All 20 known PhilSys errors
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- Check that your Birth Certificate has the PSA security paper (blue/tan watermark). Plain civil registry copies are not accepted — order from serbilis.psa.gov.ph.
- Compare the full name, birth date, and address across ALL documents you're presenting — any mismatch triggers rejection.
- If your document is expired (e.g. passport), still present it — expired passports are often accepted as a primary document. Ask the RKO explicitly.
- If the original is unavailable, present a notarized true copy and explain to the operator. Some centers accept these at their discretion.
- If all documents fail, switch to the four-supporting-document route: Voter's ID + PhilHealth MDR + Barangay Clearance + Baptismal Certificate.
- Inform the Registration Kit Operator immediately. Do not proceed without declaring the discrepancy.
- For married name vs. maiden name: present your PSA Marriage Certificate to explain the difference.
- For minor spelling errors (e.g., "Jhon" vs. "John"): present additional documents that show the correct name and explain the historical error.
- For major discrepancies requiring correction: file a Petition for Correction of Entry under RA 9048 at your local civil registry. This may take weeks — fix this before attempting registration.
- Use a utility bill (Meralco, Manila Water, PLDT, etc.) dated within the last 3 months — the billing date shown on the bill must be recent.
- If the bill is in a parent's or spouse's name, bring a Barangay Certificate of Residency in your own name instead — same-day issuance at your barangay hall, usually free.
- Ensure the street address on your registration form exactly matches the address on your proof document — even abbreviation differences can cause flags.
- In rural barangays with no utility bills: a Barangay Certificate of Residency is the most universally accepted substitute.
- Ask the operator to clean the scanner glass with the provided cloth before retrying.
- Lightly wet your fingertips (breathe on them or use a tiny amount of water) to improve conductivity — do not use lotion.
- Remove all nail polish before your appointment — even clear polish interferes with optical scanners.
- Press firmly and roll your finger slightly left to right on the scanner pad for a wider capture area.
- If all 10 fingers fail: ask the RKO to flag your record for "Degraded Fingerprint" status. You will be directed to a main PSA branch for manual biometric override where a supervisor can approve the record.
- Remove all glasses and contact lenses — including clear/transparent ones — before the iris scan.
- Face the scanner directly. Keep your eyes wide open and do not blink for 2–3 seconds.
- Avoid bright light sources directly behind you — face toward the light, not away from it.
- Remove heavy eye makeup (mascara, eyeliner) — the scanner can confuse dark edges with iris boundaries.
- For medical conditions affecting the eye: a PSA physician can issue a "medical exception" and allow biometrics to be captured under special conditions at a main PSA branch.
- For the 2×2 photo: ensure it was taken against a plain white or off-white background, within the past 6 months, in plain clothes (no uniform, no graphic tees).
- Remove eyeglasses, hats, caps, and hair accessories that cover the forehead or ears during the live camera capture at the center.
- Pull hair away from your face to ensure the full face (forehead to chin, ear to ear) is clearly visible.
- Note: for religious head coverings (e.g. hijab, veil), the face must still be fully visible from forehead to chin. This accommodation is explicitly allowed by PSA.
- Centers have an on-site camera for live photo capture. If your submitted 2×2 is rejected, the operator can use the live capture instead.
- Do not attempt to register again — a second registration attempt will be flagged and both records may be suspended.
- Proceed to any PSA branch or registration center and ask the supervisor (not the RKO) to look up your record manually using your full name and birth date.
- Bring your PSA Birth Certificate and one additional ID — the supervisor can retrieve your existing TRN from the database.
- If the duplicate is confirmed to be a system error (e.g. someone else's record merged with yours): file a Duplicate Record Correction Request at the PSA main office. Bring notarized affidavit explaining the situation.
- Wait 2–3 hours and try again. Most maintenance windows resolve within this time.
- Check the PSA Facebook page for maintenance announcements — they typically post ahead of scheduled downtime.
- Try accessing via a different browser (Chrome, Firefox) or clear your browser cache and cookies.
- If you need to register urgently: online pre-registration is optional. Proceed to any walk-in registration center directly — centers operate independently of the online portal.
- Wait a full 3–5 minutes before clicking "Resend OTP" — the PSA SMS gateway has delays during busy hours.
- Check your SMS spam/junk folder and also check if the number you entered has a typo.
- Ensure your phone has a signal (not in airplane mode, not indoors with no reception).
- Try using a Globe or Smart postpaid number — e-SIMs and some prepaid data SIMs don't receive transactional SMS reliably.
- If the OTP issue persists: skip online pre-registration entirely. Walk into any registration center — the on-site RKO can register you without a pre-registration code.
- Check back early Tuesday or Wednesday morning — centers typically release new slots at the start of the work week.
- Try different registration centers — expand your search to SM malls, LGU offices, or PSA branches in neighboring cities.
- Skip the online appointment entirely. In 2026, walk-in registration is accepted at most centers with no appointment needed. Just show up.
- For rural or provincial areas: check if a mobile registration unit is scheduled in your barangay — ask your local LGU.
- Return to any PSA registration center and inform the supervisor (not just the queue staff) that your previous registration was incomplete.
- Bring your original documents again — the operator will pull your partial record and complete the missing steps.
- If you received a transaction slip with a TRN: bring it. The TRN helps the operator locate your partial record faster.
- If no TRN was issued: the supervisor can search by name and birth date. Present your PSA Birth Certificate for verification.
- Go to the PHLPost delivery office nearest to your registered address. Bring your TRN and any valid ID.
- Ask staff to check if your card is in their "Returned" bin — it should be held there for up to 30 days.
- Claim the card in person. The delivery agent will verify your identity before releasing it.
- If the 30-day holding period has passed and the card was returned to PSA: file a "Re-delivery Request" at any PSA branch. Bring your TRN slip, a valid ID, and a written request letter. The card will be re-dispatched to your address.
- First, check with your neighbors and the barangay hall — sometimes cards are received by a family member or neighbor who forgot to mention it.
- Track your TRN at philsys.gov.ph and check if the status says "Dispatched" or "Delivered." A "Dispatched" status means it's in transit but may not have reached your area yet.
- If tracking is stuck on "Printing" for more than 6 months: visit any PSA office to file a "Card Status Inquiry." Bring your TRN and a valid ID.
- If the PSA confirms the card was dispatched but you never received it: report it as a possible lost card and initiate a replacement request. See Lost ID Guide →
- Contact your old address immediately — ask the current occupant or barangay to intercept the card before it's returned to sender.
- Visit the nearest PSA branch to file an "Address Correction Request." Bring your TRN, PSA Birth Certificate, and proof of new address (recent utility bill or barangay clearance).
- PSA will update your address and re-dispatch the card to the corrected location once it returns to their facility.
- Processing for correction and re-dispatch typically takes 4–8 weeks.
- If registered less than 6 weeks ago: this is completely normal. Wait 7 more days and check again. The system syncs in batches, not in real time.
- Enter the TRN without any spaces, dashes, or extra characters — it is exactly 15 digits with no formatting.
- Check your transaction slip carefully — some digits are easy to misread (e.g. 0 vs O, 1 vs I, 5 vs 6).
- If after 8 weeks still not found: visit any PSA branch with your transaction slip and request a manual TRN lookup from the supervisor.
- Check all pockets, bags, and drawers from the day of registration — the slip is a small A5 or thermal-printed receipt.
- If truly lost: go to any PSA branch and request a TRN retrieval. Bring your PSA Birth Certificate and one valid ID so staff can look up your record by name and birth date.
- If you registered at a mall-based center: that center's branch supervisor may also be able to retrieve the TRN from local logs within the first few weeks.
- You do not need to re-register — your biometrics are already in the database. Only the TRN number needs to be retrieved.
- Do NOT use the card — using an ID with incorrect details can create problems with government transactions. Keep the card but label it as "incorrect."
- Go to any PSA branch and request a "Data Correction" for your PhilSys record. Bring: your incorrect PhilID card, PSA Birth Certificate showing the correct date, and one additional valid ID.
- Fill out the Correction of PhilSys Record form. The correction is free of charge for errors caused by PSA data entry.
- A corrected card will be reprinted and delivered to your address — turnaround is typically 2–3 months. See full correction guide →
- If registered less than 8 weeks ago: wait. The digital ID system updates in batches — it is not available immediately after registration.
- Update the eGovPH app to the latest version from the App Store or Google Play.
- Ensure your phone has a stable internet connection during QR code generation — it requires a live server call.
- Verify that the mobile number and TRN you're entering match exactly what was used during registration.
- For persistent errors: contact the eGovPH helpdesk at support@egov.ph or visit e.gov.ph for guidance.
- File a police report or blotter immediately for lost/stolen cards — this is required for the replacement process and protects you from identity fraud.
- Go to any PSA registration center or main branch. Request a "PhilID Replacement" form.
- Bring: police blotter copy (for lost/stolen), TRN, PSA Birth Certificate, and one supporting valid ID.
- A replacement fee may apply (currently ₱200–₱400 depending on the reason — loss vs. damage). Fees may be waived for indigent applicants.
- In the meantime, use your digital PhilID on the eGovPH app — it has the same legal validity as the physical card. Full Lost ID Guide →
- Politely ask to speak with the center supervisor or branch manager — do not argue with the RKO directly.
- Cite the specific PSA requirement: "The PSA website states that [document] is accepted as a supporting document under the PhilSys Act (RA 11055)."
- If still refused without valid reason: note the date, time, center name, and RKO's name badge. File a formal complaint at psa.gov.ph/arta or call 1800-11-773-1111.
- Try a different registration center. Requirements and strictness can vary by location — another center may process your application without issue.
Why use this PhilSys error tool?
When you encounter a PhilSys error, the official PSA website doesn't always explain what it means or what to do next. Most people turn to Facebook groups or Reddit — where answers are anecdotal, outdated, and sometimes flat-out wrong.
This tool compiles the most common PhilSys registration, document, biometric, delivery, and account errors reported by Filipinos nationwide, verified against PSA advisories and on-the-ground reports from registration centers. Each error comes with a plain-language cause and a numbered fix — no guesswork.
If your specific error is not listed, use the PSA contact options below or see the full Problems & Solutions guide.
Error descriptions and fix steps in this tool are compiled from PSA official advisories, PhilSys community reports across Facebook groups and Reddit PH, and direct field visits to registration centers in NCR, Region 3, and Region 4A from January–June 2026. We update error entries whenever PSA issues new guidance. For real-time system status, follow the official PSA Facebook page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common PhilSys error questions answered — based on PSA guidelines and field-verified by NationalIDDigital.ph as of July 2026.