Selling Gift Certificates This Christmas? A Practical Guide for Small Businesses in the Philippines

Key Takeaways

  • Selling gift certificates in the Philippines comes with different rules depending on whether the GC is sold or given for free. This determines if expiration is allowed.
  • Paid gift certificates must not expire, even if a validity date is printed.
  • Promotional, raffle, and complimentary GCs may expire, but only if they are clearly labeled.
  • Using gift certificates instead of refunds can expose your business to complaints and legal risk.
  • Clear terms when selling gift certificates protect your cash flow, staff, and long-term customer trust.

Quick Gist (Taglish)

  • Hindi lahat ng GC pare-pareho ang rules.
  • Kapag selling gift certificates ang usapan at may bayad, bawal ang expiration.
  • Kapag libre o promo, puwede, basta malinaw ang terms.
  • Delikado ang GC na kapalit ng refund.
  • Klaro ngayon, iwas problema later.

Why Many Small Businesses Get Selling Gift Certificates Wrong

Many small businesses start selling gift certificates every Christmas without realizing one thing.

They may be creating obligations that do not expire, even if they think they do.

Selling gift certificates feels simple. Print, sell, done.

But under Philippine consumer law, a gift certificate is not just a marketing tool.
It is a promise tied to money.

And when money is involved, the rules change.

Selling Gift Certificates

The One Rule You Must Understand Before Selling Gift Certificates

Here is the most important rule when it comes to selling gift certificates in the Philippines:

If you sell the gift certificate, it must not expire.

This comes from Republic Act No. 10962, also known as the Gift Check Act of 2017, enforced by the Department of Trade and Industry.

The law does not ask:

  • Who ends up using the GC
  • Whether it was a Christmas gift
  • Whether it was redeemed late

It asks one question only:

Did your business receive money for this gift certificate?

If yes, expiration dates are not enforceable.


Two Types of Gift Certificates Every Business Must Separate When Selling Gift Certificates

Most problems related to selling gift certificates happen because businesses treat all vouchers the same.

They are not.

Paid Gift Certificates

These are gift certificates that are:

  • Sold over the counter
  • Sold online
  • Included in paid holiday bundles

Once money enters your register, that value cannot disappear with time.

Printing “valid until” does not override the law.

Promotional or Complimentary GCs

These are GCs that are:

  • Given as raffle prizes
  • Used for influencer or media partnerships
  • Issued as goodwill or apologies

Because no money was paid, these may legally expire, as long as the terms are clear and reasonable.

Selling Gift Certificates

Quick Reference Table for Businesses Selling Gift Certificates

GC TypeWas It Sold?Can It Expire?What You Must Do
Retail gift certificateYesNoHonor regardless of date
Gifted but purchased GCYesNoTreat as cash equivalent
Raffle or giveaway GCNoYesClearly label as promo
Free promo voucherNoYesState validity clearly
Compensation GCNoUsually yesBe reasonable
GC instead of refundYesNoHigh legal and reputational risk

The Most Dangerous Mistake When Selling Gift Certificates

This is where many small businesses get into trouble.

A customer prepays for a service.
You cannot deliver.
Instead of refunding, you issue a GC.

At that point, something changes.

If no service was delivered, a GC is not goodwill. It is your customer’s money in another form.

Because you are still holding the payment:

  • The GC becomes a refund substitute
  • Expiration becomes legally questionable
  • Complaints become harder to defend

Calling it “service recovery” does not change the reality.

If no service was delivered, refunding is the safest and cleanest option.

Why Clear Labeling Matters When Selling Gift Certificates

Most disputes are not caused by bad intentions.

They happen because:

  • Staff are unsure which rules apply
  • Paid and promo GCs look the same
  • Terms are explained verbally but not written

This leads to:

  • Awkward counter arguments
  • Escalations during peak hours
  • Stress for front-line employees

Clear labeling reduces all of that.

Practical best practices

  • Use different designs for paid vs promo GCs
  • Mark promo GCs as “Complimentary” or “For Promotional Use Only”
  • Avoid expiry dates on sold GCs entirely
  • Train staff on one rule: sold equals no expiry

Reasonable Expiry Still Matters

Even when expiration is allowed, fairness still counts.

A promo GC that expires in:

  • 7 days
  • 30 days during peak season

can frustrate customers and damage goodwill.

Six months to one year is more realistic, especially for OFWs, families, and travelers.

Short pressure rarely builds long-term loyalty.

Selling Gift Certificates Is Not a Trick, It’s a Promise

Selling gift certificates tells customers one simple thing:

We will be here when you are ready.

When businesses treat selling gift certificates as shortcuts to lock in money, problems follow.

But when done right:

  • Customers feel safe buying them
  • Cash flow improves sustainably
  • Staff feel more confident
  • Complaints decrease
  • Trust grows

Christmas sales end.

Reputation does not.


Before Selling Gift Certificates This Season, Do This One Thing

Before selling gift certificates this Christmas, pause and ask:

  1. Which GCs are sold?
  2. Which are promo or complimentary?
  3. Are they clearly labeled and designed differently?

Fixing this now is far cheaper than fixing it after a complaint.

Good businesses understand both sides of the transaction.
We also break down when gift certificates can expire and when they legally shouldn’t, explained in plain terms for consumers.

Read: Can Gift Certificates Expire in the Philippines? What the Law Really Says

Building a Business That Lasts

Small businesses do not survive on margins alone.

They survive on trust.

Selling gift certificates responsibly shows:

  • Respect for customers
  • Respect for staff
  • Confidence in your service
  • Long-term thinking

Selling gift certificates is not a shortcut.

It is a commitment.

Source:

Want more practical reads? Explore HemosPH’s Tips section.

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