Free Guides for Filipino
Online Job Seekers

30 practical articles covering everything from your first application to your first rate increase. Written specifically for Filipino beginners — no paid course required.

Most online job advice for Filipinos falls into one of two traps: it’s either too vague (“believe in yourself and apply!”) or it’s trying to sell you a ₱5,000 course before telling you anything useful. These 30 guides do neither. Each one answers a specific question that real beginners ask — about platforms, pay, portfolios, scams, equipment, taxes, and applications — with enough detail to actually act on.

What these guides are for

This library covers the full beginner journey, from the moment you’re deciding which job to try, all the way to raising your rate after your first few months of work. The guides are grouped by topic, so you can go straight to whatever question is blocking you right now — you don’t have to read them in order.

That said, if you’re brand new and don’t know where to start, read the recommended order section below. It gives you a clear sequence that avoids the most common mistakes beginners make when jumping in without a plan.

Every article is free. There are no upsells, no email walls, and no courses you have to buy before the content makes sense. If something is outdated or wrong, tell us and we’ll fix it.

How to use these guides as a beginner

Reading randomly doesn’t help. Here’s the most useful approach depending on where you are right now:

If you haven't chosen a job type yet

Start with guides 01 and 02. Guide 01 ranks the most accessible jobs for Filipino beginners and explains what each one actually involves day to day. Guide 02 answers the common worry about having no experience — because most beginners overestimate how much experience they need to get their first client.

After those two, go to the Job Paths page to read the full breakdown for whichever path interests you most.

If you've chosen a path but don't know where to find clients

Go straight to guides 03, 11, and 12. Guide 03 compares the two main platforms for Filipino beginners — OnlineJobs.ph and Upwork — and explains why most beginners get better results starting with one over the other. Guides 11 and 12 go deeper on OnlineJobs.ph and Fiverr respectively, covering profile setup and what employers actually look for.

If you're applying but getting no replies

Read guides 05, 18, and 28 in that order. They cover application message templates, what makes a strong application versus a generic one, and a step-by-step diagnostic for figuring out why nobody is responding — and what to fix.

If you want to know about money, taxes, and practical setup

Guides 13, 14, 22, and 27 cover the practical side: how to receive payments from international clients, what equipment you actually need, internet speed requirements for different job types, and what you need to know about BIR registration before you start earning.

Don’t start with the tax guide. Several beginners spend their first week worrying about BIR registration and GCash setup before they have a single client. Sort out platforms and applications first — the logistics become much simpler once you actually have a client to pay you.

— Category 01

Starting from zero experience

These guides are for Filipinos who are completely new to online work — no client history, no portfolio, no idea what to list on a profile. They answer the foundational questions: which jobs are actually accessible to beginners, how to present yourself without a track record, and what realistic expectations look like for your first few months. Read these before anything else if you haven’t worked online before.

— Category 02

Choosing the right online job platform

The platform you start on matters more than most guides admit. Upwork is global and competitive — most Filipino beginners struggle there in their first few months. OnlineJobs.ph is built for the Philippines market, where employers already expect Filipino applicants and the barrier to getting noticed is much lower. Fiverr and Facebook Groups each suit different job types and approaches. These guides help you understand which platform to start on for your specific situation, how to set up a profile that gets employers to actually respond, and what the differences in fee structures mean for your take-home pay.

— Category 03

Avoiding online job scams in the Philippines

Online job scams targeting Filipinos are common and getting more sophisticated. The most frequent type asks you to pay a registration fee, buy equipment through a specific seller, or complete unpaid “training” that turns out to be free labor. Some come disguised as legitimate companies with fake reviews. These guides are not meant to make you paranoid — most clients and employers are genuine. But knowing the red flags before you start applying means you’ll catch problems quickly instead of after you’ve already sent money or worked for free.

— Category 04

Writing applications and intro messages that get replies

The single biggest reason Filipino beginners don’t hear back from employers isn’t their skill level or their experience — it’s their application message. Most beginners send something generic (“Dear sir/ma’am, I am interested in your job posting…”) that sounds identical to every other applicant. Employers on platforms like OnlineJobs.ph and Facebook Groups receive dozens of applications per post. A message that’s two sentences shorter but addresses the specific job description will almost always outperform a longer, more polished generic one. These guides break down exactly what the difference looks like, with real before-and-after examples, templates you can adapt, and a troubleshooting guide for when you’ve been applying for weeks without a reply.

— Category 05

Payments, taxes, and beginner setup

Getting paid by international clients is straightforward once you know how — but it trips up a lot of Filipino beginners who haven’t dealt with USD-to-PHP conversions or international transfer fees before. The most common mistake is setting up a payment method your first client doesn’t support, which delays your first payment by days or weeks. The tax situation is also genuinely confusing: BIR registration is required above certain income thresholds, but the process is different for freelancers than for employed workers, and the consequences of not registering are often misunderstood. These guides cover both the practical and the legal side without making either more complicated than it needs to be.

— Category 06

Job-specific guides by path

Once you’ve chosen a job path, these guides go deeper on that specific role — what a typical workday looks like, what tools you’ll use, how to build a portfolio or prove your skills without experience, and what the honest pay ceiling looks like at different stages. Each guide is written for someone who has decided to pursue that path and wants concrete next steps, not general encouragement.

— Category 07

Equipment, internet, and learning resources

You don’t need a high-end setup to start online work — but you do need a setup that’s good enough for the specific job you’re doing. A data entry role has very different requirements from a video editing or live customer support role. These guides explain the minimum that works for each job type, help you figure out whether your internet connection meets requirements, and point you to free learning resources that are worth your time — as opposed to the dozens of paid courses that promise outcomes they can’t deliver.

What to do after reading a guide

A guide is only useful if it moves you forward. After you read one, the next step is to act on it — not read another one. Here’s how that looks in practice:

  • If you just read the “no experience” guide: pick the one job path it recommends for your situation and read that path’s full guide next.
  • If you just read the platform comparison: create a profile on the one platform it recommends for your job type. Don’t sign up for three platforms at once.
  • If you just read the application templates: take one template, rewrite the opening sentence to match an actual job post you found today, and send it. Reading templates without sending applications doesn’t help.
  • If you just read the scam checklist: check any open tabs you have with job posts you were already considering. If any of them match the red flags, close them.

The point of having 30 guides in one place is that you have a resource to come back to at each stage — not that you read all 30 before you start. Most beginners who land their first client within a month read two or three guides, act on each one, and move on. Most beginners who are still job-hunting after six months spent too long in research mode.

— Not sure where to start?

Read the Start Here page first.

It walks you through a five-minute decision process — job type, platform, and first application — so you’re not reading in circles. That’s the fastest path from “I’m trying to start online work” to actually applying somewhere.

Frequently asked questions about the guides

Are all 30 guides free, or do I need to sign up for something?

All 30 guides on this site are completely free to read — no email required, no account, no paywall. Some guides link to external tools or platforms that have their own pricing, but the guides themselves never charge anything. We keep the site running through affiliate links on some tool recommendations, which we disclose clearly.

I’m overwhelmed by the number of guides. Which one should I read right now?

If you haven’t chosen a job type yet, read guide 01 (“Best online jobs for Filipino beginners with no experience”). If you already know what kind of work you want, skip to the platform guide for that job type and the applications guide. Don’t try to read everything before you start applying — the most useful thing you can do is pick one direction and act on it.

How often are the guides updated?

We review and update guides when platform policies change, when pay ranges shift noticeably, or when a significant number of readers flag something as outdated. Guides that cover tactics (like application messages or profile setup) are updated more frequently than guides that cover fundamentals (like how to choose a job path). Each guide includes a “last updated” date at the top so you know how recent it is.

Do I need to read the guides in order, or can I jump to whatever I need?

You can jump to whatever is most relevant to where you are right now. The guides are grouped by category and each one is written to stand on its own. The recommended reading order at the top of this page is for total beginners who don’t know where to start — if you already have a job type and platform in mind, skip straight to the guides for those topics.

The guide I read said one thing, but I’ve seen different advice in Facebook groups. Who’s right?

Facebook groups can be valuable, but the advice there varies a lot in quality — some of it comes from experienced freelancers, some from people who are also just starting out and guessing. Our guides are written based on documented platform policies, community research, and direct experience. When something conflicts, check the date on both sources and see which is more recent — platform rules change, and older advice may no longer apply.

I found a mistake or something outdated in one of the guides. How do I report it?

Use the Contact page and select “Correction on an article” from the dropdown. Tell us which guide and what you think is wrong. We genuinely appreciate corrections — our credibility depends on the guides being accurate, and we’d rather fix an error than leave it in place.

Can I share or republish content from the guides?

You’re welcome to quote short passages with a link back to the source. Reproducing entire guides or sections without permission isn’t allowed. If you want to reference our content for a blog, group post, or community resource, a link back is the right way to do it — it also helps other Filipino beginners find the original.