
Thelegislative districts of Quezon City are the representations of thehighly urbanized city ofQuezon in thevarious national and local legislatures of thePhilippines. At present, the province is represented in theHouse of Representatives of the Philippines by itssix congressional districts, with the districts' representatives being elected every three years. Additionally, each district is allotted six seats in theQuezon City Council, creating a total of thirty-six elective seats in the legislature.
From its creation in 1939 to 1972,Quezon City was represented as part ofRizal Province, with the western areas that formerly belonged toCaloocan,Mandaluyong, andSan Juan voting as part of that province'sfirst district, and the eastern areas that formerly belonged toMarikina, Montalban (nowRodriguez),Pasig, andSan Mateo voting in thesecond district.
In the disruption caused by theSecond World War, Quezon City was incorporated into the City of Greater Manila on January 1, 1942, by virtue ofManuel Quezon's Executive Order No. 400 as a wartime emergency measure. Greater Manila was represented bytwo delegates in theNational Assembly of the Japanese-sponsoredSecond Philippine Republic: one was the city mayor (anex officio member), while the other was elected through a citywide assembly ofKALIBAPI members during theJapanese occupation of the Philippines. Upon the restoration of thePhilippine Commonwealth in 1945, Quezon City's divided representation between the two districts ofRizal was retained; this remained so until 1972.
The city was represented in theInterim Batasang Pambansa as part ofRegion IV from 1978 to 1984. Quezon City residents first elected representatives separate from Rizal in the1984 election, wherefour representatives, elected at-large, represented the city at theRegular Batasang Pambansa.
Quezon City was reapportioned into fourcongressional districts under the new Constitution[1] which was proclaimed on February 11, 1987. It elected members to the restored House of Representatives startingthat same year.
By virtue of Republic Act No. 10170[2] approved on July 2, 2012, thefifth andsixth districts were created out of thesecond district. Residents of the two new districts began to elect their own representatives beginning in the2013 elections.
The city was last redistricted on July 2, 2012, where the fifth and sixth districts were apportioned. The city's congressional delegation currently composes of two members of theNational Unity Party, one member ofLakas, one member of theNacionalista Party, one member of thePartido Federal ng Pilipinas, and one member ofUnited Nationalist Alliance; five members are also members of theSerbisyo sa Bayan Party. All five representatives are part of the majority bloc and one representative is part of the minority bloc in the20th Congress.
| District | Current Representative | Party | ConstituentLGUs | Area | Population (2020) | Map | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Local | National | |||||||||
| 1st | Arjo Atayde (since2022) Santo Domingo | SBP | Nacionalista | List
| 384,384[3] | 19.59 km2 | ||||
| 2nd | Ralph Tulfo (since2022) Holy Spirit | PFP | List
| 738,328[3] | 19.59 km2 | |||||
| 3rd | Franz Pumaren (since2022) White Plains | NUP | List
| 319,371[3] | 46.27 km2 | |||||
| 4th | Bong Suntay (since2025) Mariana | UNA | List
| 407,402[3] | 23.42 km2 | |||||
| 5th | PM Vargas[4] (since2022) Pasong Putik Proper | SBP | Lakas | List
| 596,047[3] | 28.03 km2 | ||||
| 6th | Marivic Co-Pilar (since2022) Pasong Tamo | NUP | List
| 514,516[3] | 21.97 km2 | |||||
Notes
| Period | Representatives |
|---|---|
| Regular Batasang Pambansa 1984–1986 | Ismael A. Mathay, Jr. |
| Orlando S. Mercado | |
| Cecilia Muñoz-Palma | |
| Alberto G. Romulo |