Rainbow flags outside a courthouse in Manila for an article about same-sex property rights Philippines

Philippines Supreme Court grants same-sex couples property rights in landmark ruling

The Supreme Court of the Philippines has ruled that same-sex couples in long-term, committed relationships are entitled to the same property rights as opposite-sex couples — a decision that legal advocates are calling one of the most significant expansions of civil rights in the country’s history. In a nation where same-sex marriage remains legally unrecognized, the ruling carves out a concrete, material protection for a community that has long existed without it.

At a glance

  • Same-sex property rights Philippines: The Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples in de facto unions — meaning couples who live together in committed relationships without formal legal marriage — have a legal basis to claim co-ownership of property they built or acquired together.
  • Co-ownership framework: The Court applied existing civil code provisions on co-ownership, finding that the exclusion of same-sex couples from these protections had no rational legal basis and violated constitutional guarantees of equal protection.
  • Scope of impact: The ruling affects an estimated tens of thousands of same-sex couples across the Philippines who own homes, businesses, or assets together — many of whom previously had no legal recourse if a relationship ended or a partner died.

What the court actually decided

The Philippines does not recognize same-sex marriage or civil unions under current law. For years, that legal gap left same-sex partners in a precarious position: even after decades together, one partner could be stripped of shared property with little legal protection upon a breakup or a partner’s death.

The Supreme Court’s ruling changes that calculus. It held that co-ownership rules under the Civil Code apply to same-sex couples in de facto unions, the same way they apply to heterosexual couples who live together without marrying. The decision does not grant marriage rights, but it does recognize that two people who build a life and accumulate property together have equal claim to what they’ve built — regardless of gender or sexual orientation.

Legal observers noted that the Court grounded its reasoning in the equal protection clause of the Philippine Constitution, a move that could have implications for future cases involving LGBTQ+ rights in the country. Human Rights Watch has documented the ongoing legal vulnerabilities facing LGBTQ+ Filipinos, making this ruling a rare and concrete step forward in a region where such protections remain scarce.

Why this matters in Southeast Asia

The Philippines has long occupied a complicated position on LGBTQ+ rights. Social acceptance of gay and lesbian Filipinos is, by some measures, among the highest in Southeast Asia — but legal protections have lagged far behind cultural attitudes. Pew Research surveys have consistently found that Filipino public opinion trends more accepting than regional neighbors, yet attempts to pass an anti-discrimination bill in the Philippine Congress have stalled for more than two decades.

That makes this ruling all the more striking. It came not from a legislature but from the courts — a reminder that judicial interpretation of existing constitutional principles can extend protections even when political will lags behind.

Across Southeast Asia, ILGA World’s annual State-Sponsored Homophobia report finds that most countries still criminalize same-sex conduct or offer no civil protections at all. Thailand’s recent passage of a marriage equality bill made it the first in the region; the Philippines, while still short of that milestone, has now joined a very short list of countries in the region to grant any formal property protections to same-sex couples.

Real lives, real stakes

Behind the legal language are practical realities. When a same-sex partner dies without a will, assets can revert to biological family members who may have been estranged or even hostile. When relationships end, the partner whose name is not on a property title may walk away with nothing. These are not hypothetical harms — UNDP research on LGBTQ+ populations in Asia has documented their prevalence across the region.

This ruling gives couples a legal mechanism to fight back. It allows them to demonstrate co-ownership based on shared contribution — financial, labor, or otherwise — and seek a fair share of jointly built assets.

Advocates have been clear that the ruling is a step, not a destination. Same-sex couples in the Philippines still cannot marry, cannot adopt jointly in most circumstances, and face no explicit anti-discrimination protections at the national level. The ruling also raises practical questions about how co-ownership claims will be adjudicated in courts where attitudes toward LGBTQ+ people vary widely.

A ruling built on what already existed

One of the more remarkable aspects of the decision is what it did not require: new legislation. The Court found that the existing Civil Code, read through the lens of constitutional equality, already supported property protections for same-sex couples. Advocates say that framing matters because it makes the ruling harder to reverse through simple legislative action, and it signals to lower courts that equal protection principles apply broadly.

The Philippines has a significant Catholic institutional presence that has historically opposed expansions of LGBTQ+ rights in the country, and that context makes the Court’s move more significant. The decision navigated that landscape by grounding itself in property law and constitutional equality rather than in any redefinition of family or marriage — a careful but consequential distinction.

For same-sex couples who built homes, raised children, and grew old together without any legal recognition of their bond, this ruling is a long-overdue acknowledgment that what they built together belongs to both of them.

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