I. Introduction
The rise of online lending applications in the Philippines has made credit more accessible to borrowers who may not qualify for traditional bank loans. Through mobile apps, a borrower can apply for a loan, submit identity documents, receive approval, and obtain funds without visiting a physical branch.
However, this convenience has also created serious legal and consumer protection concerns. Many borrowers have reported abusive collection practices, unauthorized access to phone contacts, public shaming, threats, excessive interest, hidden charges, misuse of personal data, and lending operations that appear to be unregistered or illegal.
In the Philippine legal context, reporting a lending app may involve several government agencies, depending on the violation. The most common agencies are the Securities and Exchange Commission, the National Privacy Commission, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the Department of Trade and Industry, the Philippine National Police, the National Bureau of Investigation, and local prosecution offices.
This article explains the legal basis, possible violations, agencies involved, evidence to prepare, complaint procedures, and practical considerations when reporting a lending app in the Philippines.
II. What Is a Lending App?
A lending app is a mobile or web-based platform that offers loans to borrowers through digital means. It may be operated by a financing company, lending company, bank, quasi-bank, cooperative, or other credit provider.
In the Philippines, not every entity that offers loans online is automatically lawful. The legality of a lending app depends on several factors, including whether the operator is properly registered, whether it has authority to lend, whether it follows consumer protection rules, and whether it respects data privacy laws.
A lending app may be lawful if it is operated by an entity authorized under Philippine law. It may become unlawful or abusive if it engages in prohibited practices, such as harassment, threats, data misuse, unfair collection, misleading advertising, or lending without proper registration.
III. Legal Framework Governing Lending Apps in the Philippines
Several laws may apply to lending apps, depending on the facts.
1. Lending Company Regulation Act of 2007
Republic Act No. 9474, or the Lending Company Regulation Act of 2007, regulates lending companies in the Philippines.
A lending company must generally be organized as a corporation and must be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Lending companies are not allowed to operate without the required authority.
A lending app operated by an unregistered or unauthorized lending company may be reported to the SEC.
Common violations may include:
- Operating as a lending company without SEC registration;
- Using a mobile app or online platform without proper disclosure of the legal entity behind it;
- Misrepresenting its authority to lend;
- Charging unclear, excessive, or undisclosed fees;
- Refusing to provide loan documents or terms;
- Engaging in abusive collection practices.
2. Financing Company Act
Republic Act No. 8556, or the Financing Company Act, may apply when the operator is a financing company rather than a simple lending company.
Financing companies are also regulated by the SEC. If the app is operated by a financing company, the borrower may verify whether the company has the proper Certificate of Authority.
3. Financial Products and Services Consumer Protection Act
Republic Act No. 11765, or the Financial Products and Services Consumer Protection Act, strengthens protection for consumers of financial products and services.
Under this law, financial service providers are expected to observe transparency, fair treatment, responsible pricing, privacy protection, and proper handling of complaints.
Lending apps may violate consumer protection standards when they use deceptive loan terms, unfair fees, misleading advertisements, oppressive collection tactics, or abusive treatment of borrowers.
4. Data Privacy Act of 2012
Republic Act No. 10173, or the Data Privacy Act of 2012, is highly relevant to lending apps.
Many online lending complaints involve unauthorized access to a borrower’s phone contacts, photos, messages, call logs, employer information, or social media accounts. The app may also send messages to the borrower’s relatives, friends, co-workers, or employer to shame or pressure the borrower.
Personal information must be collected and processed lawfully, fairly, and only for legitimate purposes. A lending app cannot freely harvest and expose personal data simply because the borrower installed the app or accepted its terms.
Possible data privacy violations include:
- Collecting excessive personal data;
- Accessing contact lists without valid consent;
- Using contacts for harassment or public shaming;
- Disclosing debt information to third persons;
- Posting personal information online;
- Sending threatening or defamatory messages to contacts;
- Retaining personal data longer than necessary;
- Refusing to delete or correct personal data when legally required;
- Failing to provide a privacy notice;
- Using deceptive consent mechanisms.
Complaints involving misuse of personal data are commonly filed with the National Privacy Commission.
5. Revised Penal Code
Certain conduct by lending apps or their collectors may amount to criminal offenses under the Revised Penal Code.
Depending on the facts, possible offenses may include:
- Grave threats, if the collector threatens to inflict harm;
- Light threats, if the threat is less severe but still punishable;
- Grave coercion, if the borrower is forced to do something against their will through violence, threats, or intimidation;
- Unjust vexation, if the acts cause annoyance, distress, or harassment without lawful justification;
- Slander by deed, depending on humiliating conduct;
- Libel or cyberlibel, if defamatory statements are made in writing, online, or through electronic means;
- Intriguing against honor, in limited circumstances;
- Identity-related offenses, if false accounts, impersonation, or fraudulent use of identity is involved.
Criminal complaints may be brought to the Philippine National Police, the National Bureau of Investigation, or the Office of the City or Provincial Prosecutor.
6. Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012
Republic Act No. 10175, or the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, may apply when threats, harassment, libel, identity misuse, unauthorized access, or data-related offenses are committed through electronic means.
For lending apps, cybercrime issues may arise from:
- Threatening messages sent by SMS, chat apps, email, or social media;
- Online public shaming;
- Posting a borrower’s photo or personal details online;
- Creating fake accounts to harass the borrower or contacts;
- Sending defamatory messages to contacts;
- Unauthorized access to devices, accounts, or data;
- Use of electronic systems to commit fraud or coercion.
Cybercrime-related complaints may be reported to the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or the NBI Cybercrime Division.
7. Consumer Act and General Consumer Protection Principles
Although lending is a financial service and may be regulated by specialized agencies, consumer protection principles may still be relevant where there are deceptive practices, misleading advertisements, unfair terms, or abusive dealings.
The Department of Trade and Industry may be relevant for general consumer complaints, but lending companies and financing companies are primarily under the jurisdiction of the SEC, while banks and certain financial institutions are under the BSP.
8. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Regulations
If the lending app is operated by a bank, digital bank, e-money issuer, financing institution supervised by the BSP, or another BSP-supervised financial institution, the complaint may be filed with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.
The BSP may handle complaints involving BSP-supervised entities, including issues related to digital financial services, consumer protection, unauthorized transactions, abusive conduct, failure to disclose fees, or improper handling of complaints.
IV. Common Grounds for Reporting a Lending App
A lending app may be reported for several reasons. The correct agency depends on the nature of the complaint.
1. The Lending App Is Not Registered or Authorized
A borrower may report a lending app if it appears to be operating without proper registration or authority.
Warning signs include:
- No company name disclosed;
- No SEC registration number;
- No Certificate of Authority number;
- No office address;
- No official email address;
- No written loan agreement;
- Use of constantly changing app names;
- Use of personal bank accounts or e-wallet accounts for repayment;
- Refusal to disclose the operator’s legal identity;
- Disappearance from app stores after complaints.
Unauthorized lending operations should generally be reported to the SEC.
2. Harassment and Abusive Collection Practices
Many complaints against lending apps involve collection harassment. Examples include:
- Repeated calls at unreasonable hours;
- Threatening arrest or imprisonment;
- Threatening physical harm;
- Threatening to contact the borrower’s employer;
- Threatening to post the borrower’s photo online;
- Calling the borrower’s relatives, friends, or co-workers;
- Sending insulting or degrading messages;
- Using obscene or abusive language;
- Pretending to be a lawyer, police officer, prosecutor, court employee, or government official;
- Claiming that a warrant of arrest has been issued when none exists;
- Threatening criminal charges for mere nonpayment of debt;
- Sending fake subpoenas, fake court orders, or fake police notices;
- Publicly shaming the borrower;
- Contacting minors, elderly relatives, or unrelated third persons.
These acts may be reported to the SEC, NPC, PNP, NBI, or prosecutor’s office depending on the facts.
3. Unauthorized Access to Contacts or Personal Data
A major issue with online lending apps is access to a borrower’s phone contacts. Some apps require permission to access contacts, photos, media, location, messages, or device information.
Even if a borrower clicked “allow,” the app’s collection and use of data must still comply with the Data Privacy Act. Consent must be informed, specific, freely given, and limited to legitimate purposes.
A lending app may be reported to the NPC when it:
- Accesses the borrower’s contacts without proper consent;
- Sends messages to contacts about the borrower’s debt;
- Discloses the loan to third persons;
- Uses shame, threats, or reputational harm to collect;
- Stores data without a lawful purpose;
- Shares data with unknown third parties;
- Uses permissions that are excessive for a lending transaction.
4. Public Shaming
Public shaming is one of the most serious forms of abusive collection. It may include:
- Posting the borrower’s photo on social media;
- Labeling the borrower as a scammer, criminal, thief, or fraudster;
- Sending edited photos or defamatory captions;
- Creating group chats with the borrower’s contacts;
- Posting personal information in public pages;
- Threatening to expose the debt publicly.
Public shaming may involve data privacy violations, cyberlibel, unjust vexation, grave coercion, or other offenses.
5. Excessive Interest, Hidden Charges, or Misleading Loan Terms
Borrowers may report a lending app when the app fails to clearly disclose the actual cost of the loan.
Problematic practices include:
- Advertising “low interest” but deducting large service fees upfront;
- Giving a lower amount than the approved loan but requiring repayment of the full principal;
- Imposing very short repayment periods without proper disclosure;
- Charging rollover fees or extension fees that are unclear;
- Imposing penalties disproportionate to the loan amount;
- Hiding the effective interest rate;
- Changing terms after disbursement;
- Refusing to issue a statement of account.
The SEC or BSP may be the proper agency depending on the entity involved.
6. Threats of Arrest for Nonpayment of Debt
As a general rule, nonpayment of a civil debt is not, by itself, a criminal offense. A lender may file a civil action to collect a debt, but it cannot automatically cause the borrower’s arrest merely because of nonpayment.
A lending app or collector may be acting abusively if it tells the borrower:
- “You will be arrested today”;
- “Police are coming to your house”;
- “A warrant has already been issued”;
- “You will be jailed if you do not pay now”;
- “We already filed a criminal case and you must settle immediately.”
There are situations where fraud, falsification, or bouncing checks may create criminal liability, but mere inability to pay a loan is generally a civil matter. False threats of arrest may be reported as harassment, threats, coercion, or unfair collection practice.
7. Impersonation of Government Authorities
Some collectors pretend to be police officers, prosecutors, court sheriffs, lawyers, or government personnel.
This may be reported when the collector:
- Uses titles such as “Atty.” without proof;
- Sends fake court summons;
- Sends fake subpoenas;
- Uses logos of courts, police, or government agencies;
- Pretends to be from the barangay, police, NBI, or prosecutor’s office;
- Claims to have authority to arrest the borrower;
- Sends fabricated legal documents.
Such conduct may involve criminal, administrative, or regulatory violations.
8. Unauthorized Debits or Unclear Payment Channels
Some complaints involve unauthorized deductions, payment errors, or suspicious repayment channels.
Warning signs include:
- Payment requested through personal accounts;
- Different collector accounts for each transaction;
- No official receipt;
- Refusal to acknowledge payment;
- Continued harassment after payment;
- Unauthorized debit from an e-wallet or bank account;
- Loan marked unpaid despite proof of payment.
Depending on the facts, complaints may be filed with the SEC, BSP, bank/e-wallet provider, PNP, NBI, or prosecutor.
V. Which Government Agency Should You Report To?
1. Securities and Exchange Commission
The SEC is usually the main agency for complaints against lending companies and financing companies.
Report to the SEC when the issue involves:
- Unregistered lending company;
- Lending app without authority to operate;
- Abusive debt collection by lending or financing companies;
- Hidden charges;
- Unfair or deceptive lending terms;
- Failure to disclose loan terms;
- Misrepresentation by a lending company;
- Violation of SEC rules on lending and financing companies.
The SEC may issue advisories, revoke or suspend authority, impose penalties, or take enforcement action against erring companies.
2. National Privacy Commission
The NPC is the proper agency for violations involving personal data.
Report to the NPC when the issue involves:
- Unauthorized access to contacts;
- Disclosure of debt to third persons;
- Public shaming;
- Harassing messages sent to contacts;
- Unauthorized collection of photos, IDs, or phone data;
- Refusal to delete or correct personal information;
- Excessive app permissions;
- Lack of privacy notice;
- Data sharing with unknown parties;
- Data breach or exposure of personal information.
The NPC may investigate, order corrective action, and impose penalties in appropriate cases.
3. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
The BSP is relevant if the lending app is operated by a BSP-supervised financial institution.
Report to the BSP when the app is connected to:
- A bank;
- A digital bank;
- An e-money issuer;
- A remittance or transfer company supervised by the BSP;
- Other BSP-supervised entities.
The BSP may address consumer protection issues involving supervised financial institutions.
4. Philippine National Police Anti-Cybercrime Group
The PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group may handle cyber-related offenses.
Report to the PNP ACG when there are:
- Online threats;
- Cyberlibel;
- Fake online posts;
- Identity misuse;
- Harassment through electronic means;
- Unauthorized access;
- Use of electronic systems to intimidate or defame.
5. National Bureau of Investigation Cybercrime Division
The NBI Cybercrime Division may also handle cybercrime-related complaints.
Report to the NBI when the facts involve:
- Organized online harassment;
- Identity theft or impersonation;
- Cyberlibel;
- Unauthorized access;
- Large-scale digital lending scams;
- Cross-platform online abuse.
6. Office of the Prosecutor
A borrower may file a criminal complaint before the Office of the City or Provincial Prosecutor when there is sufficient evidence of a criminal offense.
This may be appropriate for:
- Grave threats;
- Grave coercion;
- Cyberlibel;
- Libel;
- Unjust vexation;
- Identity-related offenses;
- Falsification;
- Fraud;
- Other penal violations.
7. Barangay
For some disputes, especially those involving individuals in the same city or municipality, barangay conciliation may be required before filing certain cases in court. However, many lending app complaints involve corporations, unknown collectors, online actors, or parties in different locations, making barangay conciliation impractical or inapplicable.
The barangay may still be useful if local harassment, personal visits, or neighborhood disturbance occurs.
8. Department of Trade and Industry
The DTI may be relevant for general consumer issues, misleading advertising, or unfair trade practices, but lending and financing companies are usually more directly handled by the SEC, while banks and BSP-supervised entities are handled by the BSP.
VI. Evidence to Prepare Before Filing a Complaint
A strong complaint depends on clear evidence. Borrowers should preserve all records before deleting the app, changing phones, or blocking collectors.
Important evidence includes:
1. App Information
Save the following:
- Name of the lending app;
- Screenshots of the app page from the app store;
- Developer name;
- App package name, if visible;
- Website;
- Email address;
- Phone numbers used;
- Company name stated in the app;
- SEC registration number, if any;
- Certificate of Authority number, if any;
- Privacy policy;
- Terms and conditions.
2. Loan Documents and Transaction Records
Keep copies of:
- Loan agreement;
- Promissory note;
- Disclosure statement;
- Screenshots of approved amount;
- Amount actually received;
- Fees deducted;
- Due date;
- Interest rate;
- Penalties;
- Repayment schedule;
- Statement of account;
- Payment instructions;
- Proof of disbursement;
- Proof of payment;
- Official receipts or acknowledgments.
3. Harassment Evidence
Preserve:
- SMS messages;
- Chat messages;
- Call logs;
- Voice recordings, where lawfully obtained;
- Emails;
- Social media posts;
- Group chat messages;
- Threatening messages;
- Messages sent to contacts;
- Screenshots from relatives, friends, co-workers, or employers;
- Names and numbers of collectors;
- Dates and times of calls or messages.
4. Data Privacy Evidence
Gather:
- Screenshots of app permissions;
- Privacy policy;
- Consent screens;
- Proof that contacts were messaged;
- Copies of messages sent to third persons;
- Screenshots of public posts;
- Evidence that debt information was disclosed;
- Evidence that photos or IDs were misused;
- Requests for deletion or correction of data;
- The company’s response or refusal.
5. Identity and Personal Records
Prepare:
- Valid government ID;
- Your contact information;
- Address;
- Affidavit or written complaint;
- Authorization letter if someone files on your behalf;
- Supporting statements from witnesses.
VII. How to Draft the Complaint
A complaint should be clear, factual, and supported by documents. Avoid exaggeration. State the events in chronological order.
A useful complaint structure is:
1. Heading
State the agency where the complaint is being filed.
Example:
Complaint Against [Name of Lending App / Company] for Abusive Collection Practices, Unauthorized Use of Personal Data, and Other Violations
2. Complainant Information
Include:
- Full name;
- Address;
- Email address;
- Mobile number;
- Government ID details, if required.
3. Respondent Information
Include all known details:
- Lending app name;
- Company name;
- App developer;
- Address;
- Website;
- Email address;
- Phone numbers;
- Collector names;
- Bank or e-wallet accounts used;
- SEC registration details, if known.
4. Facts of the Case
Narrate what happened.
Example:
“On [date], I downloaded the lending app known as [app name]. I applied for a loan of ₱. The app approved ₱ but only ₱____ was credited to my account because ₱____ was deducted as fees. The due date was [date]. Before and after the due date, I received repeated calls and messages from collectors using the numbers listed in Annexes __. The collectors threatened to contact my employer and later sent messages to my relatives and co-workers disclosing my alleged debt.”
5. Violations
Identify the complained acts.
Examples:
- Unauthorized access and use of contacts;
- Disclosure of personal information;
- Abusive collection practices;
- Threats and intimidation;
- Misleading loan terms;
- Excessive or hidden charges;
- Operation without authority;
- Cyber harassment;
- Defamation or public shaming.
6. Reliefs Requested
Ask the agency to act.
Possible requests include:
- Investigate the lending app;
- Order the app to stop contacting third persons;
- Order deletion or correction of unlawfully processed personal data;
- Penalize the company or collectors;
- Suspend or revoke authority to operate;
- Require accounting of the loan;
- Require proper disclosure of charges;
- Refer the matter for criminal investigation;
- Issue a cease-and-desist order, where appropriate;
- Provide other reliefs allowed by law.
7. Attachments
Label each attachment clearly.
Example:
- Annex A – Screenshot of the lending app;
- Annex B – Loan approval screenshot;
- Annex C – Proof of disbursement;
- Annex D – Proof of payment;
- Annex E – Threatening messages;
- Annex F – Messages sent to contacts;
- Annex G – App permissions;
- Annex H – Privacy policy;
- Annex I – Call logs;
- Annex J – Identification document.
VIII. Sample Complaint Format
Republic of the Philippines [Name of Agency] [Office Address]
Re: Complaint Against [Name of Lending App / Company]
I, [full name], of legal age, Filipino, and residing at [address], respectfully file this complaint against [name of lending app/company], including its officers, agents, collectors, and representatives, for abusive collection practices, unauthorized use of personal data, harassment, and other violations of Philippine law.
On [date], I downloaded and used the lending application known as [app name]. The app represented itself as a provider of online loans. I applied for a loan in the amount of ₱[amount]. The app approved the loan and released ₱[amount received] to my [bank/e-wallet account]. However, the app required repayment of ₱[amount payable] by [due date], despite deductions and charges that were not clearly explained.
Beginning [date], I received repeated calls and messages from persons claiming to collect on behalf of the lending app. These persons used threatening, insulting, and intimidating language. They also threatened to contact my relatives, employer, friends, and other persons in my phone contacts.
On [date], several of my contacts informed me that they received messages about my alleged debt. These messages disclosed my personal information and loan information without my consent. Some messages described me in humiliating and defamatory terms. Copies of these messages are attached as annexes.
I believe that the acts of the lending app and its collectors violate Philippine laws and regulations on lending, consumer protection, debt collection, data privacy, and cybercrime. I respectfully request this Honorable Office to investigate the matter, require the respondent to answer, order the cessation of unlawful collection and data processing activities, impose appropriate penalties, and grant such other reliefs as may be just and proper.
Attached are copies of relevant screenshots, messages, call logs, proof of loan, proof of payment, app information, and other evidence.
Respectfully submitted.
[Name] [Signature] [Date] [Contact Information]
IX. Reporting to the SEC
The SEC is the principal regulator for lending companies and financing companies.
Before filing, it is useful to check whether the lending company appears in SEC records, whether it has a Certificate of Authority, and whether the app or company has been subject to advisories or enforcement actions.
A complaint to the SEC should focus on:
- The identity of the lending app;
- Whether it is registered;
- Whether it has authority to operate as a lending or financing company;
- Its loan terms;
- Its collection practices;
- Its advertisements and representations;
- Proof of harassment or abuse;
- Proof of hidden charges or unfair fees.
The SEC may be especially appropriate where the app appears to be an illegal online lender or where the collection practices violate rules applicable to lending and financing companies.
X. Reporting to the National Privacy Commission
The NPC is the central agency for data privacy complaints.
A borrower should consider filing with the NPC when the lending app collects, uses, shares, or discloses personal data unlawfully.
Important facts to include in an NPC complaint are:
- What personal data was collected;
- How the app collected the data;
- Whether the app accessed phone contacts;
- Whether the borrower gave consent;
- Whether consent was valid and informed;
- Whether the app disclosed debt information to third persons;
- Whether the app posted or shared personal information;
- Whether the borrower requested deletion or correction;
- How the company responded;
- What harm resulted.
The NPC may require proof that the complainant attempted to raise the privacy concern with the company first, depending on the procedure applicable at the time. A borrower may therefore consider sending a written privacy complaint or request to the lending company before or alongside filing with the NPC.
XI. Reporting to PNP or NBI
A borrower should report to law enforcement when there are threats, cyber harassment, identity misuse, fake documents, extortion, or defamatory online posts.
The complaint should include:
- Screenshots of threats;
- Links to online posts;
- URLs of profiles or pages;
- Sender phone numbers;
- Email headers, if available;
- Names used by collectors;
- Fake legal documents;
- Audio recordings, where lawfully obtained;
- Witness statements;
- Timeline of events.
For cybercrime complaints, preserve the original electronic evidence as much as possible. Do not merely submit edited screenshots. Keep the original messages on the device and record the date, time, sender number, platform, and URL.
XII. Reporting to the BSP
If the app is operated by a BSP-supervised institution, the complaint may be submitted to the BSP’s consumer assistance mechanism.
A complaint to the BSP should include:
- Name of the financial institution;
- Account or transaction reference numbers;
- Loan details;
- Proof of payment;
- Communications with the institution;
- Description of the issue;
- Desired resolution.
The BSP is most relevant when the lender is a bank, digital bank, e-money issuer, or other BSP-supervised entity.
XIII. Reporting to App Stores and Platforms
Apart from government complaints, borrowers may report abusive lending apps to app stores and online platforms.
Reports may be submitted to:
- Google Play Store;
- Apple App Store;
- Social media platforms;
- Messaging platforms;
- Website hosts;
- Payment platforms;
- E-wallet providers;
- Banks used for repayment.
This may help remove abusive apps, suspend accounts, or preserve evidence. However, platform reporting does not replace filing with Philippine authorities.
XIV. Can a Lending App Contact Your Contacts?
Generally, a lender may contact a borrower through legitimate contact details provided for the loan. However, contacting third persons is legally sensitive.
A lending app should not disclose the borrower’s debt to unrelated persons. Debt information is personal information. Publicly or privately telling relatives, friends, employers, or co-workers that a person owes money may violate privacy rights and may also be defamatory or harassing depending on the language used.
Even if the borrower allowed access to contacts, that does not automatically authorize harassment, shaming, or disclosure of debt. Consent must be limited, specific, and lawful. A broad app permission does not justify abusive collection.
XV. Can a Lending App Threaten Legal Action?
A lender may pursue lawful remedies to collect a valid debt. This may include sending demand letters, negotiating payment, or filing a civil case.
However, a lender or collector may not use false, misleading, or abusive threats. It is improper to claim that the borrower will be arrested for mere nonpayment of debt. It is also improper to send fake warrants, fake subpoenas, or fake court documents.
A legitimate legal demand should identify the creditor, amount owed, basis of the claim, and lawful remedy. It should not use threats, insults, or public humiliation.
XVI. Can You Be Imprisoned for Not Paying a Lending App?
As a general rule, no person may be imprisoned merely for nonpayment of a debt. Debt collection is generally a civil matter.
However, a borrower may face legal consequences if there are separate criminal acts, such as fraud, falsification, use of fake identity documents, issuance of bouncing checks, or other punishable conduct. The distinction is important: inability to pay is different from obtaining money through criminal fraud.
Collectors often exploit this confusion by threatening jail to force payment. Such threats should be documented and reported.
XVII. What to Do Immediately After Harassment Begins
A borrower experiencing harassment should take the following steps:
- Stop engaging emotionally with collectors;
- Do not admit to false accusations;
- Preserve all messages and call logs;
- Take screenshots showing phone numbers, dates, and times;
- Ask contacts to forward screenshots of messages they received;
- Record the app name, company name, and payment accounts;
- Secure online accounts and change passwords;
- Review and revoke unnecessary app permissions;
- Uninstall the app only after preserving evidence;
- Report the app to the relevant agency;
- Consider replacing compromised contact numbers if harassment is severe;
- Inform employer, family, or contacts that abusive messages may be sent without consent.
XVIII. Should You Still Pay the Loan?
Reporting a lending app does not automatically erase a valid debt. A borrower may still be legally obligated to pay a legitimate loan.
However, the borrower has the right to dispute:
- Illegal charges;
- Undisclosed fees;
- Excessive penalties;
- Incorrect balances;
- Payments not credited;
- Fraudulent or unauthorized loans;
- Harassment and privacy violations.
Where there is a genuine debt, the borrower may request a written statement of account and pay only through official channels. Payment should be documented. Borrowers should avoid sending money to personal accounts unless the creditor clearly proves that the account is authorized.
XIX. Civil, Criminal, Administrative, and Regulatory Remedies
A lending app complaint may involve different types of remedies.
1. Administrative Remedies
Administrative complaints are filed with agencies such as the SEC, NPC, BSP, or DTI. These may result in warnings, fines, suspension, revocation, takedown requests, compliance orders, or other regulatory action.
2. Criminal Remedies
Criminal complaints may be filed when collectors commit threats, coercion, cyberlibel, identity misuse, falsification, or other offenses. These are handled by law enforcement and prosecutors.
3. Civil Remedies
A borrower may consider civil action for damages when the conduct caused injury, humiliation, reputational harm, emotional distress, business loss, or other compensable damage.
Possible civil claims may arise from abuse of rights, invasion of privacy, defamation, breach of contract, or quasi-delict, depending on the facts.
4. Data Privacy Remedies
Data privacy complaints may lead to orders requiring the company to stop unlawful processing, delete data, correct records, improve privacy practices, or answer for unauthorized disclosure.
XX. Practical Tips for Borrowers
1. Do Not Delete Evidence
Deleting the app, messages, or call logs may make the complaint harder to prove. Back up screenshots and original messages.
2. Screenshot Everything Clearly
Screenshots should show:
- Sender;
- Date;
- Time;
- Full message;
- App or platform used;
- Phone number or account name.
3. Ask Contacts for Evidence
If collectors messaged your contacts, ask those contacts to send screenshots. These are important for privacy and harassment complaints.
4. Keep Proof of Payment
Always keep:
- Receipts;
- Bank transfer confirmations;
- E-wallet transaction IDs;
- Screenshots of payment acknowledgment;
- Official receipts, if provided.
5. Communicate in Writing
Written communication is easier to prove than phone conversations. Ask the lender to communicate by email or SMS.
6. Do Not Be Intimidated by Fake Legal Documents
A real court document will usually come from a court or authorized process server, not from random collectors through threatening chat messages. Fake subpoenas, fake warrants, and fake legal notices should be preserved and reported.
7. Report Quickly
Delay may make it harder to trace accounts, preserve online posts, or stop continuing harassment.
8. Protect Personal Data
After using a suspicious lending app:
- Revoke app permissions;
- Change passwords;
- Enable two-factor authentication;
- Monitor e-wallet and bank accounts;
- Warn contacts about possible harassment;
- Avoid installing similar apps from unknown developers.
XXI. Possible Defenses of Lending Apps and How to Address Them
Lending apps may raise several defenses.
1. “The Borrower Consented”
Consent is not a blanket permission to harass or shame. Even if the borrower agreed to terms and conditions, data processing must still be lawful, fair, transparent, proportionate, and limited to legitimate purposes.
2. “The Borrower Failed to Pay”
Nonpayment does not justify threats, public shaming, unauthorized data disclosure, or illegal collection tactics. A creditor has lawful remedies, but harassment is not one of them.
3. “The Contacts Were Used for Verification”
Verification is different from disclosing debt or pressuring third persons. Contacting a reference may be permissible in limited circumstances if properly disclosed and consented to, but mass messaging contacts is highly questionable.
4. “The Collector Acted Independently”
A lending company may still be accountable for the acts of its agents, collectors, service providers, or outsourced collection partners, especially when those acts were done in connection with loan collection.
5. “The App Is Only a Platform”
An app operator may claim it is merely a platform connecting borrowers and lenders. This does not automatically remove liability. The actual role of the operator, its control over the lending process, its data processing activities, and its collection practices must be examined.
XXII. Special Issues Involving Online Lending Apps
1. Multiple App Names, Same Operator
Some operators use different app names under one company, or different companies under one controlling group. Complaints should list all known app names, developer names, phone numbers, and payment channels.
2. Foreign-Based Operators
Some apps may be operated by persons outside the Philippines or may conceal their location. This complicates enforcement but does not prevent reporting. Philippine agencies may still act against local representatives, app availability, payment channels, data processing, or local collection activities.
3. Use of Personal E-Wallet Accounts
Collectors may ask borrowers to pay through personal e-wallet accounts. This creates risk because payments may not be credited. Borrowers should demand official payment channels and keep proof.
4. Reborrowing and Loan Traps
Some apps encourage borrowers to take new loans to pay old loans. This may lead to a debt cycle. Borrowers should carefully document each loan and avoid accepting new loans under unclear terms.
5. Threats Against Employment
Collectors sometimes contact employers or threaten to send messages to human resources. Disclosure of debt to an employer may violate privacy rights and may cause reputational or employment harm. Such acts should be documented.
6. Harassment of Family Members
Collectors may contact spouses, parents, siblings, children, or distant relatives. Unless these persons are co-borrowers, guarantors, or authorized references under lawful circumstances, disclosure and harassment may be improper.
XXIII. Sample Evidence Checklist
Before filing, prepare a folder containing:
- Government ID of complainant;
- Written complaint or affidavit;
- Name of lending app;
- App screenshots;
- Company name and address, if known;
- SEC registration details, if shown;
- Loan agreement;
- Disclosure statement;
- Proof of amount received;
- Proof of deductions;
- Payment receipts;
- Statement of account;
- Demand messages;
- Threatening messages;
- Call logs;
- Messages sent to contacts;
- Contact witnesses’ screenshots;
- Public posts or links;
- App permissions screenshots;
- Privacy policy screenshots;
- Terms and conditions;
- Fake legal documents, if any;
- Collector names and numbers;
- Bank or e-wallet accounts used;
- Timeline of events.
XXIV. Model Timeline of Facts
A clear timeline helps agencies understand the complaint.
Example:
- March 1, 2026 – Downloaded the lending app.
- March 1, 2026 – Applied for a ₱5,000 loan.
- March 1, 2026 – Received only ₱3,500 after deductions.
- March 7, 2026 – Due date stated by app.
- March 6, 2026 – Collector began calling repeatedly.
- March 7, 2026 – Collector threatened to contact employer.
- March 8, 2026 – Relatives received messages about the debt.
- March 8, 2026 – Collector sent insulting messages.
- March 9, 2026 – Borrower paid ₱2,000 through e-wallet.
- March 10, 2026 – Harassment continued despite payment.
- March 11, 2026 – Public post appeared on social media.
- March 12, 2026 – Complaint prepared.
XXV. Possible Outcomes of a Complaint
The outcome depends on the agency, evidence, and seriousness of the violation.
Possible outcomes include:
- The app is investigated;
- The company is ordered to respond;
- The company is directed to stop abusive collection;
- The app is included in regulatory advisories;
- The company’s authority is suspended or revoked;
- Administrative fines are imposed;
- A data privacy order is issued;
- The matter is referred for criminal investigation;
- Collectors are identified;
- Online posts are taken down;
- The lender corrects the account;
- The parties enter settlement;
- A criminal complaint proceeds to preliminary investigation;
- A civil action for damages is filed.
Not every complaint results in immediate cancellation of the loan or arrest of collectors. The process may require evidence, affidavits, hearings, and agency evaluation.
XXVI. Borrower’s Rights When Dealing With Lending Apps
A borrower generally has the right to:
- Know the identity of the lender;
- Receive clear loan terms;
- Know the total cost of borrowing;
- Receive a copy of the loan agreement;
- Receive proof of payment;
- Be treated fairly and respectfully;
- Be free from threats and harassment;
- Have personal data protected;
- Withdraw or limit consent where legally allowed;
- Object to unlawful data processing;
- Demand correction of inaccurate data;
- File complaints with government agencies;
- Dispute incorrect charges;
- Be free from public shaming;
- Consult counsel or seek legal assistance.
XXVII. Responsibilities of Borrowers
While borrowers have rights, they also have responsibilities.
Borrowers should:
- Read loan terms before accepting;
- Borrow only what they can repay;
- Avoid submitting false information;
- Pay valid obligations on time;
- Keep proof of transactions;
- Communicate disputes in writing;
- Avoid using multiple apps to cover existing debts;
- Protect passwords and devices;
- Avoid giving unnecessary permissions;
- Report abusive conduct truthfully and with evidence.
A valid complaint should not be used merely to avoid a legitimate debt. It should focus on unlawful, abusive, deceptive, or privacy-violating conduct.
XXVIII. Legal Aid and Assistance
Borrowers who cannot afford private counsel may seek assistance from appropriate legal aid organizations, public attorney services, law school legal aid clinics, or local legal assistance offices.
Legal assistance may be especially important when:
- The borrower is being sued;
- The borrower received real court papers;
- There are threats of criminal charges;
- There is severe public shaming;
- The borrower lost employment or business opportunities;
- The borrower wants to file a damages case;
- The borrower is preparing affidavits for criminal complaints;
- The case involves multiple victims.
XXIX. Important Cautions
1. Do Not Ignore Real Court Documents
Fake legal threats are common, but real court documents should not be ignored. If a borrower receives a summons, subpoena, or official notice, they should verify it directly with the issuing court, prosecutor, or agency.
2. Do Not Post Defamatory Counter-Accusations
Borrowers should be careful when posting online about lending apps or collectors. Stick to facts and evidence. Avoid making unsupported accusations that could create separate legal exposure.
3. Do Not Fabricate Evidence
False screenshots, fake messages, or exaggerated claims can harm the complaint and may expose the complainant to legal consequences.
4. Do Not Pay Without Documentation
If paying, use official channels and keep proof. Ask for a statement of account and confirmation that payment has been credited.
5. Do Not Surrender to Panic
Collectors may use urgency, shame, and fear. Legal remedies require documentation, not panic-driven decisions.
XXX. Conclusion
Reporting a lending app in the Philippines requires identifying the nature of the violation and choosing the proper agency. If the issue involves an unauthorized or abusive lending company, the SEC is usually the primary regulator. If the issue involves misuse of personal data, unauthorized contact harvesting, or disclosure of debt to third persons, the National Privacy Commission is highly relevant. If the conduct involves online threats, cyberlibel, identity misuse, fake legal documents, or harassment, the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group, NBI Cybercrime Division, or prosecutor’s office may be appropriate. If the lender is a bank or BSP-supervised institution, the BSP may handle the complaint.
The most important step is evidence preservation. Borrowers should save app details, loan documents, payment records, messages, call logs, screenshots, app permissions, privacy policies, and statements from contacts who received harassing messages.
Philippine law allows lenders to collect legitimate debts through lawful means. It does not allow threats, humiliation, unlawful data processing, fake legal intimidation, harassment of third persons, or public shaming. A borrower who has been abused by a lending app has legal remedies and may report the conduct to the proper authorities.