The Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR) of Republic Act No. 12253, otherwise known as the Enhanced Fiscal Regime for Large-Scale Metallic Mining Act, took effect following their publication on 20 December 2025. The IRR provides the operational details for the fiscal and transparency measures introduced by the law, which applies primarily to large-scale metallic mining operations in the Philippines.
Enacted on 4 September 2025, RA 12253 aims to simplify and rationalize the fiscal framework governing large-scale metallic mining. It removes distinctions in tax treatment among different types of mineral agreements and replaces them with a uniform fiscal regime. In doing so, the law streamlines tax administration while ensuring that the government receives a fair share from mining activities. The IRR fleshes out these reforms, particularly with respect to filing requirements, payment procedures, and enforcement mechanisms.
A central reform under RA 12253 is the revised royalty system. For mining operations within mineral reservations, a royalty of five percent (5%) of gross output applies, regardless of profitability. For operations outside mineral reservations, royalties are computed based on the margin between income from mining operations and gross output, with rates ranging from one percent (1%) to five percent (5%), increasing progressively as margins rise from zero percent (0%) up to sixty percent (60%). The law also imposes a minimum royalty based on gross output when margins are zero or negative. In practical terms, a mining project is required to pay royalty even if it is not yet profitable, while more profitable projects pay higher royalties.
Mining contractors and operators are required to file quarterly royalty returns and pay the royalty due within sixty (60) days after the end of each calendar quarter, counted from the time the minerals or mineral products are removed. Returns may be filed electronically or manually with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), and payments are made through authorized collection channels. To secure collection, the IRR also requires the posting of a bond approximating the royalty due for the quarter, subject to final adjustment at year-end. Any excess or deficiency in quarterly payments is reconciled annually.
RA 12253 further introduces a windfall profits tax on large-scale metallic mining projects once profit margins reach thirty percent (30%). The tax starts at one percent (1%) and escalates to ten percent (10%) when margins reach seventy-five percent (75%) or higher. In computing windfall profits, the optional standard deduction is not allowed, although corporate income tax and royalty payments may be deducted in determining net income.
Another significant feature of the law is ring-fencing. Each mining project is treated as a separate taxable unit for purposes of computing royalties and windfall profits tax. A company operating multiple projects may not consolidate income and expenses, nor offset losses from one project against profits from another. Each project must be registered with the BIR under a distinct branch taxpayer identification number. This requirement is for tax purposes only and does not create a separate juridical personality. In practice, mining companies must maintain project-level accounting and compliance.
The law also preserves the revenue share of local government units (LGUs). LGUs remain entitled to forty percent (40%) of the national government’s collections from mining-related taxes and royalties generated within their areas. These amounts must be released directly and may not be withheld. This share is distinct from the local business tax, which the law caps at one-half percent (0.5%) of gross output.
With the full implementation of RA 12253 and its IRR, stakeholders in the mining industry should revisit their fiscal models, accounting systems, and compliance structures. The new regime is designed to be simpler, but it is also stricter, more transparent, and more demanding in terms of reporting and accountability.





