Can I Use My CPAP Machine in Philippines?

Good to go

You're good — plug right in.

Your device's voltage range matches this country, and the plug fits. You can use it directly — no adapter or converter needed. As a final check, confirm the voltage range printed on the device label.

The short answer

Most modern CPAP machines are dual-voltage (100–240V) and need only a plug adapter — but as a medical device, never assume: confirm the exact label and check whether your heated humidifier is frequency-sensitive. Bring the manufacturer's travel power supply, consider a battery pack for flights, and avoid cheap voltage converters that output a non-pure sine wave.

Philippines runs 220V at 60Hz. DANGEROUS TRAP: the Philippines uses US-shaped Type A/B sockets but runs at 220V. A US plug fits without an adapter — so a single-voltage US device (like a hair dryer) plugs straight in and can overheat or catch fire. The plug fitting does NOT mean it is safe.

CPAP Machine in Philippines at a glance

Your CPAP machine vs Philippines's grid
Device voltage profiledual
Typical wattage30–90W
Destination voltage220V (220–220V)
Destination frequency60Hz
Destination plug typesType A, B, C
Voltage mismatch120V → 220V = +100V
VerdictGood to go
Look for "INPUT 100–240V" on the label. If it says "120V" only — do not plug it in abroad without a converter.
For medical devices, always confirm voltage on the label and check with the manufacturer when in doubt.

Other devices & destinations

FAQ

Will a travel adapter let me use my CPAP machine in Philippines?

Philippines sockets use Type A/B/C. Your plug already fits, so no adapter is needed.

Do I need a voltage converter for a CPAP machine in Philippines?

No. If your CPAP machine is dual-voltage (100–240V), you don't need a converter in Philippines.

What plug type does Philippines use?

Philippines uses Type A, B, C sockets at 220V / 60Hz.

Adapter vs converter explained

Guidance only — not professional electrical advice. Always confirm against your device's label before plugging in. Local wiring (especially in hotels and older buildings) can vary.