Strengthening health financing research is critical to advancing universal health coverage in the Philippines. Despite increasing policy commitments, financing decisions are often shaped more by fiscal and political pressures than by systematic, evidence-based analysis. This commentary highlights persistent gaps in the country's research ecosystem characterized by limited funding, data access constraints, and weak integration of research into policymaking, and argues that without robust, empirical evidence, health reforms risk being ineffective or inequitable. Drawing on regional examples, the paper outlines a five-point action agenda to institutionalize health financing research including prioritizing strategic research areas, expanding research capacities, enabling transparent data sharing, bridging research and policymaking, and securing sustainable, diversified funding. These recommendations aim to reposition research as a core pillar of health system governance and to support evidence-informed reforms that enhance financial protection and equity.
Keywords: Philippines; health financing; health policy; research utilization; universal health coverage.