SSS Salary Loan Disbursement Guide

List of Accredited Banks for SSS Salary Loan

If you are applying for an SSS salary loan, the easiest way to avoid confusion is to stop guessing from random old bank lists and instead check whether your DAEM option is actually usable for salary loan release.

Which DAEM option do you have?

Check Select your DAEM option

Choose the route you already have in DAEM so you can see if it matches the current salary-loan disbursement setup.

The cleanest current salary-loan route is usually a single account in a PESONet participating bank, or an eligible MySSS Card / UMID ATM Pay Card setup.
This checker is meant to make the page easier to use. It helps readers quickly see whether their current DAEM route looks aligned with salary-loan release.

Quick answer

The safest answer is not to trust an old screenshot of “accredited banks.” For SSS salary loan release, the most practical working rule is: use a DAEM route that matches the current salary-loan disbursement setup.

Right now, the strongest salary-loan choices are usually:

  • an active single account in a PESONet participating bank, or
  • an eligible MySSS Card / UMID ATM Pay Card setup.

E-wallet and cash-pickup style DAEM routes may exist in the broader DAEM system, but that does not automatically mean the current salary-loan page is treating them as the main salary-loan release route.

Why this DAEM checker makes the page easier to use

Most readers do not really want a giant wall of explanation first. They want to answer one practical question: “I already have this bank, e-wallet, or cash-pickup route. Can I use it for my salary loan?”

That is why this page now starts with a simple selector above the fold. Readers can choose the route they already have and instantly see:

Accepted

Best aligned with the current salary-loan release setup

Use caution

May exist in DAEM but not clearly the main salary-loan route

Not ideal

Likely not the cleanest route for salary-loan release

What banks count for SSS salary loan disbursement?

In real use, the most useful working rule is this: your account should be a single account in a PESONet participating bank that can be successfully enrolled and approved in DAEM.

This matters because many old blog posts and screenshots show bank names that may be incomplete, outdated, or no longer the best way to explain the process. What matters more is whether the bank account can be successfully enrolled and approved inside your My.SSS disbursement setup.

The safer way to think about the “bank list”

Eligible bank for salary loan = active single account in your name + valid DAEM enrollment + current PESONet-compatible salary-loan route

This is much more reliable than relying on an old static list copied from a random website.

If the account cannot be approved in DAEM, it is not useful for actual salary loan release even if the bank itself sounds familiar.

How DAEM works for SSS salary loan release

DAEM stands for the Disbursement Account Enrollment Module. This is where SSS checks and approves the account you want to use for loan proceeds.

That means your bank is not enough by itself. The account must also be:

Active

The account should be usable and current.

In your name

The account details should match your records.

Approved in DAEM

Without approval, crediting can fail.

The bank choice and the DAEM approval work together. A “good bank” is still useless if the enrolled account is not approved or has a mismatch problem.

DAEM route types readers usually ask about

DAEM route How it should be viewed for salary loan Practical meaning
PESONet bank account Accepted Usually the cleanest bank-based salary-loan route
MySSS Card / UMID ATM Pay Card Accepted Recognized card-based salary-loan disbursement route
E-wallet Use caution Exists in broader DAEM/benefit disbursement workflows, but not the main current salary-loan route stated on the salary-loan page
Cash Pickup / RTC-CPO Use caution Exists in broader DAEM/benefit disbursement workflows, but not the main current salary-loan route stated on the salary-loan page

Why salary loan crediting can still fail even if you chose a known bank

This is another area where borrowers get confused. They assume that if the bank is well known, the loan should credit smoothly. But that is not always how it works.

The usual problems are not always about the bank brand itself. They are often about:

  • account name mismatch,
  • wrong or incomplete account details,
  • inactive or invalid account status,
  • DAEM approval issues,
  • using a route that is not properly set up for salary loan disbursement.
A borrower can choose a real bank and still fail crediting if the actual enrolled account setup is wrong.

What should you do before applying?

1

Choose the route you really plan to use

Do not guess. Use the account or card route that is active, under your name, and easiest to support with clean details.

2

Make sure it is properly enrolled in DAEM

The route alone is not enough. The account must be approved in the SSS disbursement system.

3

Prefer the cleaner salary-loan route when possible

For most users, that usually means a properly enrolled PESONet bank account or an eligible MySSS Card / UMID ATM Pay Card route.

4

If crediting fails, update and re-enroll the correct account

Do not stay stuck on the first failed route. A corrected DAEM setup is usually the real next step.

Simple examples

Example 1

A borrower uses an active personal bank account, enrolls it in DAEM, and everything matches. The salary loan release is much more likely to go smoothly.

Example 2

A borrower already has an e-wallet in DAEM and assumes it is automatically the cleanest salary-loan route. The checker warns her to confirm this because the salary-loan page currently emphasizes bank/card routes.

Example 3

A borrower relies on an old online bank list, but the actual DAEM setup is wrong. She wastes time because she followed an outdated shortcut instead of checking the route properly.

Need backup funds while fixing your salary loan release route?

If your salary loan crediting is delayed because your DAEM account setup still needs work, a backup option may help cover urgent expenses in the meantime.

Frequently asked questions

The safer way to think about it is through DAEM and the current salary-loan release setup, not an old static list copied from random websites.

The cleanest option is usually an active single account in your name that can be enrolled and approved in DAEM under a PESONet participating bank route.

Those route types may exist in broader DAEM and benefit-disbursement workflows, but the current salary-loan page itself is clearer about card and PESONet bank routes. That is why this page marks them with caution instead of presenting them as the cleanest salary-loan path.

No. Crediting can still fail if the account details are wrong, the account is inactive, or the DAEM enrollment is not properly approved.

Check whether your disbursement account setup is correct, then update or re-enroll the right account in DAEM if needed.

Related SSS Maternity Benefits Guides

Preparing for Baby Expenses?

Hospital delivery in the Philippines can easily cost ₱60,000 - ₱200,000 depending on the hospital and type of delivery. Many parents use a credit card to manage these expenses while waiting for their SSS maternity benefits.

Apply for a UnionBank Credit Card
To top