Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) has officially confirmed the return of ₱60 billion previously transferred to the National Treasury under a controversial 2024 Department of Finance (DOF) order. The return of the funds follows a December 2025 Supreme Court ruling that declared the diversion of health reserves unconstitutional, upholding the Universal Health Care Act’s mandate to protect unspent funds for the benefit of members.
National Treasury returns diverted reserves following Supreme Court victory.
The country’s public health insurer confirmed receipt of the amount on May 6, after the National Treasury returned the funds upon the orders if the administration and an earlier Supreme Court decision.
In 2024, the Department of Finance (DOF) ordered PhilHealth to return ₱89.9 billion identified as unspent funds from its previous annual budget. The amount was set to be directed to the National Treasury for reallocation in the next year’s budget.
The path to restoration
Civil society groups challenged the move as unconstitutional, elevating the case to the Supreme Court that same year. Under the Universal Health Care Act, PhilHealth is required to maintain reserve funds worth two years of projected expenses.
At that point, ₱60 billion of the ₱89.9 billion total had already been transferred back to the Treasury before the Court temporarily suspended the fund transfer.
The Supreme Court ruled in December 2025 that the DOF order violated laws covering universal healthcare and the national budget. In September 2025, the Office of the President had already ordered the funds to be returned to PhilHealth.
The tug-of-war is over. PhilHealth confirms the return of ₱60 billion in diverted reserves following a landmark Supreme Court victory.
Kiara Gorrospe is a journalist, creative, and self-proclaimed internet sleuth. When not writing about business and tech, she’s on the lookout for the best matcha in the metro.