I. Introduction
A personal loan is one of the most common private obligations in the Philippines. It may arise between friends, relatives, romantic partners, neighbors, co-workers, business acquaintances, online contacts, or small informal lenders. The amount may be small or large. The agreement may be written, oral, supported by chat messages, covered by a promissory note, secured by postdated checks, or evidenced only by bank transfers and repeated promises to pay.
When the borrower fails or refuses to pay, the lender’s first formal remedy is often a demand letter.
A demand letter is a written notice asking the borrower to pay the debt within a specified period. It is not merely a collection tactic. It can serve important legal functions: it documents the creditor’s claim, fixes the amount demanded, gives the debtor an opportunity to settle, establishes refusal or delay, and may become evidence in a civil, small claims, or criminal case where legally applicable.
The central principle is this: a demand letter is not a substitute for a court judgment, but it is often the first serious step in recovering a personal loan.
II. What Is a Demand Letter?
A demand letter is a formal written communication from the creditor, lender, lawyer, or authorized representative to the borrower demanding payment of a loan or obligation.
It usually states:
- the identity of the lender and borrower;
- the amount borrowed;
- the date of the loan;
- the agreed due date;
- partial payments, if any;
- the remaining balance;
- interest, penalties, or charges, if lawful and agreed;
- deadline for payment;
- payment instructions;
- warning that legal action may follow if payment is not made.
A demand letter may be sent by the creditor personally or through counsel. For larger amounts, disputed loans, or sensitive cases, a lawyer-drafted demand letter is often more effective.
III. Why a Demand Letter Matters
A demand letter matters because it creates a formal record.
It can prove that:
- the lender demanded payment;
- the borrower was informed of the amount due;
- the borrower was given a chance to settle;
- the borrower failed or refused to pay;
- the creditor acted in good faith before filing a case;
- the borrower may already be in delay;
- the creditor attempted settlement before litigation.
In personal loan disputes, borrowers often say:
- “I was never asked to pay.”
- “I did not know the amount.”
- “There was no due date.”
- “It was a gift, not a loan.”
- “The lender suddenly filed a case.”
- “I was willing to settle.”
A demand letter helps answer those defenses.
IV. Is a Demand Letter Legally Required?
A demand letter is not always required in every debt collection case, but it is often advisable and sometimes legally important.
Demand may be required or useful when:
- the obligation has no fixed due date;
- the creditor wants to place the debtor in delay;
- the creditor intends to claim interest or damages from delay;
- the creditor wants to show good faith before filing small claims;
- the creditor plans to file a collection case;
- the creditor wants to prove refusal to pay;
- the creditor intends to rely on a bounced check or written acknowledgment;
- the creditor wants to avoid unnecessary litigation.
Even where demand is not strictly required, sending one is usually prudent.
V. Personal Loan Defined
A personal loan is money lent by one person to another, usually with an obligation to return the same amount, with or without interest.
It may be:
- oral;
- written;
- notarized;
- evidenced by promissory note;
- supported by chat messages;
- paid through bank or e-wallet transfer;
- secured by check;
- secured by collateral;
- payable on demand;
- payable on a fixed date;
- payable by installment.
The legal enforceability depends on proof of the loan, the obligation to repay, the amount, and the terms.
VI. Loan Versus Gift
A common defense is that the money was not a loan but a gift. This is common between:
- romantic partners;
- siblings;
- parents and children;
- close friends;
- business partners;
- relatives abroad and relatives in the Philippines.
To prove that the money was a loan, the lender should gather evidence showing expectation of repayment.
Useful evidence includes:
- promissory note;
- written acknowledgment;
- chat messages saying “utang,” “loan,” “bayad,” “hulog,” “balance,” or similar words;
- bank transfer remarks;
- receipts;
- partial payments;
- payment schedule;
- borrower’s promises to pay;
- demand messages;
- witnesses;
- postdated checks;
- collateral agreement.
If the money was given out of generosity with no repayment agreement, it may be difficult to recover as a loan.
VII. Loan Versus Investment
Another common dispute is whether the money was a loan or an investment.
A loan requires repayment. An investment generally carries risk and may not guarantee return unless there was a separate obligation to repay.
If the borrower says the money was an investment, the lender should check:
- Was there a promise to return principal?
- Was there a fixed due date?
- Was interest promised?
- Was there profit-sharing instead?
- Was there a business agreement?
- Were there losses?
- Was the borrower personally liable?
- Were the words “loan,” “borrow,” or “utang” used?
- Were there installment payments?
The demand letter should describe the transaction accurately. Calling an investment a loan without factual basis may weaken the claim.
VIII. Loan Versus Partnership or Business Contribution
Money given to start a business may be treated as a loan, capital contribution, partnership contribution, or investment, depending on the agreement.
A demand letter for recovery of a personal loan should avoid ambiguity. It should state why the amount is a debt and not merely a failed business contribution.
Evidence may include:
- borrower’s personal acknowledgment;
- promise to repay regardless of business outcome;
- fixed repayment schedule;
- interest;
- collateral;
- postdated checks;
- statements that the money was borrowed.
IX. Loan Versus Payment for Services
If money was paid for goods or services and the other person failed to deliver, the remedy may be breach of contract, refund, fraud, or consumer complaint rather than simple loan recovery.
A demand letter should match the true transaction. If the issue is unpaid loan, demand payment of loan. If the issue is failed delivery, demand refund or performance.
X. Elements of a Strong Demand Letter
A strong demand letter should be clear, factual, and firm.
It should include:
Date of letter This establishes when demand was made.
Name and address of borrower Use complete and accurate details.
Statement of loan State when the loan was made and how much was lent.
Evidence of loan Mention promissory note, bank transfer, chat admission, check, or receipt.
Due date State when payment became due.
Partial payments Deduct any amounts already paid.
Outstanding balance State the exact amount demanded.
Interest or penalties Include only if lawful and agreed or legally recoverable.
Deadline to pay Give a reasonable period.
Payment instructions State where and how payment may be made.
Reservation of rights State that failure to pay may lead to legal action.
Signature The creditor or lawyer should sign.
XI. Tone of the Demand Letter
The tone should be professional. It should not contain insults, threats, harassment, public shaming, or abusive language.
Avoid statements such as:
- “I will ruin your life.”
- “I will post you online.”
- “I will tell your employer unless you pay.”
- “I will have you jailed tomorrow.”
- “You are a thief.”
- “Your family will suffer.”
- “I will send people to your house.”
Such statements may expose the lender to harassment, unjust vexation, defamation, grave threats, coercion, data privacy violations, or other counterclaims.
A good demand letter is forceful but lawful.
XII. Demand Letter and Harassment
Debt collection must be done lawfully. Even if the debt is real, the creditor should avoid:
- repeated abusive calls;
- threats of violence;
- contacting the debtor’s employer unnecessarily;
- public posting of the debtor’s name and photo;
- shaming the debtor online;
- pretending to be police or court personnel;
- threatening criminal prosecution without basis;
- using fake legal documents;
- entering the debtor’s home without consent;
- seizing property without court order;
- contacting unrelated relatives in a humiliating manner;
- using personal data beyond lawful purpose.
A creditor has rights, but collection must respect legal limits.
XIII. Should a Demand Letter Be Notarized?
A demand letter does not need to be notarized to be valid. What matters is that it is clear, signed, and received or sent through a reliable method.
However, some creditors execute an affidavit of service or have the letter sent by registered mail, courier, email, or counsel to prove delivery.
Notarization of the demand letter itself is usually unnecessary. The loan document, acknowledgment, or promissory note may be notarized if executed earlier or in a settlement.
XIV. How to Send a Demand Letter
A demand letter may be sent by:
- personal delivery;
- registered mail;
- private courier;
- email;
- text or messaging app attachment;
- lawyer’s office service;
- barangay delivery in some practical situations;
- service through authorized representative.
The important point is proof of sending and receipt.
Useful proof includes:
- signed receiving copy;
- courier delivery receipt;
- registered mail registry receipt;
- tracking page;
- email sent record;
- read receipt;
- chat screenshot showing receipt;
- acknowledgment by borrower;
- affidavit of personal service.
If the borrower refuses to receive the letter, the attempt should be documented.
XV. What If the Borrower’s Address Is Unknown?
If the borrower’s current address is unknown, send the demand letter to:
- last known residence;
- workplace, if appropriate and not harassing;
- email address used in the transaction;
- mobile number or messaging account;
- address stated in promissory note or ID;
- address of business;
- address in previous receipts or contracts.
The creditor should keep proof of attempts to locate and notify the borrower.
For court filing, proper address becomes important because summons must be served.
XVI. Demand Through Text, Messenger, or Email
A demand may be made electronically. Many personal loans are documented through chat, so electronic demand may be practical.
However, a formal demand letter is still preferable. The creditor may send a signed PDF copy through email or messaging app and keep screenshots showing delivery.
A simple message such as “Please pay me” may help, but a complete demand letter is stronger because it states amount, basis, deadline, and consequences.
XVII. Demand Letter Before Small Claims Case
Many personal loan recovery cases are filed as small claims if the amount falls within the jurisdictional threshold and the claim is for payment of money.
A demand letter is useful before filing because it shows the creditor tried to settle. It also helps establish the borrower’s refusal.
In a small claims case, the creditor should prepare:
- demand letter;
- proof of receipt;
- promissory note;
- chat messages;
- bank transfer proof;
- receipts;
- computation of balance;
- borrower’s ID or address details;
- proof of partial payments.
Small claims procedure is designed to be simpler and faster than ordinary civil litigation, but evidence remains important.
XVIII. Demand Letter Before Ordinary Civil Action
If the amount is large, the case is complex, or the relief sought is not suitable for small claims, an ordinary civil action may be filed.
The demand letter can support claims for:
- collection of sum of money;
- damages;
- interest;
- attorney’s fees;
- costs of suit;
- enforcement of promissory note;
- foreclosure or enforcement of security, where applicable.
An ordinary civil action may be necessary if there are complex issues such as fraud, collateral, mortgage, partnership dispute, or third-party liability.
XIX. Demand Letter and Criminal Cases
Failure to pay a debt is generally not automatically a crime. The Philippine Constitution prohibits imprisonment for debt. A person cannot be jailed merely because they are unable to pay a simple loan.
However, criminal liability may arise if facts show more than ordinary nonpayment.
Possible criminal issues include:
- estafa, if the money was obtained through deceit or abuse of confidence;
- bouncing checks law issues, if checks were issued and dishonored under applicable circumstances;
- falsification, if fake documents were used;
- identity theft or cybercrime, if online deception was involved;
- fraud through fake investment or loan scheme.
A demand letter should be careful. It may mention legal remedies but should not falsely threaten criminal prosecution if the case is purely civil.
XX. Demand Letter and Estafa
Estafa may be considered when the borrower obtained money through fraudulent representations or abuse of confidence.
Examples:
- borrower pretended to need money for a specific false purpose;
- borrower borrowed money while already intending not to pay;
- borrower used fake documents;
- borrower falsely represented collateral ownership;
- borrower induced the lender through deceit;
- borrower received money for a specific purpose and misappropriated it;
- borrower issued false acknowledgments or receipts.
But not every unpaid loan is estafa. If the borrower simply failed to pay due to financial difficulty, the case may be civil.
A demand letter in a possible estafa case should be drafted carefully because the wording may later be evidence.
XXI. Demand Letter and Bounced Checks
If the borrower issued a check that bounced, the demand letter becomes especially important.
The creditor should preserve:
- original check;
- bank return slip;
- notice of dishonor;
- proof of demand;
- proof of receipt of demand;
- messages from borrower;
- loan documents.
A demand letter in bounced check cases should state the dishonored check details, amount, bank, check number, date, and demand for payment within the legally relevant period.
Because bounced check cases have technical requirements, counsel should review the demand.
XXII. Demand Letter and Promissory Note
A promissory note is strong evidence of a loan. It usually states:
- borrower’s name;
- amount borrowed;
- promise to pay;
- due date;
- interest, if any;
- penalties, if any;
- payment schedule;
- signature.
A demand letter based on a promissory note should quote or summarize the note and attach a copy if appropriate.
If the promissory note is notarized, it has stronger evidentiary value, but even an unnotarized signed note can be useful.
XXIII. Demand Letter and Oral Loans
An oral loan can still be enforceable, but proof is more difficult.
Evidence may include:
- bank transfers;
- e-wallet receipts;
- chat messages;
- partial repayments;
- borrower’s admissions;
- witnesses;
- payment schedule discussions;
- voice messages;
- screenshots.
The demand letter should refer to all available evidence and state the facts clearly.
Example:
On 10 March 2026, I transferred ₱50,000 to your GCash account after you requested a personal loan and promised to repay it on 30 April 2026. You acknowledged the loan in our Messenger conversation dated 11 March 2026 and made partial payment of ₱5,000 on 15 April 2026. Your outstanding balance is ₱45,000.
XXIV. Demand Letter and Loans Between Relatives
Loans between relatives are common and emotionally difficult. A demand letter may feel harsh, but it can prevent further confusion.
For relatives, the letter may be firm but respectful. It may offer installment settlement to preserve family relations.
However, a lender should still document the obligation because family borrowers often later claim the money was help, gift, or share in family expenses.
XXV. Demand Letter and Loans Between Romantic Partners
Personal loans between romantic partners are often disputed after a breakup.
Common issues include:
- whether the money was a gift;
- whether it was support during the relationship;
- whether it was for shared expenses;
- whether the borrower promised to repay;
- whether the lender paid for the partner’s debts, tuition, rent, or business;
- whether there were threats or emotional pressure.
A demand letter should avoid emotional accusations. It should focus on the loan evidence.
Example:
This demand concerns the ₱120,000 personal loan you acknowledged in your messages dated [dates], not gifts or voluntary expenses during our relationship.
XXVI. Demand Letter and Online Loans Between Individuals
Online personal loans may involve strangers or acquaintances who met through social media. These cases require careful identity proof.
The creditor should preserve:
- profile link;
- phone number;
- account name;
- ID copy, if any;
- bank or e-wallet details;
- chat history;
- screenshots of loan request;
- proof of transfer;
- promises to pay;
- borrower’s address, if known.
If the borrower used a fake identity, the case may involve fraud, cybercrime, or identity theft, not merely debt collection.
XXVII. Interest on Personal Loans
Interest may be collected only if it is agreed and lawful. In general, interest should be in writing to be clearly enforceable.
A lender should not invent interest after the fact. If no interest was agreed, the demand should focus on principal and legally recoverable interest from delay or court judgment, where applicable.
Excessive or unconscionable interest may be reduced or invalidated. Very high monthly interest rates are legally risky.
A demand letter should clearly separate:
- principal;
- agreed interest;
- penalties;
- partial payments;
- total balance.
XXVIII. Penalties and Late Charges
Penalties and late charges must have a basis in the agreement. If there is no written or provable penalty clause, demanding arbitrary penalties may weaken the claim.
Even agreed penalties may be reduced if excessive or unconscionable.
A demand letter should avoid inflated computations.
XXIX. Attorney’s Fees
A creditor may demand attorney’s fees if there is a contractual basis or if recoverable under law. But attorney’s fees are generally awarded by the court, not automatically imposed by the creditor.
The demand letter may state:
Failure to pay may compel us to file the appropriate case and seek recovery of the principal, lawful interest, costs, attorney’s fees, and other relief allowed by law.
This is safer than adding arbitrary attorney’s fees without basis.
XXX. How Much Time Should Be Given to Pay?
The deadline should be reasonable. Common periods are:
- 5 days;
- 7 days;
- 10 days;
- 15 days;
- 30 days.
The appropriate period depends on:
- amount owed;
- urgency;
- prior demands;
- due date already missed;
- borrower’s conduct;
- possibility of settlement;
- court strategy.
If prior demands were already made, a shorter final deadline may be reasonable.
XXXI. Installment Settlement Offer
A demand letter may allow the borrower to propose installment payment. This may be practical if the borrower admits the debt but cannot pay immediately.
The creditor may state:
If you are unable to pay the full amount immediately, you may submit a written settlement proposal within the same period. Acceptance of any installment plan shall be subject to my written approval and shall not waive the remaining balance.
Do not rely on verbal installment promises. Put any settlement in writing.
XXXII. Compromise Agreement After Demand
If the borrower responds and offers to settle, the parties may execute a compromise agreement.
It should state:
- total debt;
- payment schedule;
- due dates;
- interest or waived interest;
- default clause;
- acceleration clause;
- mode of payment;
- acknowledgment of debt;
- waiver of defenses as to admitted amount, if appropriate;
- venue or dispute clause;
- signatures;
- notarization.
A compromise agreement may be stronger than the original informal loan evidence.
XXXIII. Promissory Note After Demand
If the borrower admits the debt but cannot pay immediately, the lender may require a new promissory note.
The note should include:
- amount owed;
- cause of obligation;
- due date;
- installment schedule;
- interest, if agreed;
- penalties, if reasonable;
- acceleration clause;
- borrower’s address;
- borrower’s ID details;
- signature;
- witnesses;
- notarization, if possible.
The lender should be careful not to replace strong evidence with a weaker or ambiguous document.
XXXIV. Acceleration Clause
An acceleration clause means that if the borrower misses one installment, the entire balance becomes immediately due.
Example:
Failure to pay any installment on its due date shall make the entire remaining balance immediately due and demandable without need of further notice.
This is useful in settlement agreements.
XXXV. Demand Letter for Payable-on-Demand Loans
Some personal loans have no fixed due date. The borrower may say, “I’ll pay when I can” or “just remind me.”
For payable-on-demand loans, the demand letter becomes important because it formally calls the debt due.
The letter should state:
Since no fixed due date was agreed, this letter serves as formal demand for payment of the loan.
The deadline should be reasonable.
XXXVI. Demand Letter for Installment Loans
If the loan is payable by installment and the borrower misses payments, the demand should state:
- installment schedule;
- missed installments;
- total overdue amount;
- whether entire balance is accelerated;
- deadline to cure default.
If there is no acceleration clause, the creditor may need to demand only overdue installments unless other legal grounds exist.
XXXVII. Demand Letter for Secured Personal Loans
A personal loan may be secured by collateral such as:
- vehicle;
- jewelry;
- appliance;
- land title;
- motorcycle;
- gadgets;
- shares;
- postdated checks;
- personal guarantor.
The demand letter should identify the collateral and the remedy if payment is not made.
However, the creditor should not unlawfully seize collateral without proper authority. If the collateral arrangement is defective or unregistered, legal advice is needed.
XXXVIII. Demand Letter and Guarantors
If another person guaranteed the loan, send demand to both borrower and guarantor, depending on the agreement.
A guarantor’s liability depends on the wording:
- guaranty;
- suretyship;
- co-maker;
- joint obligation;
- solidary obligation;
- witness only.
A person who merely witnessed a loan document is not automatically a guarantor.
XXXIX. Demand Letter to a Co-Maker
If a co-maker signed a promissory note, the creditor may demand payment from the co-maker according to the terms of the note.
The demand should attach or refer to the promissory note and state the co-maker’s obligation.
XL. Demand Letter for Loans With Postdated Checks
If postdated checks were issued, the demand letter should list each check:
- check number;
- bank;
- date;
- amount;
- reason for dishonor;
- date of dishonor.
If only some checks bounced, identify which ones. Preserve the original checks and bank return slips.
XLI. Demand Letter for E-Wallet Loans
For loans sent through GCash, Maya, or other e-wallets, attach transaction screenshots and reference numbers.
The demand should state:
- sending account;
- receiving account;
- date and time;
- amount;
- reference number;
- borrower’s acknowledgment;
- balance.
If the account name differs from the borrower’s name, explain why payment was sent there.
XLII. Demand Letter for Bank Transfer Loans
For bank transfers, attach:
- transfer confirmation;
- bank statement;
- account name;
- account number, if appropriate;
- date and amount;
- borrower’s instruction to send funds to that account.
Bank records are strong evidence, but they must be linked to the borrower’s loan request.
XLIII. Demand Letter for Cash Loans
Cash loans are harder to prove. Evidence may include:
- signed receipt;
- promissory note;
- witnesses;
- CCTV;
- chat arranging cash handover;
- borrower’s later acknowledgment;
- partial payments;
- bank withdrawal records.
The demand letter should describe the handover details:
- date;
- place;
- amount;
- witnesses;
- borrower’s acknowledgment.
XLIV. Demand Letter for Loans Paid to Third Parties
Sometimes the lender pays the borrower’s creditor directly, such as hospital, school, landlord, bank, or supplier. The borrower later disputes receiving the money.
The demand letter should state that the payment was made upon the borrower’s request and for the borrower’s benefit.
Evidence includes:
- borrower’s instruction;
- receipt from third party;
- messages;
- acknowledgment;
- proof that the debt paid belonged to borrower.
XLV. Demand Letter for Loans to a Business Owner
If the money was lent personally to a business owner, distinguish between personal and business liability.
Questions:
- Did the borrower sign personally?
- Was the borrower acting for a corporation?
- Was the money deposited to a company account?
- Was there a board authorization?
- Was the loan for business but personally guaranteed?
- Did the borrower use a trade name only?
If the debtor is a corporation, the demand should be addressed to the corporation and responsible authorized persons. If the owner personally borrowed, state the basis for personal liability.
XLVI. Demand Letter for Loans to a Corporation
A corporation has a separate legal personality. A shareholder, president, or manager is not automatically personally liable for corporate debt.
The demand letter should identify:
- corporate borrower;
- authorized signatory;
- board authority if known;
- contract or note;
- corporate account receiving money;
- due date;
- balance.
If personal guaranties exist, send separate demand to guarantors.
XLVII. Demand Letter for Loans to an Employee
If the borrower is an employee, the creditor should not immediately contact the employer unless legally justified. Publicly embarrassing the borrower at work may create legal risk.
If the loan agreement authorizes salary deduction, the enforceability depends on labor rules, employer consent, and written authorization. A private creditor generally cannot force an employer to deduct salary without legal basis or court order.
XLVIII. Demand Letter and Data Privacy
A creditor handling the borrower’s personal information should use it only for lawful collection and legal enforcement.
Avoid public posting of:
- ID cards;
- home address;
- phone number;
- employer;
- family members;
- children;
- bank details;
- private conversations;
- photos.
Even if the borrower owes money, unnecessary disclosure may create liability.
XLIX. Demand Letter and Social Media Posting
Posting a debtor online is risky. It may lead to counterclaims for defamation, cyberlibel, harassment, unjust vexation, or data privacy violations.
A creditor should use formal legal remedies instead of public shaming.
If a public warning is necessary because of fraud, it should be factual and carefully worded, preferably after filing a complaint and without exposing sensitive personal data.
L. Demand Letter and Threats of Imprisonment
A demand letter should not falsely say the borrower will automatically be jailed for nonpayment.
Safer language:
If you fail to pay, I will be constrained to pursue the appropriate civil and, if warranted by the facts, criminal remedies under Philippine law.
Avoid:
Pay within 24 hours or you will be jailed.
The latter may be inaccurate and may be seen as coercive.
LI. Demand Letter and Interest Computation
A computation table is useful.
Example:
Principal loan: ₱100,000 Agreed interest: ₱5,000 Partial payment on 15 March 2026: ₱20,000 Outstanding balance: ₱85,000
If interest is monthly, state exactly how computed.
Avoid confusing compound interest unless clearly agreed and lawful.
LII. Sample Computation Format
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Principal loan released on 10 January 2026 | ₱100,000 |
| Agreed interest up to 10 April 2026 | ₱6,000 |
| Subtotal | ₱106,000 |
| Less payment on 15 February 2026 | ₱20,000 |
| Less payment on 20 March 2026 | ₱10,000 |
| Total balance due | ₱76,000 |
A clear table reduces disputes.
LIII. Attachments to Demand Letter
Attachments may include:
- promissory note;
- acknowledgment receipt;
- bank transfer proof;
- e-wallet receipt;
- chat screenshots;
- check copy and dishonor slip;
- settlement agreement;
- previous demands;
- computation of balance.
For privacy and strategy, a lawyer may decide whether to attach all evidence or simply refer to them.
LIV. Should the Demand Letter Include All Evidence?
Not always. Including some evidence may encourage settlement. But revealing all evidence may allow the debtor to prepare false defenses.
A balanced approach is to attach key proof such as promissory note and payment transfer, while reserving additional evidence for court.
LV. If the Borrower Responds and Admits the Debt
If the borrower admits the debt, preserve the response. Ask for a written payment schedule.
A simple admission like “I will pay next month” can be valuable evidence.
The lender may reply:
Thank you for confirming the obligation. Please send your written payment proposal by [date]. Acceptance of any payment plan must be in writing and shall not waive the total balance.
LVI. If the Borrower Denies the Debt
If the borrower denies the debt, the lender should avoid arguing emotionally. The lender should preserve the denial and proceed with evidence-based remedies.
A reply may state:
Your denial is noted. I maintain my demand based on the attached proof of loan and your prior acknowledgments. Unless payment is made within the period stated, I will pursue appropriate legal remedies.
LVII. If the Borrower Offers Partial Payment
The lender may accept partial payment without waiving the balance if properly documented.
Receipt wording:
Received ₱10,000 as partial payment of the loan balance. Remaining balance is ₱40,000. Acceptance of this partial payment does not waive the balance.
Never issue a receipt saying “full payment” unless it is truly full settlement.
LVIII. If the Borrower Asks for More Time
The creditor may grant extension, but should put it in writing.
The extension should state:
- new deadline;
- amount due;
- whether interest continues;
- whether prior demand remains effective;
- consequence of nonpayment.
Avoid endless verbal extensions.
LIX. If the Borrower Cannot Pay
A borrower’s inability to pay does not erase the debt. But practical recovery may require installment settlement.
The creditor may evaluate:
- amount;
- borrower’s income;
- assets;
- employment;
- willingness to sign acknowledgment;
- collateral;
- guarantor;
- cost of litigation.
Sometimes a realistic installment agreement is better than a court judgment that cannot be collected.
LX. If the Borrower Disappears
If the borrower disappears, the creditor should:
- preserve evidence;
- locate last known address;
- check workplace or business address;
- contact through known email or phone without harassment;
- send demand to last known address;
- prepare for small claims or civil action;
- consider fraud complaint if deceit is evident;
- check if other victims exist.
A missing borrower may complicate service of summons.
LXI. If the Borrower Is Abroad
If the borrower is abroad, send demand to:
- foreign address;
- Philippine last known address;
- email;
- messaging app;
- relatives only if appropriate and not harassing;
- authorized representative, if any.
Court action may require special service procedures. If the borrower has assets in the Philippines, recovery may still be practical.
LXII. If the Borrower Is a Relative Abroad
For OFWs or relatives abroad, demand letters should be clear and respectful. Use written proof and avoid family group shaming.
If payment is through remittance, keep remittance records. If the borrower earns abroad, the demand may propose a remittance schedule.
LXIII. If the Borrower Died
If the borrower dies, the debt may be claimed against the estate, subject to estate settlement procedures. The lender cannot simply demand payment from heirs personally unless they assumed the debt or received estate assets subject to claims.
The demand may be sent to the estate administrator, executor, or heirs handling settlement.
If the loan is evidenced by promissory note, receipts, or bank transfers, preserve them for estate claims.
LXIV. If the Loan Is Secured by a Check From Another Person
If a third person issued the check, determine whether that person is a borrower, guarantor, co-maker, or merely accommodation party. Demand should be addressed according to the obligation.
Check cases require technical compliance. Legal advice is recommended.
LXV. If There Is Collateral Like Land Title
Some borrowers hand over land titles as “collateral.” Mere possession of a land title does not automatically create a valid mortgage or ownership right.
A creditor should not sell or transfer land based only on possession of title. A real estate mortgage must comply with formal and registration requirements.
A demand letter may mention collateral, but enforcement should be done legally.
LXVI. If There Is Collateral Like a Vehicle
If a vehicle secures the loan, check whether there is a chattel mortgage, deed of sale, or other document. The creditor should not forcibly take the vehicle without lawful basis.
A demand letter may state that failure to pay will result in enforcement of the security in accordance with law.
LXVII. If There Is No Written Agreement
A demand letter may help create a formal record, but it cannot replace proof of the original loan.
Before sending demand, gather:
- transfer records;
- chats;
- admissions;
- partial payments;
- witnesses;
- receipts;
- bank statements.
If evidence is weak, the demand may prompt the borrower to admit the debt in writing.
LXVIII. If the Borrower Claims Usury or Excessive Interest
The Philippines no longer applies the old usury framework in the same historical way, but courts may still reduce unconscionable interest. Excessive interest can weaken the creditor’s case.
If interest is very high, the lender should seek legal advice before demanding the full amount.
The demand may focus on principal and reasonable agreed charges to encourage settlement.
LXIX. If the Loan Was for Illegal Purpose
A loan connected with illegal activity may be unenforceable or legally risky. Courts do not aid illegal transactions.
Examples:
- money lent for illegal gambling;
- illegal drugs;
- bribery;
- illegal recruitment;
- fraudulent schemes;
- prohibited transactions.
A demand letter should not be used to enforce an illegal bargain.
LXX. If the Borrower Claims Payment Already Made
Ask for proof of payment. Compare with your records.
If payment was made to another person, determine whether that person was authorized to receive it.
A demand letter may include a payment reconciliation and invite the borrower to submit proof within the deadline.
LXXI. If the Borrower Paid Through Services or Goods
Sometimes a borrower claims they repaid through labor, goods, favors, or services. Unless agreed as payment, such claims may be disputed.
The creditor should document whether any in-kind payment was accepted and how much credit was given.
LXXII. If the Borrower Claims Set-Off
The borrower may say the creditor also owes them money. This is called compensation or set-off in appropriate cases.
The creditor should examine:
- whether the borrower’s claim is real;
- whether both debts are due;
- whether amounts are liquidated;
- whether there is documentary proof;
- whether set-off was agreed.
A demand letter may reject unsupported set-off.
LXXIII. If the Borrower Was a Minor
Contracts with minors raise special issues. A minor’s capacity to borrow may be limited, and enforcement may be difficult.
If a parent or guardian benefited or consented, legal analysis is needed. Avoid lending to minors without proper safeguards.
LXXIV. If the Borrower Was Mentally Incapacitated
If the borrower lacked capacity at the time of loan, enforceability may be affected. Evidence of capacity, acknowledgment, and benefit received may matter.
LXXV. Prescription of Loan Claims
Debt claims can prescribe. The period depends on the nature of the obligation and evidence. Written contracts generally have longer prescriptive periods than oral obligations, but the exact period depends on the case.
A lender should not delay. Sending a demand letter does not always stop prescription unless legally sufficient action is taken. Filing a case may be necessary to preserve rights.
LXXVI. Demand Letter and Acknowledgment to Interrupt Prescription
A debtor’s written acknowledgment of the debt may have legal significance. If the borrower replies admitting the debt, preserve it carefully.
A demand letter may lead to acknowledgment, but the creditor should not rely solely on informal reminders if the claim is nearing prescription.
LXXVII. Demand Letter and Court Filing Strategy
Before sending demand, consider:
- Is the borrower likely to pay?
- Is the amount within small claims?
- Is evidence complete?
- Is the borrower’s address known?
- Is there risk borrower will hide assets?
- Is criminal conduct involved?
- Is settlement better than litigation?
- Is interest computation defensible?
- Are there privacy or harassment risks?
- Should a lawyer send the letter?
A demand letter should support the eventual case, not undermine it.
LXXVIII. Sample Simple Demand Letter
Subject: Demand for Payment of Personal Loan
Dear [Borrower’s Name]:
On [date], you borrowed from me the amount of ₱[amount]. The loan was released to you through [cash/bank transfer/e-wallet] on [date], as shown by [proof]. You agreed to pay the loan on or before [due date].
Despite repeated reminders, you have failed to pay the amount due. As of [date], your outstanding balance is ₱[amount], computed as follows:
Principal: ₱[amount] Less payments received: ₱[amount] Balance due: ₱[amount]
Formal demand is hereby made for you to pay the total amount of ₱[amount] within [number] days from receipt of this letter.
Payment may be made through [payment details]. Please send proof of payment once completed.
If you fail to pay within the stated period, I will be constrained to pursue the appropriate legal remedies to recover the amount due, including filing a collection case and claiming costs, lawful interest, attorney’s fees, and other relief allowed by law.
This demand is made without waiver of any rights and remedies.
Sincerely, [Name] [Contact Details]
LXXIX. Sample Demand Letter With Interest
Subject: Final Demand for Payment of Loan
Dear [Borrower’s Name]:
This refers to the personal loan you obtained from me in the principal amount of ₱[amount] on [date]. Under our written agreement dated [date], you undertook to pay the loan on [due date] with agreed interest of [interest terms].
You have made the following payments:
[Date] – ₱[amount] [Date] – ₱[amount]
As of [date], your outstanding obligation is:
Principal Balance: ₱[amount] Agreed Interest: ₱[amount] Less Payments: ₱[amount] Total Amount Due: ₱[amount]
Formal demand is hereby made for you to pay ₱[amount] within [number] days from receipt of this letter.
Failure to pay will compel me to file the appropriate action for collection of sum of money and to seek lawful interest, costs, attorney’s fees, and other relief available under law.
This letter is sent without prejudice to all rights and remedies.
Sincerely, [Name]
LXXX. Sample Demand Letter for Bounced Check
Subject: Demand for Payment of Dishonored Check
Dear [Borrower’s Name]:
This concerns your obligation arising from the loan in the amount of ₱[amount] and the check you issued as payment:
Check No.: [number] Bank: [bank name] Date: [date] Amount: ₱[amount]
The said check was presented for payment but was dishonored by the bank for the reason [reason stated in bank return slip] on [date].
Formal demand is hereby made for you to pay the amount of ₱[amount] within [number] days from receipt of this letter.
If you fail to pay within the stated period, I will be constrained to pursue all appropriate legal remedies under Philippine law.
This demand is made without waiver of rights.
Sincerely, [Name]
LXXXI. Sample Demand Letter Through Counsel
Subject: Formal Demand for Payment
Dear [Borrower’s Name]:
We represent [Creditor’s Name] regarding your unpaid personal loan.
Our client states that on [date], you borrowed the amount of ₱[amount], which was released to you through [payment method]. You undertook to repay the loan on or before [due date]. Despite repeated demands, you have failed and refused to pay.
As of [date], your outstanding balance is ₱[amount], exclusive of lawful interest, costs, attorney’s fees, and other relief that may be awarded by the proper court.
Accordingly, formal demand is hereby made for you to pay ₱[amount] within [number] days from receipt of this letter.
Should you fail to comply, our client has instructed us to take the appropriate legal action to protect their rights and recover the amount due.
This letter is sent without prejudice to all rights, claims, and remedies of our client.
Very truly yours, [Lawyer / Law Office]
LXXXII. Sample Final Demand After Broken Promise to Pay
Subject: Final Demand for Payment
Dear [Borrower’s Name]:
This is a final demand concerning your unpaid loan balance of ₱[amount].
You previously promised to pay on [date/s], but you failed to do so. You also made partial payment of ₱[amount] on [date], leaving a remaining balance of ₱[amount].
Formal final demand is hereby made for you to pay the full balance of ₱[amount] within [number] days from receipt of this letter.
If payment is not made within this final period, I will proceed with the appropriate legal action without further notice.
Sincerely, [Name]
LXXXIII. Response Template for Borrower’s Settlement Offer
If the borrower offers to settle, the creditor may respond:
I acknowledge your proposal to pay the loan balance of ₱[amount] by installments. I am willing to consider settlement provided that you sign a written payment agreement stating the total balance, payment dates, default consequences, and proof of payment requirements. Until such agreement is signed and payments are made, my demand for the full balance remains.
LXXXIV. Receipt Template for Partial Payment
Receipt of Partial Payment
Received from [Borrower’s Name] the amount of ₱[amount] on [date] as partial payment of the loan dated [date].
Original loan amount: ₱[amount] Prior balance: ₱[amount] Amount received: ₱[amount] Remaining balance: ₱[amount]
Acceptance of this partial payment does not waive the remaining balance or any rights and remedies of the creditor.
Signed: [Creditor’s Name]
LXXXV. Settlement Agreement Template
Acknowledgment of Debt and Payment Agreement
This Agreement is executed by and between [Creditor] and [Borrower].
- Borrower acknowledges that he/she owes Creditor the amount of ₱[amount] arising from a personal loan obtained on [date].
- Borrower undertakes to pay the debt as follows: [schedule].
- Payments shall be made through [method].
- Failure to pay any installment on time shall make the entire unpaid balance immediately due and demandable.
- Acceptance of partial payments shall not waive the remaining balance.
- This Agreement does not prevent Creditor from pursuing legal remedies in case of default.
- The parties sign this Agreement voluntarily.
Signed this ___ day of ________, 20, at __________, Philippines.
[Creditor] [Borrower] Witnesses Notarial acknowledgment
LXXXVI. Evidence Checklist Before Sending Demand
Prepare:
- promissory note;
- loan agreement;
- bank transfer proof;
- e-wallet receipts;
- cash receipts;
- chat messages;
- email exchanges;
- borrower’s ID or address;
- payment history;
- computation of balance;
- bounced checks and return slips;
- prior reminders;
- witness details;
- collateral documents;
- guaranty or co-maker documents.
LXXXVII. Demand Letter Checklist
Before sending, check:
- Is the borrower’s name correct?
- Is the address correct?
- Is the loan amount accurate?
- Are partial payments deducted?
- Is interest legally supported?
- Is the deadline clear?
- Are payment instructions correct?
- Is the tone professional?
- Are threats avoided?
- Is proof of service planned?
- Are attachments complete?
- Is the letter signed?
- Is a copy saved?
LXXXVIII. What to Do After Sending the Demand Letter
After sending demand:
- keep proof of delivery;
- wait for the deadline;
- record any response;
- avoid abusive follow-ups;
- accept partial payment only with proper receipt;
- put settlement terms in writing;
- prepare court documents if unpaid;
- organize evidence chronologically;
- compute final balance;
- consult counsel if the amount is large or facts are complex.
LXXXIX. If the Borrower Pays in Full
Issue a receipt or acknowledgment of full payment.
The receipt should state:
- amount received;
- date;
- loan covered;
- that the loan is fully paid;
- release of borrower from that specific obligation;
- return of collateral or checks, if applicable.
If postdated checks were issued, return them or mark them cancelled.
XC. If the Borrower Pays Partially
Issue a partial payment receipt and state the remaining balance. Do not accidentally release the borrower from the full debt.
XCI. If the Borrower Ignores the Demand
If the borrower ignores the demand, the creditor may proceed with:
- small claims case;
- ordinary civil action;
- barangay conciliation where applicable;
- criminal complaint if facts support it;
- settlement through counsel;
- enforcement of security, if valid.
Choose the remedy based on amount, evidence, location, and borrower’s assets.
XCII. Barangay Conciliation
Before filing certain cases, barangay conciliation may be required if the parties are individuals living in the same city or municipality and the dispute falls within barangay jurisdiction.
Barangay proceedings may result in settlement. If the borrower fails to comply, the settlement may have enforcement consequences under barangay justice rules.
However, barangay conciliation may not apply if:
- parties live in different cities or municipalities;
- one party is a corporation in some contexts;
- the case is urgent;
- the offense carries penalties beyond barangay jurisdiction;
- the dispute is otherwise excluded;
- the amount or nature falls outside coverage.
A creditor should check whether barangay conciliation is required before filing in court.
XCIII. Small Claims Procedure
Small claims is often the practical remedy for unpaid personal loans. It is designed for money claims and does not require lawyers to appear for parties in the usual way.
The creditor should prepare:
- statement of claim;
- demand letter and proof of receipt;
- promissory note;
- transfer receipts;
- payment computation;
- borrower’s address;
- evidence of partial payments;
- witnesses, if needed.
Small claims can be effective when the debt is clear and the borrower can be located.
XCIV. Ordinary Collection Case
An ordinary collection case may be necessary for larger or more complex loans. It may involve lawyers, pleadings, evidence, hearings, and execution if judgment is won.
This may be appropriate where:
- amount exceeds small claims coverage;
- there are multiple defendants;
- collateral must be enforced;
- fraud is alleged;
- complex documents exist;
- injunction or attachment is needed;
- borrower has substantial assets.
XCV. Enforcement After Judgment
Winning a case is not the same as collecting money. After judgment, the creditor may need execution.
Execution may involve:
- garnishment of bank accounts;
- garnishment of receivables;
- levy on personal property;
- levy on real property;
- sheriff’s sale;
- examination of debtor in proper cases.
A demand letter is only the beginning. Recovery depends on locating assets and using lawful enforcement.
XCVI. Practical Recovery Strategy
The best recovery strategy depends on the borrower.
A. Borrower Has Job and Admits Debt
Send demand, negotiate payment plan, require written acknowledgment, and file small claims if default continues.
B. Borrower Denies Debt
Organize evidence and file the appropriate case.
C. Borrower Has Assets
Consider legal action promptly and, in proper cases, remedies to secure recovery.
D. Borrower Has No Assets
A settlement plan may be more practical than costly litigation.
E. Borrower Used Fraud
Consider criminal complaint in addition to civil recovery.
F. Borrower Is a Relative
Try written settlement first if possible, but preserve rights.
G. Borrower Issued Bounced Check
Act quickly and comply with technical demand requirements.
XCVII. Common Mistakes by Creditors
A. No Written Evidence
Lending without documentation makes recovery difficult.
B. No Proof of Release
A borrower may deny receiving money.
C. No Due Date
This creates uncertainty, though demand may fix payment due.
D. Excessive Interest
Unreasonable interest may be reduced and can make the creditor appear abusive.
E. Public Shaming
This may create counterclaims.
F. Threatening Jail for Debt
This is legally risky if the matter is purely civil.
G. Not Deducting Partial Payments
Inflated demands harm credibility.
H. Waiting Too Long
Evidence disappears and prescription may run.
I. Accepting Verbal Promises Repeatedly
Put settlement terms in writing.
J. Returning Evidence Too Early
Do not return original checks, notes, or collateral until payment clears.
XCVIII. Common Mistakes by Borrowers
A. Ignoring Demand Letters
Ignoring a lawful demand may lead to court action.
B. Making Promises Without Paying
Repeated broken promises can be used as evidence.
C. Denying a Debt Despite Written Proof
False denial may harm credibility.
D. Paying Cash Without Receipt
Payment may not be credited if not documented.
E. Issuing Checks Without Funds
This may create additional legal exposure.
F. Hiding Address
This may complicate but not necessarily prevent legal action.
G. Posting Against Creditor Online
Public accusations may create defamation issues.
XCIX. How to Prevent Future Personal Loan Disputes
Before lending money:
- use a written promissory note;
- state exact amount;
- state due date;
- state interest, if any;
- state payment schedule;
- require borrower’s valid ID;
- use bank transfer instead of cash;
- keep screenshots;
- use receipts;
- consider a co-maker for larger amounts;
- avoid excessive interest;
- avoid lending money you cannot afford to lose;
- notarize important documents;
- avoid vague “pay when able” terms;
- document partial payments.
C. Sample Promissory Note
Promissory Note
I, [Borrower’s Name], of legal age, Filipino, and residing at [address], acknowledge that I borrowed from [Creditor’s Name] the amount of ₱[amount] on [date].
I promise to pay the said amount on or before [due date] through [payment method].
[Optional: The loan shall earn interest of ___ per month/year.]
Failure to pay on the due date shall make the entire amount immediately due and demandable, without prejudice to the creditor’s right to pursue legal remedies.
Signed this ___ day of ________, 20, at __________, Philippines.
Borrower: __________________ Creditor: __________________ Witnesses: ________________
CI. Sample Acknowledgment of Loan Through Chat
A written document is best, but even chat confirmation can help. A creditor may ask the borrower to confirm:
Please confirm that you borrowed ₱50,000 from me today, payable on 30 June 2026, and that I sent it to your BPI account ending in 1234.
A borrower’s reply such as “Yes, I confirm. I will pay on June 30” can be useful evidence.
CII. Frequently Asked Questions
Can I recover a personal loan without a written agreement?
Yes, but you need proof. Bank transfers, e-wallet receipts, messages, admissions, partial payments, and witnesses may help.
Is a demand letter required before filing a case?
Not always, but it is strongly advisable and may be important to prove demand, delay, and good faith.
Can I have the borrower jailed for not paying?
Not for simple nonpayment of debt. Criminal liability may arise only if there is fraud, bounced checks, falsification, or another criminal act.
Can I post the borrower online?
It is risky. Public shaming can expose you to defamation, cyberlibel, harassment, or data privacy claims.
Can I charge interest?
Yes, if properly agreed and lawful. Excessive interest may be reduced by the court.
Can I demand attorney’s fees?
You may demand them if there is basis, but the court generally determines whether attorney’s fees are recoverable.
Can I file small claims?
Yes, if the claim falls within small claims rules and is for payment of money. Personal loans are common small claims cases.
What if the borrower is a relative?
You may still demand payment and file a case if needed. Family relationship does not erase a loan.
What if the borrower paid some amount?
Deduct partial payments and demand only the balance. Issue receipts for partial payments.
What if the borrower says it was a gift?
You must prove it was a loan. Messages, promissory notes, and partial payments help.
What if there was no due date?
You may send a demand letter making the loan due within a reasonable period, depending on the facts.
What if the borrower issued a bounced check?
Preserve the check, bank dishonor slip, and proof of demand. Consult counsel because technical rules apply.
Can I seize the borrower’s property?
Not without lawful basis or court process. Self-help seizure may create legal problems.
Can I collect from the borrower’s employer?
Usually not without proper authorization or court order. Avoid embarrassing the borrower at work.
CIII. Final Practical Checklist
Before sending a demand letter:
- Confirm the amount.
- Deduct all partial payments.
- Review the loan evidence.
- Check whether interest is supported.
- Verify borrower’s address.
- Prepare proof of delivery.
- Avoid threats and insults.
- Decide whether to offer settlement.
- Keep copies of everything.
- Prepare for small claims or civil action if ignored.
After sending:
- save delivery proof;
- monitor deadline;
- preserve responses;
- document partial payments;
- put any settlement in writing;
- file the proper case if unpaid.
CIV. Conclusion
A demand letter for recovery of a personal loan in the Philippines is a practical and legally important first step in debt collection. It formally notifies the borrower of the amount due, gives an opportunity to pay, documents the creditor’s demand, and prepares the record for barangay conciliation, small claims, civil action, or other remedies.
The strongest demand letters are factual, specific, professionally worded, supported by evidence, and free from unlawful threats. The lender should clearly state the loan, due date, payments made, balance, deadline, and intended legal remedies. The lender should also preserve proof of delivery and all loan documents.
Personal loan recovery is ultimately evidence-driven. A creditor with a written note, bank transfer record, borrower admission, payment history, and proper demand letter is in a much stronger position than one relying on memory and verbal promises. The safest approach is to document the loan from the beginning, demand payment formally when default occurs, and pursue lawful remedies without harassment, public shaming, or exaggerated threats.