Every now and then, government policy shifts in ways that do not make headlines but quietly shape our daily lives. One such change came from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) through Circular No. 1162, Series of 2022—a measure that, on the surface, looks like a technical adjustment on legal tender rules for coins, but in practice reflects a larger narrative about inflation, consumer behavior, and the evolving habits of a cash-reliant nation.
For most Filipinos, coins are the unassuming workhorses of everyday commerce. They pass through our hands in jeepney fares, sari-sari store purchases, parking meters, and neighborhood panaderias. Yet few of us actually know that coins—unlike banknotes—are subject to legal tender limits. This means a creditor may refuse payment made entirely in coins beyond a certain amount. The rule is not new; what is new is that the BSP has now doubled those limits.
Under Circular No. 1162, the BSP increased the maximum amount of coins that can be used to settle a single transaction. For ₱1, ₱5, ₱10, and ₱20 coins, the legal tender limit is now ₱2,000, up from the previous ₱1,000. For the low-denomination coins—₱0.01, ₱0.05, ₱0.10, and ₱0.25—the limit is ₱200, double the earlier ₱100 limit.
In simple terms: you can no longer insist on paying your entire restaurant bill with 2,000 pieces of ten-centavo coins, but you may now bring more of your higher-value coins into a transaction before hitting the ceiling.
While the adjustment appears mundane, it is actually a pragmatic response to economic realities. The BSP itself explains that the increase aligns with the higher face value of coins in circulation and the rising prices of goods and services. Inflation erodes value; what used to be a few hundred pesos’ worth of goods now requires a heavier pocketful of change. The previous thresholds, last set in 2006, simply no longer matched the cost of living or the scale of modern retail transactions.
Another important aspect of the circular is what it does not change. Banknotes, regardless of denomination, remain legal tender without limit. The rule on coins is meant only to ensure the efficient flow and recirculation of currency—not to deprive anyone of the right to pay or be paid. Indeed, the circular expressly clarifies that parties may mutually agree to accept coins beyond the prescribed limits. The law draws the line only on what can be compelled, not on what may be voluntarily accepted.
This also carries an often-overlooked implication for businesses. Retail establishments typically encounter coin shortages, especially during peak seasons. By raising the legal tender ceiling, the BSP is subtly encouraging broader acceptance of coins, which may help ease supply constraints and discourage the hoarding of loose change. The more coins circulate, the fewer bottlenecks we experience in small-value transactions.
From a legal standpoint, the circular is anchored on Section 52 of the New Central Bank Act, as amended, which guarantees that all BSP-issued notes and coins are legal tender for public and private debts. The update simply recalibrates the limits in a way that is faithful to the statute while responsive to current economic conditions.
But beyond the law, there is a social dimension to this seemingly simple change. In a country where many still rely on cash transactions—perhaps more than we care to admit—coins remain indispensable. They are carried by students, street vendors, jeepney drivers, commuters, and ordinary workers who transact in small denominations every day. Adjusting the limits is, in a way, an acknowledgment of their lived reality.
As digital payments expand and cashless ecosystems grow stronger, coins may appear quaint or even burdensome to some. Yet for millions of Filipinos, coins continue to bridge the gap between earning and surviving, paying and providing. In updating their legal tender limits, the BSP reminds us that monetary policy is not only about interest rates and inflation forecasts; sometimes, it is also about the weight of the coins in our pockets—and the value they still hold in our daily lives.





