How to Settle Small Landlord-Tenant Disputes Through the Barangay

When a landlord and tenant in the Philippines fight over unpaid rent, a security deposit, repairs, utilities, noisy occupants, damage to the unit, or a move-out date, the barangay is often the first practical place to go. For many small landlord-tenant disputes, Katarungang Pambarangay—the barangay justice system under the Local Government Code—can help both sides settle faster, cheaper, and with less hostility than immediately going to court.

The barangay cannot magically “evict” someone, erase unpaid rent, or decide complicated ownership issues like a judge. But it can bring the landlord and tenant face-to-face, help them sign a binding settlement, issue a Certificate to File Action when settlement fails, and create an official paper trail that may matter later in court.

What Barangay Conciliation Means in Landlord-Tenant Disputes

Barangay conciliation is a community-level mediation process handled by the Lupong Tagapamayapa, commonly called the Lupon. The Lupon is chaired by the Punong Barangay and exists to help people settle disputes before filing cases in court.

For landlord-tenant issues, barangay conciliation commonly covers:

  • unpaid rent;
  • delayed return of security deposit;
  • disagreement over repairs;
  • water, electricity, internet, or association dues charged to the tenant;
  • alleged damage to the unit;
  • refusal to vacate after the lease expires;
  • complaints about disturbances, pets, garbage, guests, or use of common areas;
  • disagreements about move-out inspection and turnover of keys;
  • claims that the landlord is harassing the tenant or that the tenant is refusing reasonable access for inspection.

The legal basis is Republic Act No. 7160, or the Local Government Code of 1991, particularly Sections 399 to 422 on Katarungang Pambarangay. The Supreme Court’s Administrative Circular No. 14-93 also gives important guidance to courts on when barangay conciliation is required before a case can be filed.

In simple terms: when the dispute is within the Lupon’s authority, the parties must usually try barangay conciliation first before going to court or another government office for adjudication.

When Barangay Conciliation Is Required Before Court

Barangay conciliation is usually required when:

  1. both parties are natural persons;
  2. the parties actually reside in the same city or municipality, or in adjoining barangays of different cities or municipalities and they agree to submit the dispute to barangay conciliation;
  3. the dispute is not excluded by law; and
  4. the matter is capable of compromise.

For landlord-tenant disputes, this often means a barangay process is required when the landlord and tenant are both individuals and the leased property, residence of the parties, or relevant venue falls within the rules under Section 409 of RA 7160.

Where to File the Barangay Complaint

For lease disputes involving a house, apartment, room, bedspace, condominium unit, or commercial space, the safest starting point is usually the barangay where the leased property is located.

Under Section 409 of the Local Government Code:

Type of dispute Proper barangay venue
Parties live in the same barangay Barangay where they both reside
Parties live in different barangays in the same city or municipality Barangay where the respondent resides, at the complainant’s choice if there are several respondents
Dispute involves real property or an interest in it Barangay where the property, or the larger portion of it, is located
Dispute arose in a workplace or school Barangay where the workplace or school is located

For rentals, the “real property” rule is usually important because the dispute is connected to possession, use, or occupancy of the leased premises.

When Barangay Conciliation Is Not Required

Not every landlord-tenant dispute must pass through barangay conciliation. Some cases are excluded.

Barangay conciliation is generally not required when:

  • one party is the government or a government office;
  • one party is a public officer and the dispute relates to official functions;
  • one party is a corporation, partnership, condominium corporation, property management company, or other juridical entity;
  • the parties actually reside in different cities or municipalities, unless the barangays adjoin and both sides agree to submit to barangay conciliation;
  • the real properties involved are located in different cities or municipalities, unless the parties agree;
  • urgent legal action is needed, such as a case with a request for preliminary injunction, attachment, replevin, support pending litigation, or similar provisional remedies;
  • the claim is about a labor dispute, agrarian reform dispute, or another matter assigned by law to a special body;
  • the offense involved has a penalty of more than one year of imprisonment or a fine of more than ₱5,000;
  • there is no private offended party.

This matters in rental cases involving companies. For example:

  • If the landlord is ABC Realty Corporation, barangay conciliation is generally not mandatory because a corporation is not an individual.
  • If the tenant signed with a property management company, the dispute may fall outside mandatory barangay conciliation.
  • If the landlord and tenant are both private individuals living in the same city, barangay conciliation is more likely required.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly treated barangay conciliation as a condition precedent when applicable. This means that if a party files a court case too early, the other side may ask for dismissal or raise prematurity. In Ngo v. Gabelo, G.R. No. 207707, February 17, 2020, the Supreme Court emphasized that non-compliance with required barangay conciliation can make the complaint dismissible when properly and timely raised.

Basic Rights and Obligations of Landlords and Tenants

Barangay officials do not decide rental disputes based only on sympathy. The discussion should still be grounded on law, contract, receipts, and fairness.

The main law on lease obligations is the Civil Code of the Philippines, especially Articles 1654 to 1673.

Landlord’s Basic Duties

Under Article 1654 of the Civil Code, the lessor or landlord must:

  • deliver the property in a condition fit for the intended use;
  • make necessary repairs during the lease to keep the property suitable for that use, unless the contract says otherwise;
  • maintain the tenant in peaceful and adequate enjoyment of the lease.

This is why tenants commonly complain at the barangay when the unit has unsafe electrical wiring, leaking pipes, broken doors, flooding, pest infestation, or the landlord keeps entering the unit without permission.

Tenant’s Basic Duties

Under Article 1657 of the Civil Code, the lessee or tenant must:

  • pay rent according to the lease terms;
  • use the property with proper care;
  • use the property only for the agreed purpose;
  • pay expenses for the lease deed if required.

This is why landlords commonly complain at the barangay when the tenant is behind on rent, damages the unit, subleases without permission, uses a residential unit for business without consent, refuses inspection after notice, or will not leave after the lease ends.

When a Tenant May Raise Repairs as a Defense

Under Article 1658, a tenant may suspend rent payment if the landlord fails to make necessary repairs or fails to maintain peaceful and adequate enjoyment of the property.

In real life, however, a tenant should be careful. Simply saying “I stopped paying because the landlord did not repair” can backfire if there is no proof. A tenant should keep:

  • written repair requests;
  • photos and videos of the defect;
  • messages showing the landlord was notified;
  • receipts for urgent repairs, if the tenant paid first;
  • proof that the problem made the unit unsafe or substantially unusable.

For urgent repairs, Article 1663 allows the tenant, in order to avoid imminent danger, to order repairs at the landlord’s cost if the landlord fails to act.

Rent Control Issues: When the Rent Is ₱10,000 or Below

Some residential leases are also affected by Republic Act No. 9653, the Rent Control Act of 2009, and later rental regulation issued by housing authorities.

RA 9653 covers certain lower-rent residential units and includes rules on rent increases, advance rent, deposits, and grounds for ejectment. The law provides, among others, that a lessor cannot demand more than one month advance rent and more than two months deposit for covered units.

For 2026, the National Human Settlements Board set a 1% rent increase limit for covered residential units occupied by the same tenants as of 2025, paying ₱10,000 or less per month, and continuing or renewing their lease in 2026, as reported by the government through the Philippine News Agency.

This is especially relevant in barangay disputes where a tenant says:

  • “My landlord increased my rent from ₱8,000 to ₱10,000 suddenly.”
  • “The landlord is asking for three months advance and three months deposit.”
  • “The landlord wants me out because I refused an illegal rent increase.”

For covered units, RA 9653 also recognizes judicial ejectment grounds such as:

  • subleasing without written consent;
  • three months of rent arrears;
  • legitimate need of the owner to repossess the unit for personal use or immediate family use, subject to conditions;
  • necessary repairs due to condemnation by proper authorities;
  • expiration of the lease contract.

What the Barangay Can and Cannot Do

The barangay process is useful, but it has limits.

Barangay can do Barangay cannot do
Summon both parties for mediation Force a tenant out without lawful process
Help parties sign a written settlement Decide complicated ownership or title issues like a court
Issue a Certificate to File Action if settlement fails Act as the sheriff in an ejectment case
Help enforce a valid barangay settlement within six months Allow padlocking, utility disconnection, or throwing out belongings
Document non-appearance or refusal to settle Award large or complex damages after a formal trial

A landlord should not use the barangay as a shortcut for self-help eviction. Padlocking the unit, removing the tenant’s belongings, disconnecting utilities, threatening violence, or using barangay tanods to pressure the tenant can create separate civil or criminal problems, including possible complaints for coercion or other offenses depending on the facts.

A tenant should also not treat the barangay process as an excuse to ignore rent, damage the unit, threaten the landlord, or delay indefinitely. If there is no settlement, the landlord may proceed to court with stronger documentation.

Step-by-Step: How to Settle a Small Landlord-Tenant Dispute Through the Barangay

1. Identify the Real Issue

Before going to the barangay, write down the specific problem. Avoid filing a vague complaint like “tenant is bad” or “landlord is unfair.”

Be specific:

  • “Tenant owes ₱18,000 rent for March, April, and May 2026.”
  • “Landlord has not returned the ₱20,000 security deposit after move-out on June 1, 2026.”
  • “Tenant refuses to vacate after lease expired on May 31, 2026.”
  • “Landlord increased rent by 25% although the unit is covered by rent control.”
  • “Tenant damaged the kitchen cabinet, door lock, and bathroom tiles.”

Barangay mediation works better when the issue can be reduced to money, dates, repairs, turnover, or conduct.

2. Gather Documents Before Filing

Bring copies, not just screenshots on your phone.

Useful documents include:

Document Why it matters
Lease contract Shows rent, term, deposit, rules, penalties, and move-out obligations
Receipts or bank transfer records Proves payment or non-payment
Demand letter Shows prior notice, especially for unpaid rent or vacating
Text messages, emails, chat screenshots Shows requests, admissions, promises, or refusal
Photos/videos of damage or repairs Supports claims about condition of the unit
Move-in and move-out inventory Helps resolve deposit deductions
Utility bills Shows unpaid electricity, water, internet, or association dues
IDs of parties Helps the barangay verify identity and residence
Authorization documents Useful in limited situations, though personal appearance is generally required

For foreign tenants or foreign landlords, bring passport, ACR I-Card if available, lease contract, proof of Philippine address, and any written authority if someone else is helping communicate. However, remember that in barangay conciliation, personal appearance is the rule.

3. File the Complaint With the Barangay

Go to the barangay hall and ask for the Lupon or barangay justice desk. The complaint may be written or oral, but it is better to submit a simple written complaint.

A good barangay complaint states:

  • names of landlord and tenant;
  • addresses and contact numbers;
  • location of the leased property;
  • short facts of the dispute;
  • exact amount claimed, if any;
  • practical relief requested.

Examples of relief:

  • payment of unpaid rent in installments;
  • return of security deposit less documented deductions;
  • repair of the leaking ceiling within a certain date;
  • move-out and turnover by a specific date;
  • payment of utility arrears;
  • agreement not to harass, threaten, disconnect utilities, or damage the unit.

Barangays may charge small filing or administrative fees depending on local rules. Amounts vary by city or municipality.

4. Wait for the Summons

Under Section 410 of RA 7160, after receiving the complaint, the Lupon chair should summon the respondent, with notice to the complainant, for mediation.

In practice, timing depends on the barangay’s workload, availability of officials, holidays, and whether the respondent can be served. Some barangays act within a few days; others take longer.

If you are the complainant, follow up politely. Ask for:

  • hearing date;
  • proof that summons was served;
  • name of the barangay officer handling the matter;
  • copy or photo of the summons, if allowed.

If you are the respondent, do not ignore the summons. Non-appearance can lead to a failed conciliation record and may help the complainant obtain a Certificate to File Action.

5. Attend the Mediation Before the Punong Barangay

The first stage is usually mediation before the Punong Barangay or the authorized barangay official.

Under Section 415 of RA 7160, parties must generally appear in person, without lawyers or representatives. Minors and incompetents may be assisted by next-of-kin who are not lawyers.

This surprises many landlords and tenants. You may consult a lawyer before or after the barangay hearing, but the lawyer generally does not argue for you inside the barangay conciliation proceeding.

During mediation:

  • stay calm;
  • stick to facts;
  • bring documents;
  • avoid insults;
  • propose realistic terms;
  • ask that important admissions and agreements be written down.

For example, instead of saying, “This tenant is abusive and shameless,” say:

“The tenant paid rent until February 2026. Rent for March, April, and May remains unpaid at ₱12,000 per month. I am willing to accept ₱6,000 now, ₱6,000 every payday, and move-out by July 31, 2026.”

6. If Mediation Fails, Proceed to the Pangkat

If the Punong Barangay cannot settle the dispute within the period allowed by law, the matter is referred to a Pangkat ng Tagapagkasundo, usually a panel of three persons chosen from the Lupon.

The Pangkat tries again to conciliate the parties.

Typical legal timeline:

Stage Usual legal period
Mediation before Punong Barangay Up to 15 days from first meeting
Constitution of Pangkat if mediation fails Promptly after failed mediation
Pangkat conciliation 15 days from convening
Possible extension Up to another 15 days in proper cases

In practice, the process may take around 30 to 45 days, sometimes longer if notices are delayed, parties ask for resetting, or the barangay has a heavy docket.

7. Put Any Settlement in Writing

If both sides reach an agreement, insist on a written Kasunduan or barangay settlement.

Under Section 411 of RA 7160, the settlement must be in writing, in a language or dialect known to the parties, signed by them, and attested by the proper Lupon or Pangkat officer.

A strong barangay settlement should include:

  • exact amount to be paid;
  • due dates and payment method;
  • what happens if a payment is missed;
  • move-out date, if any;
  • turnover details, including keys, access cards, parking stickers, and remotes;
  • repair obligations and deadlines;
  • deposit deductions and supporting receipts;
  • utility bill responsibility;
  • no-harassment or no-threat clause;
  • statement that parties understand and voluntarily sign.

Avoid vague terms such as:

  • “Tenant will pay soon.”
  • “Landlord will return deposit if okay.”
  • “Tenant will leave when able.”
  • “Parties will be good to each other.”

Use clear terms instead:

  • “Tenant shall pay ₱5,000 on July 15, 2026 and ₱5,000 on July 30, 2026 through GCash to 09XX-XXX-XXXX.”
  • “Tenant shall vacate and turn over the unit, keys, and access card not later than 5:00 p.m. on August 15, 2026.”
  • “Landlord shall return ₱12,000 of the security deposit on or before July 20, 2026 after deducting ₱3,000 for unpaid water bills supported by attached billing statements.”

8. Understand the 10-Day Rule

Under Section 416 of RA 7160, a valid barangay amicable settlement or arbitration award has the force and effect of a final judgment of a court after 10 days from its execution, unless properly repudiated or challenged.

A party may repudiate the settlement within the legal period if consent was affected by grounds such as fraud, violence, or intimidation.

This is why nobody should sign a barangay settlement just to “end the hearing” if they do not understand it. Once the 10-day period passes without proper repudiation, the settlement becomes much harder to avoid.

9. If There Is No Settlement, Ask for the Correct Certificate

If settlement fails, the barangay may issue a Certificate to File Action. This document tells the court or government office that the parties went through the required barangay process but did not settle.

The certificate is important if the next step is:

  • unlawful detainer or ejectment case;
  • small claims case for unpaid rent or deposit;
  • civil action for damages;
  • complaint with another office, if proper.

Make sure the certificate is accurate. It should not falsely say there was a personal confrontation if no proper confrontation occurred. It should also indicate whether the failure was due to non-settlement, non-appearance, or repudiation of a settlement.

Supreme Court guidance warns against premature or improper issuance of certificates. A defective certificate may create problems later.

What Happens If the Barangay Settlement Is Violated?

If one party signs a barangay settlement and later refuses to comply, the other party may enforce it.

Under Section 417 of RA 7160:

  • within six months from the settlement, it may be enforced by execution through the Lupon;
  • after six months, it may be enforced by action in the proper city or municipal court.

The Supreme Court in Sebastian v. Ng, G.R. No. 164594, April 22, 2015, explained this two-tiered mode of enforcement and recognized that a final barangay settlement can be enforced like a final judgment.

For small money claims, enforcement may fall under the Rules on Expedited Procedures in the First Level Courts, A.M. No. 08-8-7-SC, depending on the amount and nature of the claim. Ejectment cases, including unlawful detainer and forcible entry, are also covered by summary procedure in first-level courts.

Barangay Conciliation vs. Demand Letter vs. Ejectment Case

These are related but not the same.

Step Purpose Important note
Demand letter Formally asks tenant to pay, comply, or vacate Often important before unlawful detainer based on unpaid rent or lease violation
Barangay conciliation Attempts settlement before court Required only when the dispute falls within Lupon authority
Certificate to File Action Shows barangay settlement failed Often attached to later court complaint
Ejectment case Court case to recover possession Filed in MeTC, MTCC, MTC, or MCTC depending on location
Writ of execution Sheriff-enforced implementation of court judgment Needed for forced eviction if tenant refuses to leave

For unpaid rent or violation of lease conditions, Rule 70, Section 2 of the Rules of Court generally requires a demand to pay or comply and to vacate before filing unlawful detainer, unless otherwise stipulated. The tenant must fail to comply after the required period: 15 days for land or 5 days for buildings.

If the ejectment is based on expiration of the lease term, the rules may differ. In Cruz v. Spouses Christensen, G.R. No. 205539, October 4, 2017, the Supreme Court explained that prior demand to pay or comply is unnecessary when the unlawful detainer is based on expiration of the lease, although a clear notice to vacate is still practically important.

Common Landlord-Tenant Scenarios at the Barangay

Tenant Has Unpaid Rent but Wants Time to Pay

This is one of the most common barangay rental disputes.

A practical settlement may include:

  • acknowledgment of the exact unpaid amount;
  • partial payment on signing;
  • installment schedule;
  • waiver or reduction of penalties if paid on time;
  • move-out date if the tenant cannot continue the lease;
  • default clause if the tenant misses payment.

Example:

Term Sample wording
Unpaid rent “Tenant acknowledges unpaid rent of ₱24,000 for April and May 2026.”
Payment plan “Tenant shall pay ₱8,000 every 15th and 30th day of the month until fully paid.”
Default “Failure to pay one installment within five days from due date makes the full unpaid balance immediately demandable.”
Move-out “Tenant shall vacate on or before August 31, 2026 if arrears are not fully paid by that date.”

Landlord Refuses to Return Security Deposit

Deposit disputes often happen because the lease contract is unclear or there was no move-out inspection.

The tenant should bring:

  • lease contract;
  • deposit receipt;
  • photos at move-in and move-out;
  • proof of full payment of utilities;
  • messages showing turnover of keys.

The landlord should bring:

  • photos of damage;
  • repair estimates or receipts;
  • unpaid bills;
  • inventory checklist;
  • move-out report.

A fair barangay settlement may say:

  • how much deposit is returned;
  • what deductions are allowed;
  • deadline for payment;
  • supporting documents for deductions;
  • where the payment will be sent if the tenant has already moved away.

Tenant Refuses to Vacate After Lease Expired

The barangay may help the parties agree on a peaceful move-out date, but it should not be used for forced eviction.

A practical settlement may include:

  • final move-out date;
  • rent or reasonable compensation until turnover;
  • waiver of some penalties if the tenant leaves on time;
  • turnover inspection schedule;
  • agreement on belongings left behind;
  • no lockout before the agreed date.

If the tenant still refuses, the landlord may need to file an unlawful detainer case in the proper first-level court.

Landlord Wants to Enter the Unit for Inspection

A landlord owns the property, but a tenant has the right to peaceful enjoyment during the lease. A landlord should not enter at will unless the lease clearly allows it or there is an emergency.

A barangay settlement can set inspection rules:

  • at least 24 or 48 hours’ written notice;
  • inspection only during reasonable hours;
  • tenant or representative present;
  • emergency access only for urgent risks like fire, flooding, or electrical danger;
  • photos limited to damage or repairs, not personal belongings.

Tenant Complains of Utility Disconnection or Padlocking

A landlord should not cut water, electricity, or access to force payment or eviction. Even if rent is unpaid, the proper route is demand, barangay conciliation if required, and court action if needed.

At the barangay, the tenant may ask for:

  • restoration of access or utilities;
  • agreement not to harass or threaten;
  • schedule for payment if rent is unpaid;
  • written move-out plan if continued stay is no longer workable.

If there is violence, threats, destruction of property, or unlawful entry, separate police or court remedies may be necessary.

Foreign Tenant or Foreign Landlord Is Involved

Nationality alone does not prevent barangay conciliation. A foreigner can be a tenant, lessor of a condominium unit, or representative of an owner, depending on the legal arrangement.

What matters more is:

  • whether the party is an individual or a company;
  • whether the party actually resides in the relevant city or municipality;
  • whether the dispute falls within Lupon authority;
  • whether the party can personally appear.

Foreigners should bring passport, ACR I-Card if available, lease contract, proof of address, and payment records. If documents were executed abroad, they may need notarization and apostille for later court or formal use, depending on the document and country.

Foreign ownership rules are a separate issue. Foreigners generally cannot own private land in the Philippines due to constitutional restrictions, but they may lease property and may own condominium units subject to the condominium law’s foreign ownership limits. For a simple rental dispute, the barangay usually focuses on possession, payment, repairs, and settlement—not land ownership unless ownership is directly disputed.

Required Documents Checklist

Bring at least two sets of photocopies if possible.

For landlord For tenant
Valid ID Valid ID
Lease contract Lease contract
Proof of ownership or authority to lease Rent receipts or transfer confirmations
Rent ledger or statement of account Deposit receipt
Demand letters and proof of service Photos/videos of unit condition
Utility bills or association dues Repair requests and landlord replies
Photos of damage Move-out photos and turnover proof
Repair receipts or estimates Proof of returned keys or access cards
Prior notices to vacate Messages showing agreements or admissions

If the lease was verbal, bring proof that a lease existed:

  • receipts;
  • bank transfers;
  • text messages;
  • witness statements;
  • barangay certificate of residence;
  • photos showing occupancy;
  • utility bills under the tenant’s name.

A verbal lease can still create rights and obligations, but it is harder to prove details like term, deposit, penalties, and repair responsibilities.

Practical Tips for a Better Barangay Settlement

For Landlords

  • Do not threaten, shame, or harass the tenant.
  • Do not padlock, disconnect utilities, or remove belongings.
  • Bring a clear statement of account.
  • Separate unpaid rent from utilities, damage, penalties, and attorney’s fees.
  • Be realistic if the tenant has no ability to pay everything immediately.
  • If you want the tenant to vacate, propose a clear turnover date.
  • Put all payment and move-out terms in writing.

For Tenants

  • Do not ignore barangay notices.
  • Bring receipts and proof of payment.
  • If you cannot pay in full, propose a realistic installment plan.
  • If you are claiming repairs, bring photos and proof of notice to the landlord.
  • If you moved out, bring proof of turnover and utility clearance.
  • Do not sign a settlement you cannot comply with.
  • Ask for clear deposit return terms, including deadline and deductions.

For Both Sides

  • Focus on documents, not insults.
  • Avoid recording people secretly if it may escalate the dispute.
  • Ask for copies of everything you sign.
  • Make sure the settlement uses dates, amounts, and specific obligations.
  • Confirm what happens if either side defaults.
  • Keep all receipts after settlement.

Common Pitfalls That Make Barangay Rental Disputes Worse

Filing in the Wrong Barangay

If the dispute involves the leased unit, file where the property is located or ask the Lupon desk to confirm proper venue. Filing in the wrong barangay can waste time and may result in venue objections.

Treating the Barangay Like a Court

Barangay conciliation is not a full trial. It is designed to settle. If you need a binding court order for eviction, damages, injunction, or enforcement beyond barangay authority, you may still need court action.

Signing a Vague Kasunduan

A vague settlement often creates a second dispute. “Tenant will pay when able” is not enforceable in a practical way. Use exact amounts and dates.

Ignoring the 10-Day Finality Rule

A barangay settlement can become final after 10 days. Do not sign under pressure if the terms are wrong, incomplete, or impossible.

Skipping Barangay Conciliation When It Is Required

If barangay conciliation is mandatory and you file in court without it, the case may be dismissed or delayed if the other party timely raises the issue.

Thinking a Barangay Certificate Automatically Wins the Case

A Certificate to File Action only proves that barangay conciliation failed or was not completed for a recognized reason. It does not prove that the landlord or tenant is correct on the merits.

Confusing Deposit With Last Month’s Rent

Many tenants assume the deposit can automatically cover the last month’s rent. Many lease contracts prohibit this. Under RA 9653, deposits are generally meant to answer for unpaid rent, utilities, or damage at the end of the lease, but the exact handling still depends on the law, contract, and facts.

Forgetting Proof of Service

Demand letters, notices to vacate, and barangay summons matter only if service can be proven. Keep receiving copies, photos of delivery, courier tracking, registered mail cards, or written acknowledgments.

What to Do If Barangay Settlement Fails

If the dispute remains unresolved, the next step depends on the issue.

Problem Possible next step
Unpaid rent only Small claims case, depending on amount and nature of claim
Deposit refund only Small claims case, if it is a money claim within the threshold
Tenant refuses to vacate Unlawful detainer case in the proper first-level court
Landlord used threats, violence, lockout, or property removal Possible civil, criminal, or protective remedies depending on facts
Major property damage Civil action or criminal complaint depending on evidence and intent
Dispute involves a company Court or proper agency route may apply; barangay conciliation may not be mandatory
Rent control violation Barangay settlement attempt, then court or appropriate government remedy depending on the issue

For ejectment, the case is generally filed in the Metropolitan Trial Court, Municipal Trial Court in Cities, Municipal Trial Court, or Municipal Circuit Trial Court with territorial jurisdiction over the property.

Under the Rules on Expedited Procedures in the First Level Courts, forcible entry and unlawful detainer cases are handled under summary procedure.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a landlord evict a tenant through the barangay?

The barangay can help the landlord and tenant agree on a voluntary move-out date, but it cannot replace a court ejectment case when the tenant refuses to leave. Forced eviction generally requires a court judgment and proper execution by the sheriff.

Is barangay conciliation required before filing an ejectment case?

It depends. If the landlord and tenant are individuals and the dispute falls within the Lupon’s authority, barangay conciliation is often required before court. If one party is a corporation or the parties reside in different cities or municipalities and do not fall under the exception, it may not be mandatory.

Can a tenant file at the barangay to get the security deposit back?

Yes, if the dispute is within barangay authority. Deposit refund disputes are common barangay matters. The tenant should bring the lease contract, deposit receipt, proof of move-out, utility clearance, photos, and messages about turnover.

What if the landlord refuses to attend the barangay hearing?

If the respondent refuses to appear despite proper summons, the barangay may issue the proper certification depending on the circumstances. The complainant should ask the barangay to record the non-appearance accurately.

Are lawyers allowed in barangay conciliation?

As a rule, parties must appear personally without lawyers or representatives. Lawyers may advise a party outside the hearing, but they generally do not appear as counsel in the barangay conciliation itself.

Can an OFW landlord send a representative to the barangay?

Barangay conciliation generally requires personal appearance. In practice, some barangays may receive documents from a family member or attorney-in-fact for coordination, but the formal confrontation requirement can become an issue. If the OFW is abroad, the barangay may be unable to complete conciliation properly, and later court strategy should account for that.

What happens if we sign a barangay settlement and the tenant still does not pay?

If the settlement becomes final and is not repudiated within the legal period, it may be enforced through the Lupon within six months. After six months, it may be enforced by action in the proper city or municipal court.

Can the landlord keep the entire security deposit for damage?

Only if justified by the contract, law, and evidence. The landlord should show unpaid rent, unpaid utilities, actual damage beyond ordinary wear and tear, and receipts or reasonable estimates. Normal aging, faded paint from ordinary use, or minor wear may not justify taking the whole deposit.

Can the tenant stop paying rent because the landlord refuses repairs?

The Civil Code recognizes situations where the tenant may suspend rent if the landlord fails to make necessary repairs or maintain peaceful enjoyment. But the tenant should document the defect, notice to the landlord, and seriousness of the problem. Without proof, non-payment may expose the tenant to an ejectment claim.

Is a barangay settlement the same as a court judgment?

After 10 days, if not properly repudiated or challenged, a valid barangay settlement has the force and effect of a final court judgment under Section 416 of the Local Government Code. Enforcement still follows the proper process under Section 417.

Key Takeaways

  • Many small landlord-tenant disputes in the Philippines can and should start at the barangay if they fall within Katarungang Pambarangay rules.
  • Barangay conciliation is often required when both landlord and tenant are individuals residing in the same city or municipality and no legal exception applies.
  • The barangay can mediate, document non-settlement, issue a Certificate to File Action, and help enforce a valid settlement within six months.
  • The barangay cannot lawfully perform forced eviction without the proper court process.
  • A written barangay settlement should be specific: exact amounts, deadlines, move-out date, repair obligations, deposit deductions, and default consequences.
  • A valid settlement can become final after 10 days and may be enforced like a court judgment.
  • Landlords should avoid self-help eviction; tenants should avoid ignoring notices or withholding payment without proof.
  • Good documents—lease contract, receipts, messages, photos, demand letters, utility bills, and move-out records—often determine whether the barangay process leads to a fair settlement.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.