| Philippine National Games | |
|---|---|
| Status | Active |
| Genre | Multi-sport event |
| Frequency | Biennial(proposed) |
| Location | Various |
| Country | Philippines |
| Inaugurated | 1994; 31 years ago (1994) |
| Organized by | Philippine Sports Commission Philippine Olympic Committee |
| Website | png |
ThePhilippine National Games officially known as thePOC-PSC Games is a national multi-sport tournament in thePhilippines. It was created as a means to determine the possible composition of national pool athletes that will compete in international tournaments such as theSoutheast Asian Games,Asian Games and theOlympics.[1]
The Philippine National Games was created by virtue of Executive Order No. 163 dated March 3, 1994, during the term of 12th PresidentFidel V. Ramos.[1]
The first edition was held inManila in 1994, then the next edition was held two years later in the same venue.Cebu City hosted the third edition in 1997. However, the games were scrapped in 1998 due to lack of funds to organize the event.[2][3] The holding of games were halted until its revival in 2011. Since then the games were held annually.[4] Starting from the 2011 edition, the Philippine Sports Committee has been co-organizing the games with thePhilippine Olympic Committee.[5]
The 2015 edition was divided into three legs which were hosted in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao with each leg including 10 events each for the same sports doubling as qualifiers for the 2016 edition.[6][7] Starting the 2016 edition the National Games will beLGU-based. In the previous editions, athletes represented their school, club or a sponsoring group. Athletes will be able to formally represent their municipality, city or province at the games but in the finals athletes will only represent one of the four regions;Luzon,Visayas,Mindanao andNational Capital Region.[8]
The conduct of the National Games would be disrupted by theCOVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic led to the cancellation of the 2020 edition.[9]
During the19th Congress of the Philippines, a measure seeking to institutionalize the National Games as the "government's premier national sports competition" to be held biannually has been filed. It was aimed that the National Games would become a "more comprehensive" version of thePalarong Pambansa, the government's students' national games.[10][11]
Last held in 2018 since the pandemic, the National Games is set to return in 2023. With the city of Manila as the host for fifth time, it will run from December 17 to 22.[12][13]
A bill to institutionalize the PNG as a bi-annual competition to compliment the national sports program was filed in 2023. It also explicitly includes persons with disabilities (PWDs).[14][15] However it was vetoed by presidentBongbong Marcos in January 2025 citing redundancy with thePalarong Pambansa.[16][17]
The National Games will still be held sometime in 2025.[17]
| Year | Main Host | Province | Region | Island group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1994 | Manila | — | National Capital Region | Luzon |
| 1996 | Manila | — | National Capital Region | Luzon |
| 1997 | Cebu City | — | Central Visayas | Visayas |
| 2011 | Bacolod | — | Western Visayas | Visayas |
| 2012 | Dumaguete | Negros Oriental | Central Visayas | Visayas |
| 2013 | Manila | — | National Capital Region | Luzon |
| 2014 | Manila | — | National Capital Region | Luzon |
| 2016 | Lingayen | Pangasinan | Ilocos Region | Luzon |
| 2018 | Cebu City | — | Central Visayas | Visayas |
| 2023 | Manila | — | National Capital Region | Luzon |
| 2025 | Future event | |||
The following are the sports contested at the National Games (as of May 2014).
Olympic sports
Other sports
Paralympic sports