loan.
5. Extremely High or Unclear Charges
Hidden fees, unexplained deductions, and vague interest computations are warning signs.
6. Harassment or Public Shaming
Threatening to post the borrower’s photo, calling the borrower’s employer, contacting relatives, or sending defamatory messages may violate Philippine laws and regulations.
7. Access to Phone Contacts and Photos
Some online lenders misuse borrower data by accessing contacts, photos, and messages. Excessive data collection may violate privacy rules.
8. Threats of Arrest for Nonpayment
Nonpayment of debt is generally a civil matter. A lender cannot simply have a borrower arrested for inability to pay a loan. Threats of imprisonment are often used to intimidate borrowers.
9. False Representation as Government-Connected
Some lenders falsely claim to be connected with courts, police, barangay officials, or government agencies.
10. Name Mimicking
Illegal lenders may copy the names, logos, or branding of legitimate lending or financing companies.
X. The Role of the Securities and Exchange Commission
The SEC is the primary regulator of lending companies and financing companies in the Philippines.
Its functions include:
- Registering lending companies;
- Issuing Certificates of Authority;
- Monitoring compliance;
- Publishing lists of authorized lending and financing companies;
- Issuing advisories against illegal operators;
- Revoking or suspending authority to operate;
- Penalizing violations;
- Receiving complaints against abusive lenders.
For lending companies, SEC registration and authority are central indicators of legitimacy.
XI. The Role of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
Not all lenders are under the SEC. Some financial institutions are regulated by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, such as banks, quasi-banks, certain credit card issuers, e-money issuers, and other BSP-supervised financial institutions.
A borrower should distinguish between:
- Banks, generally regulated by the BSP;
- Lending companies, generally regulated by the SEC;
- Financing companies, generally regulated by the SEC;
- Pawnshops, money service businesses, and certain financial service providers, which may fall under BSP supervision depending on their activities.
If the lender is a bank or BSP-supervised institution, checking SEC lending-company records alone may not be enough.
XII. The Role of the National Privacy Commission
The National Privacy Commission (NPC) is relevant when a lender misuses personal information.
Borrowers may have privacy concerns if a lending company or app:
- Accesses contact lists without valid consent;
- Sends messages to people who are not parties to the loan;
- Posts borrower information online;
- Shares borrower photos or IDs;
- Uses threats involving personal data;
- Collects excessive data unrelated to the loan;
- Fails to provide a privacy notice;
- Refuses to explain how borrower data is used.
The Data Privacy Act of 2012 protects personal information and imposes obligations on companies that collect and process personal data.
A lending company may be legitimate from a corporate standpoint but still violate data privacy rules through abusive collection methods.
XIII. Debt Collection Rules and Prohibited Practices
Debt collection must be lawful, fair, and professional. A lending company or its collection agents should not use abusive, unfair, or deceptive methods.
Improper practices may include:
- Threatening violence or harm;
- Using obscene or insulting language;
- Calling repeatedly at unreasonable hours;
- Falsely claiming that a borrower will be arrested;
- Pretending to be a lawyer, police officer, court sheriff, or government official;
- Publicly shaming the borrower;
- Contacting third persons who are not guarantors or co-makers;
- Posting the borrower’s name, photo, or debt on social media;
- Sending false legal documents;
- Threatening criminal prosecution without basis.
A borrower’s obligation to pay does not give the lender permission to harass, defame, threaten, or violate privacy rights.
XIV. Can a Borrower Be Imprisoned for Not Paying a Loan?
As a general rule, a person cannot be imprisoned merely for nonpayment of debt. The Philippine Constitution protects against imprisonment for debt.
However, this does not mean a borrower can ignore lawful obligations. The lender may still pursue civil remedies, such as collection suits, foreclosure of collateral, or enforcement of security agreements.
Criminal liability may arise only if there are separate criminal acts, such as fraud, falsification, bouncing checks under applicable laws, or other punishable conduct. Mere inability to pay is different from fraud.
Thus, a lender’s statement that “you will be jailed immediately if you do not pay” is often misleading unless there are specific facts supporting a criminal offense.
XV. Checking the Company Name Carefully
When verifying a lending company, the borrower should check the exact legal name. This is important because businesses often use trade names, app names, brand names, or shortened names.
For example, an app may be called “Fast Peso Loan,” but the actual registered corporation may have a different name. The borrower should ask:
- What is the exact SEC-registered corporate name?
- Is the app listed under that corporation?
- Is the corporation authorized to operate as a lending company?
- Is the Certificate of Authority still valid?
- Does the office address match the SEC records?
- Does the website or app privacy policy identify the same company?
A mismatch between the app name and the registered company is not automatically illegal, but it requires closer checking.
XVI. Check Whether the Certificate of Authority Is Still Valid
A company may have been authorized in the past but later suspended, revoked, cancelled, or otherwise restricted.
The borrower should not rely on old screenshots, old certificates, or old advertisements. The borrower should check whether the company’s authority is currently active.
A lender may become questionable if:
- Its Certificate of Authority was revoked;
- It is included in SEC advisories;
- Its authority was suspended;
- It uses a different name from the authorized company;
- It continues operating despite cancellation;
- It operates an app not disclosed to regulators.
XVII. Verify the Physical Office
A legitimate lending company should have a real office address.
Borrowers should be cautious if:
- The company refuses to provide an address;
- The address is incomplete;
- The address belongs to another company;
- The address is only a virtual office;
- The lender insists on communicating only through chat;
- No one answers the official landline or business email;
- The address on the loan documents differs from the SEC records.
A physical office is not conclusive proof of legitimacy, but its absence is a serious warning sign.
XVIII. Verify the Business Permit
Aside from SEC authority, a lending company should ordinarily have local business permits for its place of business.
A city or municipality may issue a business permit or mayor’s permit allowing the company to operate in that locality. However, a local business permit does not replace SEC authority.
A company cannot rely only on a mayor’s permit to operate as a lending company. It still needs the appropriate SEC authority.
XIX. Verify the Loan Agreement Before Signing
Before signing or accepting loan proceeds, a borrower should read the loan agreement carefully.
Important clauses include:
- Loan amount;
- Net proceeds;
- Interest rate;
- Payment period;
- Due dates;
- Penalty charges;
- Default provisions;
- Acceleration clause;
- Attorney’s fees;
- Venue of court action;
- Collection costs;
- Authorization to process personal information;
- Authority to contact references;
- Collateral provisions;
- Assignment of salary or receivables;
- Automatic debit arrangements;
- Waivers and admissions.
A borrower should be careful with clauses that authorize broad access to personal data, employer contact, public disclosure, or excessive penalties.
XX. Online Lending and Data Privacy Concerns
Online lending apps often require borrowers to upload identification cards, selfies, employment details, bank information, and contact details. Some apps also request access to phone contacts, camera, storage, location, and social media information.
A legitimate lending company must collect only data that is necessary, proportionate, and lawful. It must inform the borrower how the data will be used.
Borrowers should avoid apps that:
- Require access to the entire contact list;
- Access photos or files unrelated to the loan;
- Send messages to contacts after default;
- Shame borrowers through group chats;
- Threaten to post personal data;
- Use borrower photos in collection messages;
- Lack a privacy policy;
- Do not identify the company processing personal data.
Consent should be specific, informed, and freely given. A borrower’s need for money should not be exploited to obtain excessive personal information.
XXI. How to Spot Loan Scams
Some entities are not actual lending companies but scams designed to collect fees or personal data.
Common loan scam patterns include:
1. Advance Fee Scam
The borrower is told to pay a processing fee, insurance fee, registration fee, tax clearance fee, or release fee before receiving the loan. After payment, the scammer disappears.
2. Identity Theft Scam
The borrower is asked to submit IDs, selfies, signatures, or bank details. The scammer then uses the information for fraudulent transactions.
3. Fake Approval Scam
The lender claims the loan is approved but requires repeated payments before release.
4. Impersonation Scam
The scammer uses the name or logo of a legitimate bank, lending company, or government agency.
5. Social Media Loan Scam
The lender operates only through Facebook, Messenger, Telegram, Viber, WhatsApp, or text messages and has no verifiable registration.
A legitimate lender may charge lawful fees, but suspicious upfront payments to personal accounts or e-wallets are strong warning signs.
XXII. What to Check Before Borrowing
Before borrowing, a prudent borrower should verify:
- Is the lender a corporation?
- Is it registered with the SEC?
- Does it have a Certificate of Authority to operate as a lending company?
- Is the authority active?
- Is the online app registered or recognized under the company?
- Is the company listed in any SEC advisory?
- Does the company have a real office?
- Does it issue a written loan agreement?
- Are the interest and charges clearly disclosed?
- Are collection practices lawful?
- Does the app respect data privacy?
- Are payments made to official company accounts?
- Are official receipts issued?
- Does the lender pressure the borrower to pay advance fees?
If the answer to several of these questions is no, the borrower should be cautious.
XXIII. What to Do If the Lending Company Is Not Registered
If a borrower discovers that a lending company is not registered or not authorized, the borrower may consider:
Preserving evidence Save screenshots, loan agreements, messages, receipts, call logs, emails, app pages, payment records, and collection threats.
Checking SEC advisories Determine whether the company or app has already been identified by the SEC.
Filing a complaint with the SEC Unauthorized lending activities may be reported to the SEC.
Filing a complaint with the National Privacy Commission If personal data was misused, the borrower may report privacy violations.
Reporting threats or harassment Serious threats, extortion, cyberlibel, unjust vexation, grave coercion, or other possible offenses may be reported to law enforcement or prosecutors, depending on the facts.
Consulting a lawyer Legal advice may be necessary if the borrower has signed documents, issued checks, provided collateral, or is facing a collection case.
XXIV. Does Borrowing from an Unregistered Lender Mean the Borrower Does Not Have to Pay?
Not necessarily.
The illegality or lack of authority of a lender may expose the lender to penalties and regulatory action. However, whether the borrower must repay the loan depends on the facts, the documents, the law on obligations and contracts, and possible defenses.
A borrower should not assume that a loan automatically disappears because the lender is unregistered. At the same time, an unregistered or abusive lender may not be allowed to enforce illegal charges, excessive interest, unlawful penalties, or improper collection methods.
The borrower should distinguish between:
- The obligation to return money actually received;
- The validity of excessive interest or fees;
- The legality of the lender’s business operations;
- The legality of collection practices;
- Possible regulatory or criminal liability of the lender.
XXV. Interest Rates and Excessive Charges
Philippine law generally allows parties to agree on interest, but interest rates and penalties may be challenged if they are unconscionable, excessive, iniquitous, or contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order, or public policy.
A lending company must clearly disclose charges. Courts may reduce unreasonable interest, penalties, attorney’s fees, or charges depending on the circumstances.
Borrowers should examine not only the stated interest rate but the effective cost of the loan, including:
- Deductions before release;
- Daily interest;
- Short repayment periods;
- Rollover fees;
- Late payment penalties;
- Collection fees;
- Service fees;
- Reborrowing charges.
Small short-term loans can become extremely expensive if charges are hidden or compounded.
XXVI. Harassment by Collectors
If a collector harasses a borrower, the borrower should document everything.
Useful evidence includes:
- Screenshots of messages;
- Record of call dates and times;
- Names or numbers of collectors;
- Threatening voice messages;
- Social media posts;
- Messages sent to relatives, friends, co-workers, or employers;
- Proof that third persons were contacted;
- Loan documents;
- Payment history;
- App permissions or privacy settings;
- Police blotter, if applicable.
Harassment does not erase a valid debt, but it may create separate liability for the lender, collector, or agency involved.
XXVII. Liability of Officers, Directors, and Agents
In some cases, responsibility may not be limited to the corporation. Officers, directors, agents, collectors, or employees may face liability if they personally participate in unlawful acts.
Possible issues include:
- Operating without authority;
- Misrepresentation;
- Fraud;
- Harassment;
- Threats;
- Data privacy violations;
- Unauthorized disclosure of personal information;
- Defamatory statements;
- Unfair debt collection;
- Use of false names or fake legal documents.
Corporate status does not protect individuals from liability for their own wrongful acts.
XXVIII. Lending Company vs. Financing Company
Lending companies and financing companies are related but distinct.
A lending company generally grants loans from its own capital funds or limited funding sources.
A financing company may engage in broader financing activities, such as extending credit facilities, discounting commercial papers, factoring, leasing, and other financing arrangements.
Both may be regulated by the SEC, but the specific authority, permitted activities, and applicable rules may differ. A borrower should verify whether the entity is registered as a lending company or financing company and whether its activities match its authority.
XXIX. Lending Company vs. Private Individual Lender
Not every loan comes from a lending company. Some loans are made by private individuals.
A private person who occasionally lends money may not necessarily be a lending company. However, a person or group habitually engaged in lending to the public as a business may raise regulatory issues.
If the lender advertises loans to the public, maintains agents, uses a business name, charges standardized fees, and repeatedly lends money as a commercial activity, borrowers should be more cautious and verify whether regulatory authority is required.
XXX. Barangay, Police, and Court Threats
Some abusive collectors threaten borrowers by saying they will immediately send the police, barangay officials, or court sheriffs.
Borrowers should understand:
- A barangay may handle certain disputes through barangay conciliation, but it does not automatically jail borrowers.
- Police generally do not collect private debts.
- Court action requires proper legal proceedings.
- A sheriff acts only under lawful court orders.
- A demand letter is not the same as a court judgment.
- A collection agency cannot pretend to be a court.
Borrowers should not ignore legitimate court documents, but they should also not be intimidated by fake legal threats.
XXXI. Demand Letters from Lending Companies
A legitimate lender may send a demand letter if the borrower defaults.
A proper demand letter may state:
- The borrower’s name;
- The loan account;
- The amount due;
- The basis for the amount;
- The deadline for payment;
- The consequences of nonpayment;
- Contact details for settlement.
However, a demand letter should not contain threats of violence, public shaming, false criminal accusations, or abusive language.
Borrowers should verify whether the demand letter comes from the actual company, a legitimate law office, or a collection agency authorized by the lender.
XXXII. Collection Cases
If a borrower fails to pay, a lender may file a civil case for collection of sum of money, depending on the amount and circumstances.
Possible proceedings may include:
- Small claims case;
- Ordinary civil action;
- Foreclosure, if secured by mortgage or collateral;
- Enforcement of a promissory note;
- Action against guarantors or co-makers.
Borrowers should take court papers seriously. Ignoring a real court summons may result in adverse consequences.
However, borrowers should also verify whether documents are genuine. Fake subpoenas, fake warrants, fake court notices, and fake law firm letters may be used by abusive collectors.
XXXIII. Small Claims and Lending Disputes
Some loan collection disputes may fall under small claims procedures, depending on the amount and applicable procedural rules.
Small claims proceedings are designed to be simpler and faster than ordinary civil cases. Lawyers are generally not allowed to appear for parties during the hearing in small claims cases, subject to court rules.
A borrower who receives small claims documents should read them carefully and comply with deadlines.
XXXIV. Guarantors, Co-Makers, and References
Borrowers should distinguish among:
1. Guarantor
A guarantor undertakes to answer for the debt if the borrower fails to pay, subject to the terms of the guarantee.
2. Co-Maker
A co-maker is usually directly liable with the borrower under the loan document.
3. Reference
A reference is usually only a person who can verify the borrower’s identity or contact details. A reference is not automatically liable for the debt unless that person signed as guarantor, surety, or co-maker.
Lending companies should not harass references or falsely claim that they are liable when they did not sign any loan obligation.
XXXV. Employer Contact
Some lenders threaten to contact the borrower’s employer. Whether this is lawful depends on the facts, the loan documents, consent, purpose, and manner of communication.
A lender may have legitimate reasons to verify employment during loan processing, but using employer contact to shame, pressure, or defame the borrower may be improper.
Messages to employers stating that the borrower is a scammer, criminal, or immoral person may expose the lender or collector to liability.
XXXVI. Social Media Shaming
Posting a borrower’s name, face, ID, address, employer, contact details, or debt on social media is highly problematic.
Possible legal issues may include:
- Data privacy violations;
- Defamation;
- Cyberlibel;
- Unjust vexation;
- Grave coercion;
- Harassment;
- Violation of SEC debt collection rules.
A borrower should immediately preserve screenshots, URLs, usernames, timestamps, and names of persons who saw the post.
XXXVII. What Evidence to Keep
Borrowers should maintain a complete file, including:
- Loan agreement;
- Disclosure statement;
- Screenshots of app pages;
- SEC registration details shown by the lender;
- Certificate of Authority shown by the lender;
- Receipts;
- Proof of bank or e-wallet transfers;
- Text messages;
- Emails;
- Chat logs;
- Call logs;
- Names and numbers of collectors;
- Threatening statements;
- Social media posts;
- Privacy policy;
- App permissions;
- Copies of IDs submitted;
- Demand letters;
- Court papers, if any.
Good documentation is essential when filing complaints or defending against improper claims.
XXXVIII. Where to File Complaints
Depending on the issue, complaints may be brought before different agencies or offices.
1. Securities and Exchange Commission
For unauthorized lending, lack of Certificate of Authority, abusive lending company practices, or violations by lending and financing companies.
2. National Privacy Commission
For misuse of personal data, unauthorized contact harvesting, public shaming, or unlawful disclosure of borrower information.
3. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
For complaints involving banks or BSP-supervised financial institutions.
4. Department of Trade and Industry
For some consumer protection issues, depending on the nature of the transaction and entity involved.
5. Philippine National Police or National Bureau of Investigation
For threats, cybercrime, identity theft, online harassment, extortion, or other possible criminal acts.
6. Prosecutor’s Office
For filing criminal complaints where facts support a criminal offense.
7. Courts
For civil claims, injunctions, damages, collection disputes, or defense against lawsuits.
XXXIX. Common Borrower Mistakes
Borrowers often make the following mistakes:
- Borrowing without checking SEC authority;
- Trusting a lender based only on social media ads;
- Paying advance fees to personal accounts;
- Signing blank documents;
- Sending IDs and selfies to unknown lenders;
- Allowing app permissions without reading them;
- Ignoring the effective interest rate;
- Failing to save evidence;
- Believing all threats of arrest;
- Ignoring real court documents;
- Assuming illegal collection means the debt is automatically cancelled;
- Paying collectors without official receipts;
- Borrowing from multiple apps to pay previous apps.
Careful verification before borrowing prevents many legal and financial problems.
XL. Practical Verification Checklist
Before borrowing from a lending company, use this checklist:
- Exact name of lender identified;
- Corporate name confirmed;
- SEC registration number obtained;
- Certificate of Authority number obtained;
- Authority confirmed as active;
- App or platform connected to registered company;
- No SEC advisory against the lender;
- Office address verified;
- Business permit available;
- Loan agreement provided;
- Disclosure statement provided;
- Interest and charges clear;
- Net proceeds clear;
- Due dates clear;
- Payment channels official;
- No advance fee to personal accounts;
- Privacy policy available;
- App permissions reasonable;
- Collection policy lawful;
- Official receipts issued.
If the lender fails several items on this checklist, the borrower should treat the transaction as risky.
XLI. Legal Consequences for Illegal Lending Operations
A lending company that operates without authority may face legal consequences, including:
- SEC enforcement action;
- Revocation or suspension of registration or authority;
- Administrative fines;
- Cease-and-desist orders;
- Criminal prosecution where applicable;
- Liability of officers or responsible persons;
- Complaints for data privacy violations;
- Civil liability for damages;
- Other penalties under applicable laws and regulations.
The exact consequence depends on the violation, evidence, and applicable law.
XLII. Borrower Rights
Borrowers have rights even when they owe money.
These include the right to:
- Know the true identity of the lender;
- Receive clear loan terms;
- Be informed of interest, fees, and penalties;
- Receive receipts for payments;
- Be treated fairly during collection;
- Be free from threats and harassment;
- Have personal data protected;
- Challenge excessive charges;
- Defend against improper lawsuits;
- File complaints with regulators;
- Seek legal remedies for abuse.
Debt does not erase a borrower’s legal protections.
XLIII. Borrower Responsibilities
Borrowers also have responsibilities.
These include:
- Reading loan documents before signing;
- Providing truthful information;
- Paying valid obligations;
- Keeping records of payments;
- Communicating through proper channels;
- Avoiding fraudulent loan applications;
- Not issuing checks without sufficient funds;
- Not using fake IDs or false employment information;
- Not ignoring legitimate court notices.
A borrower’s rights and responsibilities exist together.
XLIV. Special Warning on “Too Easy” Loans
A loan that is approved instantly without proper identification, documentation, or review may be risky. Some illegal lenders rely on speed and urgency to trap borrowers into high fees, short repayment periods, and abusive collection.
Warning signs include:
- “Guaranteed approval” regardless of credit history;
- No documents required except ID and contacts;
- Release only after advance fee;
- Very short payment period;
- Hidden deductions;
- No official agreement;
- No company name;
- No physical office;
- Pressure to decide immediately.
Borrowers should be especially careful with emergency loans advertised online.
XLV. Conclusion
Checking whether a lending company is registered and legitimate in the Philippines requires more than looking at advertisements, social media pages, or app store listings. The borrower should verify the company’s SEC registration, confirm its Certificate of Authority to operate as a lending company, check whether its online platform is properly connected to the registered entity, review the loan documents, examine the true cost of borrowing, and watch for abusive collection or privacy violations.
A legitimate lending company should be transparent, properly registered, duly authorized, and compliant with Philippine laws. It should disclose the full cost of the loan, issue proper documents and receipts, respect borrower privacy, and collect debts lawfully.
The safest approach is to verify first, borrow second.