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4 Bedroom House for sale in Talon Dos, Metro Manila, Las Piñas, Metro Manila

Manila, Philippines

Guide Price

$566372

32000000 PHP

PROPERTY TYPE

house

BEDROOMS

4

BATHROOMS

4

4 Bedroom House for sale in Talon Dos, Metro Manila, Las Piñas, Metro Manila - Photo 2
4 Bedroom House for sale in Talon Dos, Metro Manila, Las Piñas, Metro Manila - Photo 3
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Description

2 Storey-Corner lot Residence

• 3 Car Garage

• Furnished

SELLING PRICE - 32M

BIG Discounts for CASH Buyers!!!

LOT AREA - 218 Sqm

FLOOR AREA - 335 Sqm

HOUSE COMPONENT:

Ground Floor

• 3 Car garage

• Sunken Living Area

• Dining Area

• Covered Lanai

• Guest Room / Multi-purpose room with T&B

• Clean kitchen with island & full kitchen equipment

• Kitchen sink equipped with source of potable alkaline water

• Pantry cabinet

• Powder Room

• Daily Kitchen

• Laundry and Hampering Area

• Maids Room with T&B

• Service / Utility Area

Second Floor

• Master BR with Walk-in closet, Full T&B, & Big Balcony

• BR 1 with full T&B & Balcony

• BR 2 with full T&B & Loft

• 2nd Flr Family area with Balcony

FEATURES:

1. 8 Channel CCTV with mobile monitoring.

2. Split type Aircon on all bedrooms, multi-purpose room, and dining area.

3. With Centralized water heater on Bathrooms.

4. Shower Enclosure on Bathrooms

5. Cooktop, Rangehood, Microwave & built-in Oven on Clean Kitchen

8. Pressurized water pump (bladder type) & 600L Stainless Storage Tank

9. Aluminum cabinets on daily kitchen

9. Landscaping

FULL COMPLETION: (Ready for Viewing)

OCT. 1, 2025 Telephone number: View Phone

Living 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
See all Philippines listings

Philippines at a glance

How Philippines scores for American expats

💰Cost of Living
Affordable
🛡️Safety
Use caution
🗣️English Spoken
Widely
🏥Healthcare
Basic
🌬️Air Quality
Poor
📶Internet
Slow
🚶Walkability
Moderate
🚇Transit
Limited

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

Jonel Rebadomia

Next steps for moving to Philippines

Interested in this property? Here's how to move forward.

1

Understand the buying rules

Foreign ownership laws vary wildly by country. Some welcome you, others restrict or ban foreign buyers entirely.

2

Sort out your visa

Owning property doesn't give you the right to live there. Research residency options before you buy.

3

Plan your finances

Understand currency risk, international wire transfers, and whether you can get a local mortgage.

4

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.

5

Set up healthcare

Medicare doesn't cover you overseas. You'll need international health insurance or a local plan.

6

Run the full checklist

Banking, mail forwarding, power of attorney, pet import rules — the complete pre-move checklist.

Source

DotProperty.com.ph

Portal listings

Currency

PHP