1 Bedroom Condo for sale in Woodsville Crest, Merville, Metro Manila, Parañaque, Metro Manila
Manila, Philippines
Guide Price
$175,293
9,904,050 PHP
PROPERTY TYPE
condo
BEDROOMS
1
BATHROOMS
1
Description
Woodsville Crest is a mid‑rise residential condominium complex located in Merville, Parañaque City, Metro Manila, Philippines. It’s developed by Robinsons Land Corporation and forms part of the larger Woodsville Residences masterplanned community.
Type: Residential condominium development (pre‑selling / under development)
Address: Edison Avenue, Barangay Merville, Parañaque City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Developer: Robinsons Land Corporation
Buildings: Multiple mid‑rise towers (around 8 total buildings planned)
Floor count: Typically around 9 floors per building
Features & Lifestyle
Woodsville Crest is designed for comfortable urban living and includes a suite of
amenities such as communal pools, fitness gym, clubhouse, landscaped gardens, co‑working spaces, kiddie play areas, lap pool, and BBQ areas, among others.
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Location
Highlights
Strategically located close to major transport routes (West Service Road, Edison Ave) for easy access to Makati, Bonifacio Global City (BGC), and NAIA.
Nearby conveniences include shopping centers, schools, hospitals, and entertainment hubs in Parañaque.
� Unit Types
Units in the development range from:
Studio units
1‑Bedroom units
2‑Bedroom units
Some units are designed with work‑from‑home spaces and other modern features.
Neighborhood
The project is within Barangay Merville, a residential area of Parañaque City in Metro Manila.
If you want more details like pricing, floor plans, or how to schedule a viewing, I can help with that too! Telephone number: View Phone
Location
Open in Google MapsLiving in Manila
The capital's dense urban core offers rock-bottom costs ($1,000-$1,500/month for a comfortable life) and widespread English fluency. Makati and BGC are the expat hubs with modern condos, international restaurants, and reliable infrastructure. The trade-offs are intense traffic, tropical heat, and the chaos that comes with a megacity of 14 million.
Island-hopping on weekends, karaoke as a national religion, and a Filipino hospitality so genuine that you will be adopted by your neighbor's entire extended family before your first month is over.
Visa
SRRV (Special Resident Retiree Visa) — available from age 40+. Requires $15,000-50,000 deposit depending on age and pension status. Grants indefinite stay with multiple-entry privileges. SIRV (Special Investor Resident Visa) — requires $75,000 investment in Philippine securities. No age minimum. Both offer permanent residency.
Learn more: The Complete Guide to Moving to the Philippines→Key Fact
English is an official language and widely spoken — making the Philippines the easiest Asian country for American expats to navigate daily life. Private healthcare is excellent and affordable, but infrastructure outside Manila can be underdeveloped.
Learn more: The Cheapest Cities to Live Abroad→Philippines at a glance
How Philippines scores for American expats
Cost of buying in Philippines
Estimated fees and ongoing costs for this property
Closing Costs
5-8% of purchase price
- ·Transfer tax: 0.5-0.75%
- ·Documentary stamp: 1.5%
- ·Capital gains tax: 6% (seller, but often negotiated)
- ·Registration: ~0.25%
- ·Notary: ~0.5%
Annual Costs
Property Tax
1-2% of assessed value (varies by city)
Insurance
₱5,000-15,000/yr
HOA / Condo Fees
₱3,000-10,000/mo for condos
Good to Know
Agent Fees
Seller pays (3-5%)
Foreign Buyer Note
Foreigners CANNOT own land. Can own condo units (max 40% foreign quota per building). Houses possible via long-term lease or Filipino spouse.
Legal help in Philippines
Hire your own attorney — not the seller's. We'll match you with a vetted local lawyer.
Need a local attorney in Philippines?
We'll connect you with an independent, English-speaking real estate attorney experienced with foreign buyers. Not the seller's lawyer — yours.
Contact Agent
Jemail Zapico
Next steps for moving to Philippines
Interested in this property? Here's how to move forward.
Understand the buying rules
Foreign ownership laws vary wildly by country. Some welcome you, others restrict or ban foreign buyers entirely.
Sort out your visa
Owning property doesn't give you the right to live there. Research residency options before you buy.
Plan your finances
Understand currency risk, international wire transfers, and whether you can get a local mortgage.
Know your tax obligations
US citizens are taxed on worldwide income. You'll need to file US taxes from abroad and may owe local taxes too.
Set up healthcare
Medicare doesn't cover you overseas. You'll need international health insurance or a local plan.
Run the full checklist
Banking, mail forwarding, power of attorney, pet import rules — the complete pre-move checklist.
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