Manila, Philippines – The suspension of 12 government digital platforms, such as eGov PH, has drawn attention to the capacity and funding challenges facing the Philippines’ digital infrastructure, as demand for online public services continues to rise.
According to PhilStar, the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) confirmed that several systems were taken offline after the agency was unable to sustain cloud server costs following a sharp increase in usage. The disruption followed outages affecting the eGovPH App, the government’s central digital services platform, which reportedly went down for several hours across two days in mid-April.
David Almirol Jr., Undersecretary at DICT, told senators during a hearing on 29 April that simultaneous onboarding by e-wallet providers, financial institutions and government agencies placed heavy pressure on a shared cloud environment supporting multiple services. These reportedly included the eGovPH App, the digital National ID, the e-Verify system, the eLGU platform used by around 1,000 local government units, and the app’s AI assistant.
Meanwhile, Rappler reported the Senate PROTECT Committee reviewed the outages while examining the integration of the National ID system for beneficiaries of the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program. During the hearing, lawmakers raised concerns over both technical readiness and funding arrangements for digital public services.
The increase in demand for digital services came after new features were introduced, including National ID e-Verify services, with banks and digital wallet providers such as GCash and Maya beginning to use the platform at scale. Existing backend systems were not designed to absorb the sudden increase in traffic.
In a post published on BitDigest.io, the incident illustrates a wider structural issue in the country’s digital transformation efforts, with the adoption of online services accelerating more quickly than the infrastructure and financing required to support them. It added that reliance on centralised systems and subscription-based cloud services may increase vulnerability when traffic surges occur.
The suspension of the government digital platforms has resurfaced scrutiny of public sector budgeting processes, which may not always align with the flexible and scalable funding models often required for cloud-based technology services.
As more government functions move online, questions remain over whether infrastructure investment can keep pace with rising user demand.

