About
Kasamako is a practical, no-fluff guide for Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) — and for the families who support them.
I write deep, well-researched explainers on the things that actually decide whether a deployment goes well or goes wrong: contract clauses, labor law changes, employer transfer rights, remittance fees, embassy escalation paths, and the real-world traps that recruitment agencies don’t mention in the orientation seminar.
Who this is for
- OFWs already abroad who want to understand their rights before signing the next renewal
- Filipinos in the Philippines preparing for their first deployment
- Family members helping a relative review a contract or escape a bad employer
- Returning balikbayan figuring out reintegration, savings, and what’s next
What you’ll find here
- Country guides — Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong, Singapore, UAE, Taiwan, Japan, and more, updated as labor laws change
- Contract walkthroughs — clause-by-clause breakdowns, especially the ones agencies skip past
- Remittance and money — comparing services, avoiding hidden markup, building a savings plan that survives the trip home
- Rights and escalation — what to do when wages are delayed, when contracts get switched on arrival, when you need the embassy
How I write
Every guide cites primary sources — Saudi HRSD, Philippine DMW, Hong Kong Labour Department, NGO reports from Amnesty International, IOM, and Migrante International. I tell you when something is verified, when it’s a composite scenario, and when you should double-check with POLO or OWWA.
I’m not a lawyer, a recruitment agency, or a remittance company. I don’t get paid by employers. If I make affiliate revenue from a remittance comparison, it’s clearly disclosed in the article.
A note on accuracy
OFW labor rules change fast. Saudi Arabia rewrote half its labor code in 2025. Hong Kong tweaks its domestic helper rules every couple of years. The Philippine DMW issues advisories that contradict each other within months.
If you find an error, an outdated number, or a regulation that’s changed — please tell me. Email feedback is the fastest way to keep this site useful for the next kabayan who needs it.
Ingat lagi.