Key Takeaways
- November’s fuel price hike and higher electricity rates are tightening margins for small Filipino businesses.
- Diesel and gas rose by up to ₱2.70 per liter, while power bills increased due to generation pass-through charges.
- Cafés, restaurants, and online sellers doing deliveries are seeing monthly cost increases between ₱800 and ₱4,000.
- Cutting power waste, reviewing delivery costs, and adjusting pricing strategies are now survival moves, not options.
- The fuel price hike is another test of MSME resilience, but smart systems can turn this crisis into control.
Quick Gist (Taglish)
- Tumaas na naman ang diesel at kuryente ngayong Nobyembre. Maliliit na negosyo gaya ng café, karinderya, at online shops ang unang tatamaan.
- Kada litro ng gasolina, dagdag gastos. Kada oras na bukas ang ilaw o oven, dagdag singil.
- Pero may paraan pa rin para huminga, matalinong diskarte, energy saving, at tamang pag-presyo.
- Hindi mo kontrolado ang presyo ng langis, pero kontrolado mo kung paano mo haharapin ito.
Every Peso Counts When Prices Rise
Every Filipino small business owner knows the feeling. One fuel price hike and suddenly, the numbers don’t add up. This November, diesel and gasoline prices rose by up to ₱2.70 per liter, while Meralco warned of another adjustment in power bills because of generation pass-through charges and a weak peso.
For large companies, these fuel price hike is just a number on a spreadsheet. For a café in Cubao, an online seller in Cavite, or an eatery in Iloilo, they mean longer hours, smaller profit, and harder decisions. Energy and fuel costs don’t just raise bills. They chip away at survival.
When there’s a fuel price hike, small businesses don’t crash overnight. They bleed slowly, until the profit disappears.

The Quiet Cost of Running a Small Business
Electricity and fuel costs are the silent killers of profitability. You don’t feel them right away, but they cut through every sale you make.
Take a small café that uses ovens, grinders, and chillers. At a rate increase of ₱0.60 per kilowatt-hour, a café consuming 1,500 kWh monthly will see its Meralco bill jump by ₱900. Add air-conditioning and lights that run from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., and the cost climbs higher.
Small restaurants with delivery operations are battling a different kind of pain. A single delivery motorcycle consuming 3 liters a day now costs ₱150 more per week. Multiply that by three riders, and the added monthly cost reaches ₱2,000.
Here’s how the numbers stack up:
| Category | Average Monthly Use | Before Hike (₱) | After Hike (₱) | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Café or small resto (electricity) | 1,500 kWh | 16,500 | 17,400 | +₱900 |
| Sari-sari or food shop (power + chillers) | 500 kWh | 5,500 | 5,800 | +₱300 |
| Online shop doing deliveries (fuel) | 10L/day @ ₱67/L | 20,100 | 21,900 | +₱1,800 |
| Delivery rider (individual) | 3L/day @ ₱67/L | 6,030 | 6,390 | +₱360 |
These numbers show why every fuel price hike hits harder for MSMEs than for big chains. When fuel and electricity move together, small businesses lose the breathing room that keeps daily operations sustainable.
For businesses that earn ₱20,000 to ₱40,000 monthly, a ₱900 to ₱2,000 increase isn’t a minor adjustment. It’s the cost of ingredients, packaging, or one employee’s allowance.
When Electricity Becomes the Silent Killer of Profit
The danger of a fuel price hike goes beyond the gas pump. Energy prices ripple through the supply chain.
A fuel price hike push logistics companies to raise their delivery rates. App-based couriers pass those charges on to small merchants. Suppliers, who also deal with higher power bills, increase their product prices. A ₱10 rise in diesel can turn into ₱100 added to your restock bill by the time it reaches your counter.
Many café and resto owners are already cutting hours to save power. Some are closing earlier. Others are trimming their menus to reduce cooking time. An online seller who once offered free shipping now limits promos to weekends. None of it is ideal, but all of it is necessary.
What Small Businesses Can Do Now
No one can stop a global fuel price hike, but MSMEs can still take control of their operations.
1. Track consumption like you track sales.
List every device or vehicle that consumes electricity or fuel. Estimate how many hours they run each day. When you see where the waste is, you can cut without hurting output. Most small shops can save at least 5% a month by unplugging idle machines or rescheduling operations.
2. Rethink your delivery setup.
If you’re an online seller or café offering deliveries, check your numbers. Third-party apps may charge commissions, but during a fuel spike, outsourcing deliveries can be cheaper than running your own fleet. If your volume is under 15 orders a day, it’s usually better to go external.
3. Renegotiate supplier terms.
Distributors are also struggling. Many will allow delayed payments or bulk discounts if you ask. If you’ve been a consistent buyer, use that relationship to secure flexibility.
4. Invest in energy-saving tools.
LED lights and inverter-type appliances are essential now. Even small changes, like switching lighting or managing aircon hours, can save ₱500 to ₱1,000 monthly.
5. Adjust pricing carefully.
Don’t rush to raise prices across the board. Test small adjustments and communicate clearly with customers. Transparency builds loyalty. Bundle meals or offer loyalty promos so customers feel value, not burden.
Real Stories
Café owners in Metro Manila are seeing the same pattern. Sales hold steady, but bills rise faster. One café in Cubao now closes two hours earlier each night, saving about ₱1,200 monthly.
A family-run eatery increased its lunch box meals by ₱10. Some customers left at first, but most returned when they saw the same serving size and taste. “Mas okay daw na tumaas ng konti kaysa mawala,” the owner said.
Online sellers are making similar shifts. Some have reduced free delivery zones to nearby areas. Others group deliveries every other day to save on fuel. It’s not perfect, but it keeps the doors open.

The Peso Effect That Keeps Everything Expensive
The weak peso continues to push costs higher. Oil imports are priced in dollars, and the peso’s current level near ₱59 per USD means every shipment costs more. This weak exchange rate creates a fuel price hike and higher costs for power generation . Even when global oil prices stabilize, local costs remain high because of currency weakness.
The Real Bottom Line
This isn’t a one-week crisis. The fuel price hike is part of a longer cycle that tests how efficiently small businesses run.
For café owners, online sellers, and small restaurants, every peso saved matters. The challenge is not to predict when prices will fall, but to build systems strong enough to survive while they’re high.
Resilience doesn’t mean waiting for better days. It means acting now, cutting what you can, and finding smarter ways to work. Control isn’t about having more money. It’s about knowing exactly where every peso goes.
You don’t need to outspend the problem. You just need to outthink it.
FAQ Section
- Why is there a fuel price hike in novermber?
Global supply cuts and a weak peso pushed local pump prices up by as much as ₱2.70 per liter. - How does the fuel price hike affect small businesses?
The fuel price hike continues to shape how small businesses plan their weekly budgets and delivery schedules, forcing many to review pricing, energy use, and supplier contracts just to stay afloat. - How can MSMEs save on power?
Use LED lights, unplug idle appliances, and move heavy power use to off-peak hours. - Should small businesses raise prices?
Yes, but gradually and transparently. Explain the change to customers and show you’re maintaining quality. - How long will high prices last?
Economists expect fuel and power volatility to continue through early 2026, depending on global supply and peso performance.
Sources:
The fight to keep your business alive doesn’t end here. Visit HemosPH’s Business & Money page for more tools, stories, and guides built for small Filipino entrepreneurs like you.




