Taxumo’s latest State of Online Taxation Report looks at how Filipino taxpayers across different industries are using online tax filing to formalize their income while navigating irregular earnings, rising costs, and changing work conditions.
MANILA, PHILIPPINES — [July 7, 2026] — Before sunrise in Marikina, Bianca, a 33-year-old virtual assistant, is already awake, working for multiple clients abroad.
To her clients, she is reliable. At home, she is the eldest daughter trying to keep the household steady as prices rise and uncertainty becomes part of daily life.
Bianca keeps her work organized and files her taxes. She does this because every filing helps prove that her work is real and her income is recorded, belonging in the formal economy.
But that proof does not make life secure.
Bianca is not poor because she lacks opportunities. She’s skilled and hardworking however she’s still living close to the edge. One sudden expense can quickly pull her financially backward making her poor.
Bianca Reyes is a fictional character –– a composite inspired by data patterns observed in Taxumo’s 2026 State of Online Taxation Report.
But her story reflects the reality of many Filipino online workers and independent earners who are filing taxes, joining the formal economy, and trying to build stability in an increasingly uncertain economy.
Taxumo’s report offers a closer look at Filipino taxpayers using online filing through the Taxumo platform. The findings point to one central story: online tax filing is helping more taxpayers formalize their income, but many are doing so while still facing financial pressure.
Taxumo’s filer base includes freelancers, self-employed professionals, online sellers, consultants, creatives, micro-entrepreneurs, small businesses, and taxpayers from traditional service-based industries.
For many of them, tax filing helps them create a record of income, strengthen credibility, support future financial applications, and make their work more visible in the formal economy. At the same time, the report shows that formalizing income does not automatically mean financial stability.
A closer look at financially exposed taxpayers
One of the report’s main themes is financial exposure. Taxumo’s 2026 data suggests that some filers are using online tax tools while still working toward financial stability. The report notes that a significant share of Taxumo filers fall under the Poor and Lower Middle Income brackets.
The data does not represent all Filipino taxpayers. However, it shows what is visible within Taxumo’s own filer base: many people use online filing not because they are already financially stable, but because they are trying to build a more secure financial future. Filing taxes helps create proof of income, establish a financial record, and open access to opportunities such as loans, business growth, and other financial services.
Like Bianca, they file taxes to build proof of income, even while dealing with unstable earnings, rising costs, and daily work pressure.
Key Findings from the 2026 Report
Several findings from Taxumo’s 2026 report show how Filipino taxpayers are using online filing while navigating different levels of financial stability.
Online tax payments continued to grow.
Taxumo recorded a 43% compound growth rate in online tax payments, showing that more users are turning to digital tools to make tax compliance easier.
More Gen Z taxpayers entered the system.
Gen Z filers increased by 19% from 2025 to 2026. However, Millennials remained the largest filer group on Taxumo.
Men reported faster income growth.
Male filers declared 12.45% higher annual income year-on-year, while female filers reported 4.79% growth. This shows that filing participation and income growth do not always move at the same pace.
More filers did not always mean higher income.
IT & Software Development had the largest share of Taxumo filers in 2026 (13.81%) and higher incomes. But other large groups, like Virtual Assistant & Admin Services, had many filers with lower income contributions.This highlights a gap: more filers don’t always mean higher earnings.
Online filing is not just for digital workers.
Traditional and service-based industries such as Agriculture & Farming, Veterinary & Pet Services, Wellness, Hardware & Home Improvement, and Security & Investigation also showed strong median tax remittance levels.
What Connects the Findings
The findings show one clear story: online tax filing is helping more taxpayers formalize their work, but not all of them are financially stable.
Some are digital workers. Some run traditional or service-based businesses. Some come from growing industries, while others belong to large filer groups where income remains modest.
What connects them is the need for an easier way to comply.
For many Taxumo filers, filing taxes builds income credibility. These can help when applying for loans, working with clients, or growing a business.
But the report also shows that compliance happens alongside real financial pressure: irregular income, rising costs, family responsibilities, and limited access to accounting support.
Online Filing Is Reaching More Than Online Workers
Online filing is also being used by people from traditional and service-based industries, including agriculture, wellness, pet services, hardware, security, consulting, and tech.
This matters because tax compliance applies to everyone, not just freelancers or digital workers. Regardless of how they earn, people need a simpler way to file and pay taxes.
Tax Compliance as a Step Toward Inclusion
Filing taxes is not just about meeting a requirement. For many taxpayers, it can also help build proof that their income is real, recorded, and visible.
That proof can matter when applying for loans, working with clients, organizing business records, or growing a small business.
The bigger question is not only how to get more people to file. It is also how to make filing feel useful, less intimidating, and more connected to real opportunities.
This is where digital tools, including platforms like Taxumo, can play a role by helping make workflows more efficient and accessible for taxpayers, supporting them as they manage their responsibilities and grow their businesses.
About the 2026 State of Online Taxation Report
Taxumo’s 2026 State of Online Taxation Report analyzes online taxpayer behavior, declared income, tax remittance, industry activity, location, gender, and generational trends based on Taxumo platform data.
Socioeconomic profiles in the report are approximated from declared annual income on Taxumo and mapped directionally to PSA/PIDS classifications. The findings should be read as insights from a segment of the Filipino taxpayer population.
Read the full “State of Online Taxation 2026” report at: https://www.taxumo.com/soot/2026-report/

