Philippines leads Asia in traffic congestion, report finds

The 2025 TomTom Traffic Index ranks the Philippines as Asia's most congested country, followed by India and Singapore. Filipinos are losing a significant portion of their lives to worsening traffic on the roads. Rappler’s Patrick Cruz reports on the findings.

The 2025 TomTom Traffic Index highlights the Philippines as Asia's leader in traffic congestion, causing residents to lose substantial time on the roads. The report notes that worsening traffic is severely impacting daily life for Filipinos, particularly in Metro Manila and Davao City, where more hours were lost to jams in 2025 compared to previous years.

Rappler describes the situation as a major challenge, with cities like Manila and Davao facing intense gridlock. While exact hours are not specified in the report, it underscores the urgent need for solutions to improve traffic flow. The ranking—Philippines first, followed by India and Singapore—illustrates broader regional issues in urban mobility.

No contradictions appear in the sources, and the focus remains on traffic's effect on quality of life. This fits into wider discussions on urban planning in the Philippines.

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Busy toll highway traffic leaving Jakarta during Mudik 2026, under police control with cars and motorbikes amid mild congestion.
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Mudik traffic increases but remains under control

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Indonesia's traffic police report rising vehicles leaving Jakarta on day five of Operasi Ketupat 2026, with 28 percent of the projected 3.5 million vehicles departed. Overall traffic remains manageable despite some congestion.

São Paulo hit its highest traffic congestion of the year on Friday. The traffic authority recorded 1,348 km of slow traffic at 6 p.m.

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MANILA — Amid continued oil price hikes, traffic volume on EDSA fell by eight percent, the Metro Manila Development Authority said yesterday. The agency also exempted oil tankers and vehicles delivering basic commodities from truck bans and number coding schemes.

Despite the ongoing Middle East conflict, the Bureau of Immigration expects international passenger volumes to remain high in coming weeks. Travel activity stayed strong during Holy Week, said BI Commissioner Joel Anthony Viado. Repatriation efforts continued for overseas Filipino workers from Dubai, Lebanon, and Kuwait.

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Transportation Secretary Giovanni Lopez forecasts more than five million passengers per day during Holy Week amid ongoing preparations, including LTFRB's special bus permits.

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