When does a short-term microloan become a 277% annual interest story?
That question surfaced this week after a report by Nikkei Asia examined the effective cost of in-app loans offered to motorcycle riders in the Philippines by Grab.
The story calculated that some of these loans carry annual effective interest rates (EIR) of up to 277%, significantly higher than the advertised “simple interest monthly” rate shown inside the app.
Following the report, Grab Financial Group Philippines issued an official statement to Fintech Alliance.PH, which was subsequently shared with us, outlining how its microloan product is structured and why it believes annualised comparisons may misrepresent the experience of short-term borrowers.
According to the report by Nikkei Asia, one rider borrowed PHP 11,000 and repaid PHP 14,294 over 150 days through automatic daily deductions from his in-app wallet.
While the platform advertised a 5.99% “simple interest monthly” rate, the structure of daily repayments resulted in an effective annual interest rate of 277% when annualised.
The article noted that Grab did not dispute the EIR calculation but argued that applying annualised rates to short-term microloans creates an “apples to oranges” comparison.
Lawyers cited in the report said the rates are legal, and that Grab Finance is registered with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission.
The controversy centres on presentation versus perception.
While borrowers see a fixed peso repayment amount upfront, converting that cost into an annualised percentage significantly amplifies the headline figure.
In its official statement shared via Fintech Alliance.PH, Grab Financial Group Philippines, framed its product as a regulated and structured alternative to informal lending.
The statement emphasised that there are “no late payment charges or penalties,” adding that the only consequence of missed payments “may be an impact on eligibility for future loans.”
Grab also detailed its underwriting guardrails.
While riders may hold more than one loan, the combined total cannot exceed that cap.
According to the company, it aligns repayments with actual platform earnings through smaller daily deductions, rather than requiring large lump-sum payments.
For partners affected by calamities, the company said it offers loan payment holidays to provide temporary relief.
Photo by Lê Quốc Hùng via Pexels.
At the centre of the clash is the question of how to measure short-duration credit.
Grab argued that because these short-term microloans feature a fixed repayment amount that the company discloses upfront, “the most relevant figure for partners is the actual peso amount they will repay over the life of the loan.”
It added that while annualised rates are commonly used to compare long-term loans, applying them to short-term products “without proper context can appear significantly higher and may not reflect how partners experience the loan in reality.”
The mathematical reality, however, is that daily deductions on a declining balance increase the effective annualised cost when expressed as an EIR.
This tension between disclosure format and financial interpretation is not unique to Grab. In fact, it has been a recurring issue across digital microcredit models globally.
The debate among regulators and industry stakeholders centres on whether Grab’s focus on total peso repayment provides the clearest of transparency.
Or even better, by standardising annualised metrics for easier comparison across products.
The original report also highlighted concerns from labour advocates and researchers. These two groups argue that gig workers, often operating on thin margins, may be especially vulnerable to high-cost credit.
With repayments deducted automatically from daily earnings, riders must continue working to maintain cash flow.
Grab, for its part, positioned the loans as an alternative to informal lenders with “unclear terms and very high penalties.”
It stated that its objective is “to expand access to clear, regulated, and responsibly designed short-term financing” that complies with regulatory guidelines and interest caps.
Such an episode underscores a larger shift taking place across Southeast Asia’s platform economy.
As super apps integrate lending directly into driver and rider ecosystems, embedded finance becomes both a lifeline and a lightning rod.
In this case, no one is disputing the numbers.
The debate, however, is about framing, context, and what constitutes meaningful transparency in short-term digital credit.
Now, before I end, I have a question to Grab.
So Grab, if the comparison is “apples to oranges,” as your company suggests, then please explain to us, why does the fruit looks so expensive once annualised?
Featured image: Edited by Fintech News Philippines based on a video by Grab.
The post Grab Calls ‘Over 230%’ Rider Loan Comparison “Apples to Oranges” appeared first on Fintech News Philippines.


