
MANILA (January 6) — President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Monday signed into law the ₱6.793-trillion national budget for 2026, vetoing ₱92.5 billion in unprogrammed items to tighten safeguards on public spending and reinforce fiscal discipline.
The signing of Republic Act 12314, or the 2026 General Appropriations Act (GAA), took place at Malacañan Palace. Marcos said the challenges of 2025—including climate-related disruptions, economic uncertainty, and exposed corruption—made timely reforms unavoidable.
“The year 2025 tested our nation on many fronts… These challenges are painful, but they also made one thing clear: real change could no longer wait,” the President said.
“As we enter this year, let us take this opportunity to start moving forward with difficult but needed reforms in governance, to rebuild our trust… and deliver an honest and effective government to the Filipinos.”
Sectoral Allocations
Education received the largest share, ₱1.345 trillion, to fund:
- Creation of teaching and non-teaching plantilla positions
- Teacher promotion and reclassification
- Nationwide classroom construction
“The national budget shall sustain our momentum in education reform,” Marcos said.
Health was allocated its largest-ever budget at ₱448.125 billion, aimed at advancing universal healthcare through:
- DOH’s Universal Health Care Fund
- Zero Balance Billing program for indigent patients
- Disease surveillance and rapid response systems
- Sustainable health financing
Nearly ₱129.8 billion will also strengthen PhilHealth, including ₱60 billion restored in line with a Supreme Court ruling to reduce out-of-pocket expenses.
Agriculture received ₱297.102 billion, supporting:
- Modernization of supply systems
- Assistance for farmers and fisherfolk
- Farm-to-market road construction to lower costs and minimize post-harvest losses
Social services were allocated ₱270.189 billion, targeting systemic vulnerabilities and promoting inclusive growth, with a goal of achieving single-digit poverty by 2028.
Other key provisions include:
- Increased funding for local government units and the Local Government Support Fund
- ₱15.33 billion for disaster rehabilitation under the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Fund
- Sustained military and uniformed personnel budgets, including updated base pay and increased subsistence allowances

