
CALAMBA, LAGUNA — The Jose Rizal Coliseum in Calamba City—ordinarily a venue for basketball games and local pageants—was repurposed on April 28–29, 2026, into something far quieter but significantly more consequential: a one-stop platform where low- and middle-income Filipino families could walk in as renters and walk out holding a pathway to ownership. The Pag-IBIG Housing Fair 2026 for Southern Luzon, staged by the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD) and the Pag-IBIG Fund, brought together accredited developers, on-site loan processing, and thousands of housing units in a single accessible facility. The same model was replicated days later at the IEC Convention Center Cebu for the Visayas leg, which drew approximately 5,000 attendees and featured over 40 participating developers.
For the property sector, the fairs are more than a social program. They are a structural intervention that converts marginalized households—historically excluded from the formal housing market—into documented, credit-assessed, mortgage-paying participants. "Ang pagkakaroon ng sariling tahanan ay hindi lamang tungkol sa tirahan. Ito ay pundasyon ng mas maayos at may dignidad na pamumuhay," DHSUD Secretary Jose Ramon Aliling said at the Calamba opening. "Kapag ang isang pamilya ay may sariling bahay, mas nagiging matatag ang kanilang kinabukasan at mas nagkakaroon sila ng pagkakataong makaahon sa kahirapan." The statement was not rhetorical. It was operational: every loan application processed inside that coliseum represented a household exiting the informal rental economy and entering a regulated, amortized asset class.
The Arithmetic That Converts Renters Into Owners
The monthly amortization rates on display at the fairs were deliberately structured to undercut prevailing rental costs. A 24-square-meter condominium unit at Asenso Yuhum Residences in Bacolod, priced at ₱1.059 million, was offered at a monthly amortization of as low as ₱1,703.08 in the first year. A unit at Pasinaya Heights in Laguna, priced at ₱1.404 million, carried a monthly amortization of ₱2,257.91. Both figures were made possible through Pag-IBIG's subsidized 3 percent interest rate for socialized housing under the Expanded Pambansang Pabahay para sa Pilipino (4PH) Program, an interest rate that holds for the first five years of the loan term.
Pag-IBIG Fund CEO Marilene Acosta articulated the logic plainly: "Through Pag-IBIG Fund's affordable housing loan programs, many families may now find that what they would otherwise spend on rent can already be used to start paying for a home they will eventually own." The fairs addressed three structural barriers simultaneously: limited access to affordable home financing, information gaps among beneficiaries, and the high costs that historically blocked low-income families from even beginning the application process. Developer participation—roughly 50 in Laguna and more than 40 in Cebu—ensured that attendees could compare inventory across price points and locations without having to visit individual project sites.
A Regional Rollout, a National Signal
The Calamba and Cebu fairs were not stand-alone events. They form part of a broader regional rollout that began with the Central Luzon Housing Fair in Pampanga in March 2026, which showcased more than 20,000 housing units from about 40 private developers. The Southern Luzon and Visayas editions each featured more than 20,000 units, and the DHSUD has confirmed that Mindanao and Metro Manila legs will follow later in the year. The four-major-island coverage—Luzon, Visayas, Mindanao, and the National Capital Region—converts the housing fair concept from a pilot into a permanent distribution channel for socialized and affordable housing.
Each fair functions as a compressed marketplace where the sales cycle collapses from weeks to hours. Beneficiaries who attended the Southern Luzon fair included private sector workers, government employees, self-employed individuals, and members of the informal sector. The fair also attracted teachers and uniformed personnel, demographics that the government has explicitly prioritized through earlier partnerships between DepEd and Pag-IBIG. The one-stop architecture—developer booths, loan counseling, document processing, and Pag-IBIG membership verification housed in a single venue—addresses a friction that has historically killed more housing applications than any single affordability barrier.
What the Fairs Mean for the Real Estate Sector
The property market implications of the housing fair rollout are neither abstract nor purely social. Every family that signs a loan application at a Pag-IBIG fair becomes a unit-owner in a developer's project, absorbing inventory that the private market might otherwise take quarters to move. For accredited developers, the fairs provide a concentrated demand pipeline that reduces customer acquisition costs and accelerates project sell-out rates. The subsidized 3 percent interest rate, while a government expenditure, functions as a de facto demand-side stimulus that keeps the affordable housing segment liquid even when conventional mortgage rates rise.
More broadly, the fairs represent a formalization mechanism that brings informal earners into the documented economy. The Pag-IBIG Housing Loan requires membership contributions, income verification, and credit assessment—processes that create a financial identity for households that have historically transacted only in cash. Once a household enters the Pag-IBIG loan system, it becomes trackable, scorable, and eligible for future financial products. The coliseum in Calamba and the convention center in Cebu were, in this sense, thresholds: entry points not just to homeownership but to the formal economy itself.




