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2022-02-25 Β |Β β±οΈ 13:51 Β |Β ποΈ 64.6K views Β |Β π 5.2K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.2K comments
Pea walks through the entire visa application process for bringing a Filipina to the West, step by step, revealing exactly how scammers exploit each stage to extract thousands of dollars. She explains every legitimate expense and document required, then shows how a dishonest woman can pocket money at each checkpoint β from the visa agency fee to the final airport phone call claiming her vaccination card was rejected. Total potential loss: over $9,000.
Why this scam is relevant right now β
- Many foreigners still can't visit the Philippines due to COVID restrictions or being unvaccinated
- Some have been chatting with women for two years and are impatient to meet
- The idea of flying the Filipina to them seems logical β but it opens the door to a well-established scam
Filipinos face much harder travel requirements than westerners β
- Westerners can travel almost anywhere on short notice
- Filipinos have a "laundry list" of requirements before they can even stand a chance of visiting your country
- Scammers exploit the fact that most foreign men don't know these requirements
How the scam begins β
- Either the woman brings up visiting, or the man pushes for it β especially if the relationship feels like it's stalling
- Long-distance couples naturally say things like "I'm dying to see you" and "I don't know if I can wait much longer"
- Once someone suggests meeting in the West, the ball starts rolling
- The man typically lets the woman handle the paperwork while he provides the cash β a perfect setup for exploitation
Step 1: The visa agency fee ($300β$500) β
- A visa agency helps navigate forms, processing order, and approval strategy β money well spent for a legitimate applicant
- Costs $300β$500 upfront depending on the destination country
- A scammer who's done this before knows she doesn't need the agency β she'll grab a brochure or business card to flash on video chat, then pocket the entire fee
Step 2: The passport ($25) β
- Many Filipinas have barely traveled off their own island and don't have a passport
- The real cost is about $25 (approximately 950 pesos)
- Greedy scammers pad small expenses like this; smart scammers don't, because getting caught over $75 kills the long game
- Pea says she's gotten messages from men asking "my girlfriend says she needs $100 for her passport, does that sound right?" β and when she tells them it's $25, the scam is over before it begins
Step 3: Documents that cost nothing (beware if she charges) β
- Certificate of employment β free from her employer
- Income tax return β she should already have it
- Proof of travel history to other countries
- Proof of accommodations (hotel reservation or letter from the man)
- Sample itinerary of planned activities
- Birth certificate β only about $3 if she needs a new one
- NBI clearance (criminal background check) β about $3
- Property deed (if she owns any β a big plus but not required)
- Affidavit of sponsorship from the man, accepting financial responsibility for her during the visit β and liability if she disappears in your country
The critical requirement: photos together proving you've met in person β
- This is one of the most important things the embassy wants to see
- Not an automatic disqualification without it, but a major red flag
- For European countries, approval is theoretically still possible without meeting
- For the U.S., it's essentially impossible to get approved without proof of an in-person meeting
- A scammer who's never met you in person will simply not mention this requirement, hoping you don't know the rules β because if she tells you honestly, the whole scheme falls apart
Step 4: The bank balance β the scammer's big payday β
- The visa agency will recommend approximately $6,000 in her bank account to show she can support herself abroad
- The money can't appear as one lump sum β that looks like a loan, not real savings
- You'll need to send her large sums over the course of several months to build a credible balance and transaction history
- Pea's rhetorical: "What could go wrong?"
- Travel insurance adds another $50β$150
Step 5: The embassy interview and airfare β
- Visa application fee: $90β$160 depending on country
- If she passes the interview (or says she did), round-trip airfare to Manila is needed, plus hotel and food for the trip
- Pea advises: wait until her passport is returned with the visa sticker inside before buying tickets
- You have a choice: buy the tickets yourself or send her the money
- A scammer will insist on buying them herself β so she can pocket the cash
- Pea strongly recommends buying the tickets yourself
Step 6: The airport phone call β the final squeeze β
- On the day of the flight, the scammer calls to say there's a problem at the airport β her vaccination card isn't being accepted
- She needs money for a hotel while she "sorts everything out" plus food money
- By this point the man suspects he's been scammed, but he's in so deep that he keeps paying "just in case" she's legit
- "What's a few hundred bucks when you've already been milked for thousands?"
- The man ends up "standing alone at the arrival gate with a bouquet of flowers in your hand and murder in your heart"
- Meanwhile she's "on the other side of the planet, untouchable, already planning her next scam"
Total potential cost: over $9,000 β
- Even if the woman is legitimate, the process costs thousands
- If she's real, she'll "probably give you the six grand back β probably"
How to protect yourself β
- Know the application process β this video is your best defense
- Get involved in every step; don't just send money and hope
- Ask to see documents along the way
- Pay for things yourself whenever possible (visa agency, airfare)
- Never send thousands to a woman without oversight
- Pea's ultimate move: if your Filipina mentions visiting, say "Great idea, hon β I found a video that shows all the steps" and send her this video
- If she's honest, she'll use it as a resource; if she's a scammer, "she knows I just put her entire playbook right in your lap" and she'll disappear