7.10% vs 0.25%. Tax-free vs 20% withholding tax. We compare MP2 against bank savings, time deposits, digital banks, mutual funds, and stocks. See the actual numbers and where each option wins.
Enter the same amount and see side-by-side how MP2 stacks up against bank savings, time deposits, digital banks, and other options, including the after-tax difference.
Philippines' Most Advanced MP2 Tool — Free & Accurate
| Year | Contribution | Dividend | Total Balance |
|---|
Enter your savings target — we'll tell you exactly how much to invest monthly.
| Duration | Required Monthly | Total Invested | Dividends Earned |
|---|
See how MP2 compares to banks, mutual funds, and stocks.
| Investment | Gross Return | After-Tax Return | Final Value | MP2 Advantage |
|---|
See the true cost of withdrawing your MP2 savings before maturity.
Actual dividend rates declared by Pag-IBIG Fund (2010-2025)
| Year | Dividend Rate | Performance |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 7.12% | Excellent |
| 2024 | 7.10% | Excellent |
| 2023 | 7.05% | Excellent |
| 2022 | 7.03% | Very Good |
| 2021 | 5.79% | Pandemic Low |
| 2020 | 6.12% | Good (COVID) |
| 2019 | 7.23% | Outstanding |
| 2018 | 7.41% | Outstanding |
| 2017 | 8.11% | All-Time High |
| 2016 | 7.43% | Outstanding |
| 2015 | 5.34% | Recovery |
| 2014 | 4.69% | Early Era |
| 2013 | 4.58% | Lowest Recorded |
| 2012 | 4.67% | Early Era |
| 2011 | 4.63% | Early Era |
| 2010 | 5.50% | Launch Year |
| 16-Year Average | 6.05% | Consistently High |
| Post-2016 Average | 7.06% | Best Period |
Walk into any bank in the Philippines and ask about their savings account interest rate. You will hear numbers between 0.125 percent and 0.50 percent. Walk into a Pag-IBIG branch and ask about MP2. You will hear 7.10 percent (2024) or 7.12 percent (2025).
That is a 28 to 56 times difference. Yet most Filipinos still keep their savings in traditional banks. Why? Some reasons are good (emergency funds need liquidity). Most are not (inertia, lack of awareness, or fear of locking money for 5 years).
This guide compares MP2 against every major savings option in the Philippines. Bank savings accounts, time deposits, digital banks, mutual funds, and stocks. You will see the actual numbers, the tax differences, the safety profiles, and the realistic scenarios where each option makes sense.
By the end, you will know exactly where your money should go for medium-term wealth building. Spoiler: for most Filipinos with savings they can lock up for 5 years, MP2 is the smart choice. But the details matter, and the right answer depends on your specific situation.
If you need the bottom line.
For money you can leave alone for 5 years. The returns are dramatically higher (7+ percent vs less than 1 percent), the earnings are tax-free, and the government backs your principal. There is no comparable risk-adjusted alternative in the Philippines for this time horizon.
For money you might need access to within a year. The lower returns are the trade-off for liquidity and instant access.
Maya and Tonik compete with MP2 for some scenarios, but only when their boosted rates apply consistently, and they still have withholding tax on interest.
For most Filipinos building wealth toward goals 5 years out, MP2 is the clear winner. Use the MP2 Calculator to see exactly how much more you would earn in MP2 versus your current bank account.
The full picture in one table.
| Feature | Pag-IBIG MP2 | Traditional Bank Savings | Bank Time Deposit | Digital Bank Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interest/Dividend Rate (2026) | 7.10% to 7.12% | 0.125% to 0.50% | 1.5% to 3.75% | 3.5% to 4.5% base, up to 15% with conditions |
| Tax Treatment | Tax-free | 20% withholding tax | 20% withholding tax | 20% withholding tax |
| Lock-in Period | 5 years | None | 30 days to 5 years | None |
| Minimum Amount | P500 | P500 to P10,000 | P5,000 to P100,000 | No minimum |
| Government-Backed | Yes (RA 9679) | PDIC up to P500,000 | PDIC up to P500,000 | PDIC up to P500,000 |
| Early Withdrawal Penalty | 50% of dividends | None | Forfeited interest | None |
| Compounding | Yes (annual) | Yes (monthly) | At maturity | Yes (varies) |
| Online Access | Yes (Virtual Pag-IBIG) | Yes | Yes | Yes (primary method) |
| OFW Friendly | Yes | Limited | Limited | Yes |
| Required Maintaining Balance | None | P2,000 to P10,000 | Locked amount | None |
The pattern is clear. MP2 offers much higher returns and tax-free treatment in exchange for a 5-year lock-in commitment.
Let us break down what each option actually pays.
Major Philippine banks pay surprisingly little on regular savings accounts. As of 2026:
| Bank | Savings Rate (per annum) |
|---|---|
| BDO Unibank | 0.0625% to 0.125% |
| BPI | 0.125% on regular savings |
| Metrobank | 0.125% |
| PNB | 0.25% |
| Security Bank | 0.125% to 0.25% |
| RCBC | 0.125% |
| LandBank | 0.125% to 0.25% |
On a P100,000 balance, these rates produce between P63 and P250 per year in interest. After 20 percent withholding tax, you receive P50 to P200. Yes, less than P200 a year. Most traditional banks also require maintaining balances of P2,000 to P10,000, with fees if you fall below.
Time deposits pay better than regular savings but with lock-in periods. A 3-month time deposit pays 1.5 to 2.5 percent, a 6-month one 2 to 3 percent, a 1-year one 2.5 to 3.75 percent, and a 5-year one 3.5 to 4.5 percent (rare offerings).
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) deposit interest rate was 3.75 percent in March 2026, which represents the BSP's official benchmark for short-term deposit facilities. Even the best bank time deposit pays less than half of MP2's recent rates. And time deposit interest is still subject to 20 percent withholding tax.
Digital banks have shaken up the Philippine banking landscape with higher rates. As of May 2026: Maya Bank offers a 3.7 percent base rate with boosted rates up to 15.2 percent (subject to spending conditions). Tonik Bank offers a 4.2 percent base rate on solo savings, with time deposits up to 8 percent for 12-month tenure. GoTyme Bank has competitive base rates with promotional boosts. UNO Digital Bank offers 3 percent on UNOReady savings, higher on time deposits. OFBank (LandBank subsidiary) offers a 4.2 percent base rate.
Digital banks are PDIC insured up to P500,000 per depositor. However, their interest is still subject to 20 percent withholding tax, unlike MP2. The "boosted" rates often require specific actions like minimum spending, fresh fund deposits, or maintaining particular balances. Read the fine print carefully.
For comparison, the verified MP2 dividend rates: 2025 was 7.12 percent, 2024 was 7.10 percent, 2023 was 7.05 percent, 2022 was 7.03 percent. The 9-year average is 6.95 percent and the 16-year average is 6.05 percent.
For complete historical data spanning 2010 to 2025, see our MP2 Dividend Rates History. The MP2 advantage becomes clearer when you factor in taxes.
This is where MP2 quietly destroys bank alternatives. Most people focus on advertised rates and forget about taxes.
All bank interest in the Philippines is subject to 20 percent withholding tax, automatically deducted by the bank before crediting interest to your account.
Example. A bank advertises 4 percent on a time deposit. Your real return is gross interest 4.00 percent, less 20 percent withholding tax 0.80 percent, for a net effective rate of 3.20 percent. That advertised 4 percent becomes 3.20 percent after tax. The bank still calls it "4 percent" in their marketing materials, but you only see 80 percent of that in your account.
This applies to bank savings account interest, bank time deposit interest, digital bank savings interest, money market fund earnings, bond fund earnings, and some specific government securities.
When you compare apples to apples (after-tax returns), the gap widens significantly.
| Investment | Advertised Rate | After-Tax Rate | MP2 Equivalent Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank Savings | 0.25% | 0.20% | 0.20% |
| 1-Year Time Deposit | 3.75% | 3.00% | 3.00% |
| 5-Year Time Deposit | 4.50% | 3.60% | 3.60% |
| Digital Bank (Tonik 12-mo TD) | 8.00% | 6.40% | 6.40% |
| Maya Bank (boosted with spending) | 15.00% | 12.00% | 12.00% |
| Pag-IBIG MP2 (2024) | 7.10% | 7.10% | n/a |
For MP2 to be beaten on an after-tax basis at typical conditions, you would need a bank product paying 9+ percent advertised (or qualify consistently for digital bank boosted rates). The MP2 rate is your real rate. There is no withholding tax deduction. That advertised 7.10 percent is what you actually keep.
Numbers make this concrete. Let us see what P100,000 actually grows to in different vehicles.
Roughly 0.20 percent net. Inflation alone (averaging 3.5 percent) destroys your purchasing power. You actually lost real value.
Roughly 1.60 percent net. Better than savings, but still barely keeping up with inflation.
Roughly 3.20 percent net. This is decent. Digital banks are a real alternative for liquid savings.
41 times more than bank savings (P1,005), 5 times more than 1-year time deposits (P8,300), 2.4 times more than digital bank base rate (P17,000).
For monthly contribution scenarios and other amounts, use the basic MP2 Calculator to run your own numbers.
Time deposits are the closest bank product to MP2 in concept. Both involve locking funds for higher returns. Here is how they actually compare.
Rate comparison. Time deposits pay 1.5 to 4.5 percent gross (1.20 to 3.60 percent net). MP2 paid 7.10 percent in 2024. Even the best time deposit offers less than half of MP2's net return.
Lock-in period. Most bank time deposits run 30 days to 1 year. MP2 requires 5 years. Time deposits offer more flexibility for shorter goals.
Early withdrawal penalty. Bank time deposits typically forfeit accrued interest if withdrawn early. MP2 forfeits 50 percent of dividends for non-valid early withdrawal.
Compounding. Time deposit interest typically pays at maturity (no intra-period compounding). MP2 compounds annually in compounding mode.
Tax treatment. Time deposit interest is subject to 20 percent withholding tax. MP2 dividends are 100 percent tax-free.
Safety. Time deposits are PDIC insured up to P500,000. MP2 is backed by Republic Act 9679 (full government backing, no specific cap).
Verdict. For 1-year goals, time deposits are reasonable. For 3+ years, MP2 wins decisively in both gross return and after-tax return.
Digital banks like Maya, Tonik, and GoTyme are the new competitors. Here is the honest comparison.
Rate comparison. Digital banks offer 3.5 to 4.5 percent base rates, with boosted rates up to 8 percent (Tonik 12-month TD) or 15 percent (Maya with spending conditions). MP2 offers 7.10 percent flat. Digital bank base rates are below MP2. Boosted rates can match or exceed MP2 only if you consistently meet the conditions.
Tax. Digital bank interest gets the 20 percent withholding tax. MP2 is tax-free. This eats into the digital bank advantage.
Liquidity. Digital bank savings allow immediate withdrawal. MP2 locks in for 5 years.
Boosted rate conditions. Maya's 15 percent rate requires meeting daily spending requirements. Tonik's 8 percent rate requires a 12-month tenure (similar to a time deposit). These are not "no-strings-attached" rates.
Safety. Both PDIC insured up to P500,000. MP2 has additional government backing without specific cap.
Verdict. Digital banks are excellent for liquid savings up to P500,000. MP2 is better for amounts above that or for users who do not need immediate access. Many savvy Filipinos use both: digital banks for emergency funds, MP2 for medium-term wealth.
Mutual funds offer market-based returns, which means higher potential upside but also real downside risk.
Rate comparison. Equity mutual funds in the Philippines have historically returned 8 to 10 percent annually on average, but with significant volatility (negative years exist). Bond mutual funds return 4 to 6 percent. Balanced funds return 5 to 8 percent. MP2 returns 6.95 percent average without any capital risk.
Risk. Mutual funds can lose money in any given year (the PSEi was down 8 percent in 2024 before recovering). MP2 has never lost member capital in 16 years.
Tax. Mutual fund earnings get taxed at various rates depending on type. MP2 is tax-free.
Liquidity. Mutual funds usually allow redemption within 3 to 7 days. MP2 locks for 5 years.
Fees. Mutual funds charge management fees of 1 to 2.5 percent annually. MP2 has no fees.
Verdict. Mutual funds work for investors comfortable with risk and seeking long-term growth (10+ years). MP2 works for investors who want stable returns without market risk. A balanced portfolio often includes both.
Direct stock investments in the Philippines (PSEi) offer the highest potential returns but require knowledge and tolerance for volatility.
Rate comparison. The PSEi has averaged 8 to 12 percent annual returns over long periods, but with extreme volatility (some years +30 percent, other years down 20 percent or more). MP2 returns 6.95 percent average steadily.
Effort required. Stock investing requires research, monitoring, and decision-making. MP2 is set-and-forget.
Risk. Individual stocks can lose 50 to 100 percent of value. MP2 principal is fully protected.
Tax. Stock dividends and trading get various tax treatments. MP2 is tax-free.
Time horizon. Stocks work for 10+ year horizons. MP2 is designed for 5-year cycles.
Verdict. Stocks belong in serious investors' portfolios for growth potential, but MP2 should anchor the safe portion of any Philippine portfolio. Most financial advisors recommend 30 to 60 percent in safe instruments (MP2, time deposits) and the rest in growth assets (stocks, mutual funds).
For detailed long-term planning combining MP2 with other investments, use our Advanced MP2 Calculator.
Based on the comparison, here are the specific scenarios where MP2 clearly wins.
Any savings goal 5+ years out belongs in MP2 (or partly in MP2). The combination of higher returns and tax-free treatment compounds dramatically. P5,000 monthly for 5 years in MP2 becomes P358,000. The same amount in bank savings becomes P302,000. Use our MP2 Goal Calculator to figure out how much to contribute toward your specific goal.
OFWs often park large amounts in Philippine bank accounts where it earns almost nothing. A P500,000 amount sitting in BPI earning 0.125 percent generates around P500 net per year. The same P500,000 in MP2 at 7.10 percent generates P35,500 per year, tax-free. Over 5 years, that is a P175,000 difference.
Retirees and pre-retirees benefit from MP2's stable, predictable income. The annual payout option creates a steady tax-free income stream. A P2 million MP2 portfolio at 7 percent generates P140,000 annually with no market risk.
If you are in higher income brackets where withholding tax really bites, MP2's tax-free dividends become especially valuable. You keep 100 percent of what MP2 declares, while bank interest loses 20 percent before you see it.
MP2 is not always the right answer. Here is when banks win.
Emergency funds need to be accessible immediately. MP2's 5-year lock-in disqualifies it for this purpose. Keep 3 to 6 months of expenses in a high-yield digital bank savings account (Maya, Tonik, GoTyme) for some growth, or a traditional bank savings account for instant access. Mix the two for balance. Once your emergency fund is set, additional savings can go to MP2.
If you are saving for something within 12 months (wedding, vacation, business launch), MP2 is wrong. Use bank time deposits matching your timeline, money market funds for slightly better returns with liquidity, or digital bank savings for flexibility plus modest returns.
If you need monthly access to your funds for spending, MP2 does not work. Bank checking and savings accounts handle daily transactions. Use MP2 only for money you can truly leave alone.
Yes, and most smart Filipinos do exactly this.
| Bucket | Where to Put It |
|---|---|
| Emergency fund (3 to 6 months expenses) | Digital bank savings or traditional bank savings for instant access |
| Short-term savings (under 1 year) | Bank time deposit or money market fund |
| Medium-term wealth building (1 to 10 years) | MP2 (potentially multiple accounts for rolling maturity) |
| Long-term growth (10+ years) | Mix of MP2, mutual funds, and stocks |
This approach gives you liquidity where needed and maximum tax-free growth on funds you can lock up. The MP2 Goal Calculator helps you size each bucket based on your specific financial goals.
Common questions comparing MP2 and bank savings answered.
For any money you can leave alone for 5 years, yes, MP2 is dramatically better than traditional bank savings. MP2 paid 7.10 percent in 2024 versus 0.125 to 0.25 percent for typical banks. That is 28 to 56 times higher returns, and MP2 dividends are tax-free while bank interest gets a 20 percent withholding tax. For money you might need within a year, bank savings make more sense for liquidity.
A lot. On a P100,000 deposit over 5 years, MP2 at 7.10 percent earns about P40,900 in dividends. A bank savings account at 0.25 percent earns about P1,005 in net interest. That is 41 times more in MP2. The longer the timeframe and larger the amount, the bigger the gap.
Both are very safe but in different ways. Bank deposits are PDIC insured up to P500,000 per depositor per bank. MP2 is backed by Republic Act 9679 with full Philippine government backing and no specific cap. For amounts above P500,000, MP2 actually provides stronger protection than a single bank account. Both have excellent safety records.
No. MP2 has never lost member principal in 16 years of operations. Stocks can lose 50 percent or more in bad years. MP2's worst case is a lower-than-expected dividend rate, but your principal contributions are protected by law. This makes MP2 fundamentally different from market-based investments.
Digital bank base rates (3.5 to 4.5 percent) are lower than MP2 (7.10 percent), and digital bank interest is subject to 20 percent withholding tax while MP2 is tax-free. Digital banks can match or beat MP2 only with boosted promotional rates that require meeting specific conditions consistently. For straightforward growth without conditions, MP2 wins. For pure liquidity, digital banks are useful.
No. Always keep an emergency fund (3 to 6 months of expenses) in liquid bank savings for unexpected needs. MP2 is for funds you can truly leave alone for 5 years. A typical smart allocation: 20 to 30 percent in liquid bank savings, 50 to 70 percent in MP2 for medium-term goals, and the rest in growth investments (stocks, mutual funds) if you have a longer horizon.
PDIC insures bank deposits up to P500,000 per depositor per bank. MP2 has government backing under RA 9679 without a specific cap. For balances under P500,000, both are very safe. For balances above P500,000, MP2 actually offers stronger protection since the entire amount is covered by government backing.
For most Filipinos, yes. The 5-year commitment is the trade-off for 28+ times higher returns and tax-free treatment. If you can identify money you do not need to touch for 5 years (which is achievable for most people once they have an emergency fund), MP2 is significantly better than letting that money sit in bank savings earning nothing meaningful.
The comparison is clear. For medium-term and long-term wealth building, Pag-IBIG MP2 is one of the smartest investment choices available to Filipinos. Higher returns than banks, tax-free earnings, government backing, and minimum P500 entry.
The only legitimate reason to keep large amounts in low-interest bank savings is liquidity. For everything else, MP2 wins on the math.
Here is the practical next step. Look at your current bank balance. Subtract your emergency fund needs (3 to 6 months of expenses). Whatever is left is money that should not be sitting in a 0.25 percent account.
Use our MP2 Calculator to see what that money could grow to over 5 years. If you have not opened an MP2 account yet, our MP2 Enrollment Guide walks you through the 15-minute online registration. For a complete program overview, read our MP2 Savings Guide. To verify the historical dividend rate track record, check our MP2 Dividend Rates History.
Stop letting inflation slowly destroy your bank savings. Move what you do not need within 5 years into MP2. Future-you will thank present-you for the discipline.
This MP2 vs Bank Savings comparison uses verified data from official Pag-IBIG Fund announcements, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) deposit interest rates as of March 2026, and publicly available rate information from major Philippine banks and digital banks. For the most current MP2 dividend rates, visit the Pag-IBIG Fund website. For BSP benchmark rates, visit the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas website.