I. Introduction
In the Philippines, many individuals and businesses deal with recruitment agencies, manpower service providers, outsourcing companies, placement firms, and other entities that promise employment, deployment, staffing, or business services. Because these activities often involve money, employment opportunities, overseas deployment, or personal documents, verifying whether a company is legally registered is an essential step before signing contracts, paying fees, submitting identification documents, or accepting job offers.
Legal registration does not automatically mean that a company is trustworthy, solvent, ethical, or compliant with every law. However, it is the first layer of verification. A legitimate recruitment or service company should be able to show that it exists as a legal entity, is authorized to operate, and, where required, holds the proper license from the relevant government agency.
In the Philippine context, verification usually involves checking several government records, depending on the company’s nature of business. A corporation or partnership must generally be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. A sole proprietorship must generally be registered with the Department of Trade and Industry. A business operating in a city or municipality should also have a local business permit. If the company recruits workers for overseas employment, it must be licensed by the Department of Migrant Workers. If it recruits or places workers for local employment, it may need authority from the Department of Labor and Employment. If it acts as a contractor or subcontractor, it may also need to comply with labor contracting rules.
This article discusses how to verify a recruitment or service company’s legal registration in the Philippines, what documents to ask for, what agencies to check, what red flags to watch for, and what legal remedies may be available if the company turns out to be illegitimate.
II. Understanding the Type of Company You Are Dealing With
The first step is to identify what kind of company you are dealing with. Different businesses require different registrations, permits, and licenses.
A recruitment agency for overseas employment is a company that recruits, processes, or deploys Filipino workers for jobs abroad. These agencies are highly regulated because they handle overseas employment, placement fees, contracts, passports, visas, medical exams, and deployment documents. In the Philippines, overseas recruitment agencies must be licensed by the Department of Migrant Workers, which absorbed functions previously handled by the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.
A local recruitment or placement agency helps workers find jobs within the Philippines. Depending on its activities, it may need authority or registration with the Department of Labor and Employment, especially if it operates as a private employment agency.
A manpower agency, contractor, subcontractor, or service provider supplies workers or services to another company. Examples include janitorial services, security support, logistics staff, merchandisers, production workers, administrative support, and similar outsourced services. These companies may be subject to Department of Labor and Employment rules on contracting and subcontracting.
A business process outsourcing company or general service company may provide services such as customer support, data processing, marketing, consultancy, accounting, IT support, or administrative services. These businesses may not be “recruitment agencies” in the strict sense, but they still need proper business registration and local permits.
A training center, consultancy, visa assistance company, or immigration service provider may not necessarily be authorized to recruit workers. Some illegal recruiters disguise themselves as “consultants,” “training centers,” “travel agencies,” or “visa processors.” Their authority must be verified carefully, especially if they promise jobs abroad.
The correct verification method depends on this classification.
III. Basic Legal Registrations Every Business Should Have
A legitimate company operating in the Philippines should generally have the following basic documents:
- SEC registration, if it is a corporation or partnership;
- DTI registration, if it is a sole proprietorship;
- BIR registration, including a Certificate of Registration;
- Mayor’s permit or business permit, issued by the city or municipality where it operates;
- Barangay business clearance, usually required for local permitting;
- Official receipts or invoices, registered with the BIR;
- Special license or authority, if the nature of business is regulated.
These documents serve different purposes. SEC or DTI registration proves the business name or legal entity exists. BIR registration shows that the business is registered for tax purposes. A mayor’s permit shows that the local government has allowed it to operate at a particular address. A special license, such as a recruitment license, shows that the company is authorized to engage in a regulated activity.
A common mistake is assuming that SEC or DTI registration alone means a company is authorized to recruit workers. It does not. A corporation may be SEC-registered but still unauthorized to conduct recruitment or overseas placement. Similarly, a business name may be DTI-registered but still lack the required labor or migrant worker license.
IV. SEC Registration: Corporations and Partnerships
If the company claims to be a corporation, partnership, or one-person corporation, it should be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Relevant documents may include:
- Certificate of Incorporation;
- Articles of Incorporation;
- By-laws;
- General Information Sheet;
- Certificate of Filing of Amended Articles, if applicable;
- Certificate of Good Standing or similar certification, if available.
The company’s SEC registration confirms that a corporation or partnership exists under Philippine law. However, SEC registration is not the same as a license to recruit workers. A company’s primary or secondary purposes may mention manpower, recruitment, placement, consultancy, outsourcing, or employment services, but that does not automatically authorize regulated recruitment activities.
When reviewing SEC documents, check the following:
- The exact corporate name;
- SEC registration number;
- Date of incorporation;
- Registered office address;
- Names of incorporators, directors, trustees, or officers;
- Corporate purposes;
- Whether the company is still active or has been suspended or revoked;
- Whether the name used in advertisements matches the registered name.
Be cautious if the company uses a trade name that is different from its SEC-registered name. A trade name may be legitimate, but the company should clearly disclose the registered entity behind it.
V. DTI Registration: Sole Proprietorships
If the business is owned by one individual and operates as a sole proprietorship, it should be registered with the Department of Trade and Industry.
A DTI Business Name Registration shows that a business name has been registered by an individual proprietor. It does not create a separate juridical personality like a corporation. The owner remains personally responsible for the business.
When checking DTI registration, verify:
- Business name;
- Name of the owner or proprietor;
- Scope of registration;
- Registration date and expiration;
- Business address, if reflected;
- Whether the business name matches the name used in advertisements or contracts.
A DTI registration only protects or records the business name. It does not prove that the business has a local permit, tax registration, or special recruitment authority.
VI. BIR Registration and Official Receipts
A legitimate business should be registered with the Bureau of Internal Revenue. The company should have a BIR Certificate of Registration and should issue official receipts or invoices for payments.
The BIR Certificate of Registration may show:
- Taxpayer Identification Number;
- Registered name;
- Registered address;
- Registered tax types;
- Line of business;
- Revenue district office;
- Registration date.
For verification purposes, ask whether payments will be covered by an official receipt or invoice. Be cautious if the company only accepts payment through personal bank accounts, e-wallets under an individual’s name, remittance centers, or cash without receipts.
For recruitment-related transactions, the absence of proper receipts is a serious red flag. Illegal recruiters often avoid issuing official receipts because receipts create a paper trail.
VII. Mayor’s Permit and Local Business Permit
A company operating from a physical office should have a mayor’s permit or local business permit issued by the city or municipality where its office is located.
The permit usually identifies:
- Business name;
- Business address;
- Nature of business;
- Permit number;
- Validity period;
- Local government unit;
- Owner or registered entity.
A business permit is location-specific. If the company has a branch in another city, it may need a permit for that branch as well.
When dealing with a recruitment agency or manpower service provider, visit the office if possible. Check whether the office address matches the permit, SEC or DTI records, website, job ads, and contracts. A company that refuses to disclose its office address or only operates through social media, messaging apps, or temporary meeting places should be treated with caution.
VIII. Special Licenses for Recruitment and Employment Services
A. Overseas Recruitment Agencies
A company that recruits Filipinos for overseas employment must be licensed by the Department of Migrant Workers.
For overseas recruitment, the most important verification is not merely SEC or DTI registration. The decisive question is whether the agency has a valid license to recruit and deploy workers abroad.
A legitimate overseas recruitment agency should be able to provide:
- DMW license number;
- Official registered agency name;
- Validity period of license;
- Approved job orders;
- Country of deployment;
- Foreign principal or employer;
- Approved positions;
- Authorized representatives or branch offices.
A job abroad should generally be covered by an approved job order. A company may be licensed but still not have an approved job order for the specific position being offered. Therefore, verification should cover both the agency’s license and the specific job order.
Be careful with phrases such as:
- “Direct hire processing assistance”;
- “Visa consultancy”;
- “Guaranteed job abroad”;
- “No experience needed, no documents required”;
- “Tourist visa first, work visa later”;
- “Training fee before deployment”;
- “Pay reservation fee now”;
- “Processing through a partner agency.”
These may be legitimate in some contexts, but they are also commonly used in illegal recruitment schemes. The safest approach is to verify whether the agency is licensed and whether the job order is approved.
B. Local Recruitment and Private Employment Agencies
Companies that recruit workers for local employment may be regulated by the Department of Labor and Employment, depending on their activities. A private employment agency generally acts as an intermediary between jobseekers and employers.
For local recruitment, ask whether the company has DOLE authority or registration, where applicable. Also check whether the company charges applicants fees. Charging applicants improper or unauthorized fees may violate labor rules.
C. Contractors and Subcontractors
A manpower service company that supplies workers to another company may be treated as a contractor or subcontractor. Under Philippine labor law, contracting arrangements are regulated to prevent labor-only contracting and other abuses.
A legitimate contractor should generally be able to show:
- Business registration;
- Local business permit;
- BIR registration;
- DOLE registration as contractor or subcontractor, where required;
- Service agreements with clients;
- Proof of substantial capital or investment;
- Payroll records and employment contracts;
- Compliance with minimum wage, social benefits, and labor standards.
A contractor should not merely recruit workers and place them under another company while lacking substantial capital, tools, equipment, supervision, or independent business operations. Such arrangements may raise labor-only contracting issues.
IX. How to Verify a Company Step by Step
Step 1: Get the Exact Legal Name
Before checking government records, get the company’s exact legal name. Do not rely only on a Facebook page name, brand name, website name, or recruiter’s nickname.
Ask for:
- Full registered business name;
- SEC or DTI registration number;
- DMW or DOLE license number, if applicable;
- Office address;
- Name of authorized representative;
- Contact number and official email address.
Check whether the name on the job advertisement matches the name on the registration documents.
Step 2: Determine Whether It Is SEC-Registered or DTI-Registered
Ask whether the business is a corporation, partnership, one-person corporation, or sole proprietorship.
If it is a corporation or partnership, check SEC registration.
If it is a sole proprietorship, check DTI registration.
If the company cannot clearly explain its legal form, that is a warning sign.
Step 3: Check Local Business Permit
Ask for a copy of the mayor’s permit for the current year. Confirm that the address and nature of business match the actual operation.
A business permit that is expired, issued to another entity, or issued for a different address should be questioned.
Step 4: Check BIR Registration and Receipts
Ask whether the company issues official receipts or invoices. The registered name on the receipt should match the entity you are dealing with.
Avoid paying fees without documentation. For job applicants, be especially careful with “processing fees,” “reservation fees,” “slot fees,” “training fees,” “medical fees,” “placement fees,” or “documentation fees.”
Step 5: Check Special License or Authority
For overseas recruitment, verify the DMW license and job order.
For local recruitment, verify DOLE authority or registration if applicable.
For manpower contracting, verify DOLE contractor registration where required.
For security agencies, verify the appropriate security agency license.
For training centers, verify whether they are accredited or authorized by the relevant agency if they claim formal accreditation.
For travel agencies or visa assistance companies, remember that travel or consultancy registration does not authorize recruitment.
Step 6: Confirm the Office and Representatives
A legitimate company should have a verifiable office, official contact details, and identifiable representatives.
Check:
- Whether the office exists;
- Whether signage matches the company name;
- Whether employees know the recruiter;
- Whether the contact number is official;
- Whether email uses a company domain or only a free email account;
- Whether the recruiter has written authority from the company.
Be cautious of recruiters who communicate only through personal accounts, insist on secrecy, or refuse to provide documents.
Step 7: Review the Contract Before Paying or Submitting Documents
Before paying money or surrendering original documents, review the contract carefully.
Check:
- Name of employer or principal;
- Position;
- Salary;
- Work location;
- Benefits;
- Fees;
- Refund policy;
- Processing timeline;
- Grounds for cancellation;
- Dispute resolution;
- Signatory authority;
- Company details.
For overseas employment, the employment contract should correspond to the approved job order and comply with applicable deployment rules.
X. Documents to Ask From a Recruitment or Service Company
A cautious applicant, worker, or client may request copies of the following:
For Any Business
- SEC Certificate of Incorporation or DTI Business Name Registration;
- BIR Certificate of Registration;
- Mayor’s permit;
- Official receipt or invoice sample;
- Company profile;
- Office address and contact details;
- Authorization letter for the representative.
For Overseas Recruitment
- DMW license;
- Approved job order;
- Name of foreign principal or employer;
- Position and salary details;
- Employment contract;
- Pre-employment orientation or briefing documents;
- Written breakdown of lawful fees, if any.
For Local Recruitment
- DOLE authority or registration, where applicable;
- Employer-client details;
- Job description;
- Employment terms;
- Fee policy;
- Written agreement.
For Manpower or Service Contracting
- DOLE contractor registration, where applicable;
- Service agreement;
- Employment contracts of deployed workers;
- Proof of statutory benefits;
- Payroll system;
- Proof of substantial capital or investment;
- Safety and health compliance documents, where applicable.
XI. Warning Signs of an Unregistered or Illegal Recruitment Company
A company may be suspicious if it:
- Cannot provide SEC, DTI, BIR, or mayor’s permit documents;
- Claims SEC registration is enough to recruit workers abroad;
- Uses a business name different from its registered name without explanation;
- Refuses to disclose its office address;
- Operates only through Facebook, Messenger, Viber, Telegram, WhatsApp, or text messages;
- Uses personal bank accounts or e-wallets for payments;
- Demands payment before showing license or job order;
- Offers deployment through tourist visa;
- Promises guaranteed overseas employment;
- Says documents are unnecessary or can be fabricated;
- Offers unusually high salaries for minimal qualifications;
- Pressures applicants to pay immediately;
- Refuses to issue official receipts;
- Gives vague details about employer, country, salary, or job duties;
- Claims to have a “backer” or “inside contact” in government;
- Uses fake or altered government logos;
- Provides expired licenses or permits;
- Gives only photocopies with blurred registration numbers;
- Uses a residential address, coworking space, or temporary venue without clear authority;
- Asks applicants to surrender passports without proper documentation;
- Claims to be merely a “consultant” but performs recruitment functions.
One red flag alone does not always prove illegality, but several red flags together should be treated seriously.
XII. Legal Effect of Registration: What It Proves and What It Does Not Prove
Legal registration proves only limited matters.
SEC registration proves that a corporation or partnership exists or existed as a registered entity. DTI registration proves that a sole proprietor registered a business name. A mayor’s permit proves local permission to operate for a certain period and location. BIR registration proves registration for tax purposes. A DMW or DOLE license proves authority to perform certain regulated recruitment or employment-related activities.
Registration does not automatically prove that:
- The company is financially stable;
- The company has no complaints;
- The recruiter is honest;
- The job offer is real;
- The foreign employer is legitimate;
- The fees are lawful;
- The company is compliant with labor standards;
- The contract is fair;
- The transaction is risk-free.
Therefore, legal registration should be combined with due diligence, contract review, and verification of the specific job, project, or service being offered.
XIII. Illegal Recruitment Under Philippine Law
Illegal recruitment is a serious offense in the Philippines. It generally involves recruitment activities undertaken by persons or entities without the required license or authority, or recruitment activities involving prohibited acts.
Recruitment activities may include canvassing, enlisting, contracting, transporting, utilizing, hiring, or procuring workers, including referrals, contract services, promising or advertising employment locally or abroad.
Illegal recruitment may exist even if the recruiter does not successfully deploy the applicant. The act of promising or offering employment for a fee, without authority, may already create liability depending on the facts.
Illegal recruitment may become more serious when committed:
- By a syndicate;
- On a large scale;
- Against multiple persons;
- With economic sabotage elements;
- Through false pretenses;
- By collecting unlawful fees;
- By misrepresenting authority or job availability.
Victims may file complaints with the appropriate government agencies and law enforcement authorities.
XIV. Common Scenarios and How to Analyze Them
Scenario 1: The Company Is SEC-Registered but Not DMW-Licensed
This is not enough for overseas recruitment. SEC registration allows a corporation to exist, but overseas recruitment requires a DMW license. If the company recruits for jobs abroad without a valid DMW license, that is a major legal concern.
Scenario 2: The Company Says It Is a “Visa Assistance” Firm
A visa assistance company may help with documentation, but it should not recruit workers unless licensed to do so. If it promises jobs abroad, collects placement-related fees, or coordinates with foreign employers, it may be engaging in recruitment activity.
Scenario 3: The Recruiter Says the Job Is “Direct Hire”
Direct hiring of Filipino workers for overseas employment is regulated. A “direct hire” explanation should not be used to bypass government requirements. The worker should verify the proper process with the relevant government agency before paying or leaving the country.
Scenario 4: The Company Has a DTI Certificate Only
A DTI certificate may be valid for a sole proprietorship, but it does not authorize overseas recruitment or regulated placement services. The nature of the business must still be checked.
Scenario 5: The Company Has a Mayor’s Permit but No Special License
A mayor’s permit allows local business operation but does not substitute for a recruitment license. If the business is engaged in regulated recruitment, placement, manpower contracting, or deployment, additional authority may be required.
Scenario 6: The Recruiter Uses a Partner Agency’s License
Be cautious. If a person or company claims to process applicants through a licensed partner agency, verify directly with the licensed agency. Ask whether the recruiter is an authorized representative. Unauthorized use of a licensed agency’s name is a common tactic.
Scenario 7: The Company Offers Jobs Abroad Through Tourist Visas
This is a serious red flag. A tourist visa is generally not a work visa. Leaving as a tourist to work abroad may expose the worker to immigration problems, labor exploitation, deportation, and lack of legal protection.
Scenario 8: The Company Charges “Training Fees” Before Employment
Training fees are sometimes used to disguise illegal recruitment fees. The legality depends on the facts, the type of training, the company’s authority, the documents signed, and whether the fee is connected to promised employment.
XV. Verification Checklist for Job Applicants
Before applying or paying any fee, an applicant should confirm:
- The company’s full legal name;
- Whether it is SEC- or DTI-registered;
- Whether it has a current mayor’s permit;
- Whether it is BIR-registered;
- Whether it issues official receipts;
- Whether it has a DMW license for overseas recruitment;
- Whether the specific job order is approved;
- Whether the recruiter is authorized by the company;
- Whether the office address is real;
- Whether the employment contract is complete;
- Whether the salary and benefits are written;
- Whether the fees are lawful and documented;
- Whether the visa type matches the work arrangement;
- Whether the employer or principal is identified;
- Whether the transaction is rushed or secretive.
No applicant should rely solely on screenshots, social media posts, verbal assurances, or testimonials.
XVI. Verification Checklist for Businesses Hiring a Service Provider
A company that plans to hire a manpower or service provider should conduct its own due diligence. This is important because client companies may face legal, reputational, and labor consequences if they engage noncompliant contractors.
Before signing a service agreement, the client should request:
- SEC or DTI registration;
- Articles of Incorporation or business name certificate;
- General Information Sheet, if applicable;
- BIR Certificate of Registration;
- Mayor’s permit;
- DOLE contractor registration, where applicable;
- Proof of statutory benefits compliance;
- Sample employment contracts;
- Payroll process;
- Occupational safety and health compliance documents;
- List of equipment, tools, or assets used in the business;
- Organizational chart;
- Proof of supervision over deployed employees;
- Financial capacity documents, where appropriate.
The client should also examine whether the provider is a legitimate independent contractor or merely supplies labor. Labor-only contracting issues may arise if the contractor lacks substantial capital or investment, does not exercise control over its employees, or merely recruits and places workers under the client’s supervision.
XVII. The Role of Government Agencies
Several Philippine government agencies may be involved in verification.
The Securities and Exchange Commission handles corporations, partnerships, one-person corporations, and related corporate records.
The Department of Trade and Industry handles business name registration for sole proprietorships.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue handles taxpayer registration, invoices, receipts, and tax compliance.
The local government unit issues mayor’s permits and business permits.
The Department of Migrant Workers regulates overseas recruitment and deployment of Filipino workers.
The Department of Labor and Employment regulates labor standards, local employment, private employment agencies, and contracting or subcontracting arrangements.
The National Bureau of Investigation and Philippine National Police may become involved in criminal complaints involving fraud, estafa, illegal recruitment, falsification, or related offenses.
The Department of Justice may become involved through prosecution of criminal offenses.
The National Labor Relations Commission may become relevant in labor disputes between workers and employers.
The Philippine Overseas Labor Offices or migrant worker offices abroad may become relevant when issues arise after deployment.
XVIII. Importance of Matching Names Across Documents
One practical verification method is to compare names across all documents. The following should match or be clearly connected:
- Name in advertisement;
- Name in contract;
- Name in SEC or DTI registration;
- Name in mayor’s permit;
- Name in BIR certificate;
- Name in official receipt;
- Name in DMW or DOLE license;
- Name of authorized representative;
- Name on bank account or payment channel.
If the advertisement says one name, the contract says another, the receipt is under a third name, and payment goes to an individual, the transaction should be questioned.
Mismatched names do not always mean fraud. Companies may use trade names, branches, affiliates, or authorized representatives. However, legitimate businesses should be able to explain the relationship clearly and provide documents.
XIX. Verifying Branches, Agents, and Representatives
Some companies operate through branches or authorized representatives. A branch office should generally have proper authority from the main company and may need local permits.
Ask for:
- Branch authority;
- Representative’s authorization letter;
- Company ID of the representative;
- Official contact details of the main office;
- Confirmation directly from the main office;
- Local permit for the branch, where applicable.
Do not rely solely on an ID card. IDs can be fabricated. Direct confirmation from official company channels is safer.
For overseas recruitment, unauthorized agents are a known risk. A licensed agency may have authorized representatives, but applicants should verify whether the person collecting documents or fees is officially connected to the licensed agency.
XX. Online Verification and Digital Due Diligence
Modern recruitment often happens online. Digital due diligence is therefore important.
Check the company’s:
- Website;
- Domain name;
- Official email address;
- Social media pages;
- Online reviews;
- Complaints;
- Job postings;
- Contact numbers;
- Address consistency;
- Age of page or website;
- Use of government logos;
- Quality and consistency of documents.
Be careful with pages that were created recently, use stolen photos, disable comments, change names frequently, or post unrealistic job offers.
A legitimate company may use social media, but it should still have verifiable registration documents, office address, official contact information, and proper licenses.
XXI. Fees and Payments
Payment requests are one of the most important danger areas.
A legitimate company should clearly explain:
- What the fee is for;
- Whether the fee is lawful;
- Whether payment is refundable;
- Who receives the payment;
- Whether an official receipt will be issued;
- Whether the fee is required by law, employer, government, or third-party provider.
Be cautious with vague fees such as:
- Processing fee;
- Slot reservation fee;
- Line-up fee;
- Guarantee fee;
- Backer fee;
- Embassy fee paid through recruiter;
- Medical referral fee;
- Training fee tied to job placement;
- Documentation fee without invoice;
- Deployment fee through personal account.
Never pay without written documentation and a receipt.
XXII. Surrender of Passports and Original Documents
Applicants should be cautious about surrendering original passports, diplomas, certificates, or identification documents.
A legitimate process may require inspection or submission of documents at certain stages, but the company should issue an acknowledgment receipt and explain why the original document is needed.
Red flags include:
- Refusal to return passport;
- Holding documents to force payment;
- Keeping original documents without written acknowledgment;
- Asking applicants to sign blank forms;
- Asking applicants to submit fake documents;
- Asking applicants to misrepresent travel purpose.
Holding documents improperly may expose applicants to coercion, exploitation, or identity misuse.
XXIII. Contracts and Written Agreements
A legitimate transaction should be documented. Applicants and clients should avoid relying on verbal promises.
A recruitment or employment-related document should clearly state:
- Company name;
- Applicant or worker name;
- Employer or client;
- Job title;
- Work location;
- Salary;
- Benefits;
- Working hours;
- Contract duration;
- Fees;
- Refund terms;
- Processing steps;
- Signatories;
- Date;
- Contact details.
For service contracts, the agreement should clearly state:
- Scope of services;
- Number and qualifications of workers, if applicable;
- Service fee;
- Responsibilities of contractor and client;
- Labor standards compliance;
- Supervision and control;
- Tools and equipment;
- Liability allocation;
- Confidentiality;
- Termination;
- Dispute resolution.
Read the entire contract. Do not sign blank documents or documents with incomplete details.
XXIV. Complaints and Legal Remedies
If a company appears to be unregistered, unauthorized, or fraudulent, possible steps include:
- Preserve all evidence;
- Stop making payments;
- Request written clarification;
- Verify directly with the relevant government agency;
- File a complaint with the appropriate agency;
- Report illegal recruitment to the proper authorities;
- Consult a lawyer or legal aid office;
- Coordinate with other victims, if any.
Evidence may include:
- Screenshots of messages;
- Job advertisements;
- Receipts;
- Bank transfer records;
- E-wallet receipts;
- Contracts;
- IDs of recruiters;
- Photos of office signage;
- Copies of permits or licenses shown;
- Call logs;
- Email exchanges;
- Witness statements.
Potential legal issues may include illegal recruitment, estafa, fraud, falsification, labor standards violations, unlawful collection of fees, breach of contract, or labor-only contracting.
XXV. Distinguishing Illegal Recruitment from Poor Service
Not every failed job application or delayed deployment is illegal recruitment. Some legitimate agencies experience delays due to employer decisions, visa processing, documentation, medical results, government processing, or changing labor demand.
However, illegality becomes more likely when there is no license, no approved job order, false promises, unauthorized collection of fees, fake documents, misrepresentation, or refusal to refund money after fraudulent representations.
The legal analysis depends on evidence and the specific facts.
XXVI. Special Concern: Overseas Employment
Overseas employment involves heightened risk because workers may leave the country, incur debt, surrender documents, or become vulnerable abroad. Verification should be stricter.
Before accepting an overseas job offer, confirm:
- The recruitment agency is DMW-licensed;
- The job order is approved;
- The employer or principal is identified;
- The salary and benefits are written;
- The work visa is appropriate;
- The employment contract is processed properly;
- Fees are lawful and receipted;
- Deployment procedures are official;
- The worker is not being asked to leave as a tourist;
- The agency is not blacklisted, suspended, or using another agency’s license without authority.
A promise of overseas work should never be treated casually. The applicant should verify before paying, resigning from current employment, borrowing money, or surrendering documents.
XXVII. Special Concern: Manpower Agencies and Labor-Only Contracting
Service companies that provide manpower must comply with labor laws. A manpower agency may be legally registered as a business but still operate in a legally problematic manner if it engages in prohibited labor-only contracting.
Indicators of a legitimate contractor may include:
- Substantial capital or investment;
- Independent business operations;
- Tools, equipment, or work premises;
- Control and supervision over employees;
- Written service agreement;
- Compliance with wages and benefits;
- DOLE registration where required;
- Payment of social benefits;
- Occupational safety and health compliance.
Indicators of labor-only contracting may include:
- Contractor merely supplies workers;
- Client directly controls the workers’ daily tasks;
- Contractor has no substantial capital or equipment;
- Contractor has no independent business;
- Workers perform tasks directly related to the client’s main business under client control;
- Contractor exists mainly to avoid regular employment obligations.
For workers, this matters because labor-only contracting may affect regularization, benefits, employer liability, and labor claims.
XXVIII. Special Concern: Security Agencies
Security agencies are subject to separate regulatory requirements. A company providing security guards or private security services cannot rely merely on ordinary business registration. It must comply with licensing and supervision requirements applicable to private security agencies.
A client hiring a security agency should verify:
- Corporate registration;
- Local business permit;
- Tax registration;
- Appropriate security agency license;
- Guard licenses;
- Training compliance;
- Firearms authority, where applicable;
- Insurance and labor compliance.
XXIX. Special Concern: Training Centers and Assessment Centers
Some companies offer training with a promise of employment. Training itself may be lawful, but it becomes suspicious if the training center promises local or overseas job placement without proper recruitment authority.
Ask:
- Is the company licensed or accredited as a training provider, if it claims accreditation?
- Is the training required for a specific job?
- Is employment guaranteed?
- Are fees refundable?
- Is there an actual employer?
- Is the training provider also acting as a recruiter?
- Is the job local or overseas?
- Does the company have recruitment authority?
Training should not be used as a disguise for collecting recruitment fees.
XXX. Practical Verification Questions to Ask the Company
A person dealing with a recruitment or service company may ask:
- What is your exact registered business name?
- Are you registered with the SEC or DTI?
- What is your registration number?
- May I see your current mayor’s permit?
- Are you registered with the BIR?
- Will you issue an official receipt or invoice?
- Are you licensed to recruit workers?
- If the job is abroad, what is your DMW license number?
- Is there an approved job order for this position?
- Who is the foreign employer or principal?
- Who is authorized to collect documents or fees?
- Are fees required? If yes, what law or rule allows them?
- Can I verify this directly with your main office?
- What is the official company email address?
- What is the complete office address?
- Who will sign the contract?
- Can I take time to review the documents before paying?
A legitimate company should not object to reasonable verification.
XXXI. How to Review a Company’s Documents for Authenticity
When reviewing documents, examine:
- Whether the document is current or expired;
- Whether the company name is consistent;
- Whether the address matches;
- Whether the registration number is visible;
- Whether the document has obvious erasures or alterations;
- Whether the scope of business matches the activity;
- Whether the signatory is authorized;
- Whether the license belongs to the same company;
- Whether the document appears copied from another entity;
- Whether the document is only a screenshot with hidden details.
Be cautious of documents sent as blurry images, cropped screenshots, or files with altered names. Ask for clear copies and confirm directly through official channels when possible.
XXXII. The Difference Between “Registered,” “Licensed,” “Accredited,” and “Authorized”
These terms are often used interchangeably, but they are not the same.
Registered usually means the business or name is recorded with a government agency such as SEC, DTI, BIR, or the local government.
Licensed means the company has permission to perform a regulated activity, such as overseas recruitment.
Accredited means the company or program has been recognized by a relevant body for a particular purpose. Accreditation depends on context.
Authorized may mean the company or individual has permission from a principal, employer, agency, or government office to act in a certain capacity.
A company may be registered but not licensed. A person may be employed by a company but not authorized to collect fees. A training center may be accredited for training but not authorized to recruit. A travel agency may be registered but not licensed to deploy workers abroad.
XXXIII. Liability of Individuals Behind the Company
In some cases, individuals behind a company may be personally liable, especially in criminal cases involving illegal recruitment, estafa, fraud, or falsification. Corporate registration does not necessarily shield individuals who personally participate in unlawful acts.
Directors, officers, employees, agents, or representatives may become involved depending on their participation, knowledge, authority, and acts.
For victims, it is important to identify:
- The person who made the promise;
- The person who received payment;
- The person who issued the receipt;
- The person who signed the contract;
- The person who claimed authority;
- The company officers involved;
- The bank or e-wallet account holder.
XXXIV. Evidence Preservation
If fraud or illegal recruitment is suspected, evidence must be preserved immediately.
Keep:
- Original receipts;
- Screenshots with dates and usernames;
- URLs of job posts;
- Copies of IDs;
- Contracts;
- Application forms;
- Payment slips;
- Bank deposit records;
- E-wallet transaction confirmations;
- Voice messages;
- Email headers;
- Photos of office visits;
- Names of witnesses;
- Copies of licenses shown;
- Proof of promises made.
Do not delete conversations. Do not rely only on memory. Evidence is essential for complaints, refunds, criminal cases, and administrative investigations.
XXXV. Data Privacy Considerations
Recruitment companies collect personal data, including resumes, IDs, passports, educational records, medical records, employment history, and sometimes financial information. A legitimate company should handle personal information responsibly.
Applicants should ask:
- Why is the data needed?
- Who will receive it?
- Will it be sent abroad?
- How will it be stored?
- Can original documents be returned?
- Is sensitive information necessary at this stage?
Be cautious about sending passports, IDs, birth certificates, or bank details to unverified recruiters.
XXXVI. Due Diligence for Online Job Offers
For online job offers, a cautious applicant should:
- Verify the company independently;
- Avoid clicking suspicious links;
- Avoid sending documents through unsecured channels;
- Confirm the recruiter’s official email;
- Check whether the company domain matches the claimed company;
- Be cautious of free email addresses for formal recruitment;
- Avoid paying fees through personal accounts;
- Confirm the position through official company contact details;
- Search for complaints or warnings;
- Ask for a written contract before accepting.
Online scams often copy the names of real companies. The fact that a real company exists does not mean the person contacting you is actually connected to it.
XXXVII. Refunds and Recovery of Payments
If money has already been paid, the possibility of recovery depends on the facts, documents, and identity of the recipient.
Possible steps include:
- Send a written demand for refund;
- Preserve proof of payment;
- Identify the recipient account;
- File a complaint with the proper agency;
- Consider criminal complaint if fraud or illegal recruitment is involved;
- Seek legal assistance;
- Coordinate with other complainants.
A written demand should state the amount paid, date of payment, purpose, promise made, reason for refund, and deadline for response. It should be factual and supported by documents.
XXXVIII. Role of Lawyers and Legal Aid
Legal assistance is useful when:
- Large amounts of money are involved;
- Multiple victims are affected;
- The company refuses refund;
- The applicant’s passport or documents are withheld;
- A criminal complaint is being prepared;
- A labor case is involved;
- A service contract has major financial consequences;
- The company threatens the complainant;
- The facts involve overseas deployment.
Legal aid may be available through government offices, legal clinics, public attorney services for qualified individuals, and non-government organizations assisting workers or migrants.
XXXIX. Practical Summary
To verify if a recruitment or service company is legally registered in the Philippines, do not rely on one document alone. Confirm the company’s legal existence, local authority to operate, tax registration, and special license if it performs regulated activities.
For ordinary businesses, check SEC or DTI registration, BIR registration, and mayor’s permit.
For overseas recruitment, check DMW license and approved job order.
For local recruitment, check applicable DOLE authority.
For manpower contracting, check DOLE contractor compliance where required.
For service providers, check business permits, tax registration, labor compliance, and contract terms.
The safest rule is this: registration proves existence, but a license proves authority for regulated activities. A recruitment company, especially one offering overseas jobs, must be more than merely registered. It must be properly licensed for the specific activity it performs.
XL. Final Legal Points to Remember
A company may be legitimate as a corporation but unauthorized as a recruiter.
A business name registration does not authorize recruitment.
A mayor’s permit does not replace a recruitment license.
A social media page is not proof of legal existence.
A screenshot of a license should be independently verified.
A licensed agency must still have an approved job order for a specific overseas position.
A recruiter using another agency’s license must be confirmed directly with that agency.
Payments should be documented by official receipts.
Applicants should avoid tourist-visa deployment schemes.
Original documents should not be surrendered without proper acknowledgment.
Contracts should be read before signing.
Evidence should be preserved if fraud is suspected.
Legal registration is only the beginning of due diligence, not the end.