Streets in the Philippine capital are flooded after heavy rains soaked the archipelago and as Tropical Storm Henry made landfall.
In Manila's business district of Makati, motorists drove through the water, while some people used makeshift rafts to float around.
Classes are usually suspended when floods affect the capital, but only some were reportedly cancelled on Tuesday.
In the southern reaches of Manila in Paranaque municipality, many families built shelters inside a gymnasium as a temporary evacuation center amid the floods.
Though Tropical Storm Henry (Son-Tinh) moved west across the north of Luzon island and left the Philippine Area of Responsibility, monsoons accompanying the storm were still affecting the country, the Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said in an advisory.
PAGASA warned of floods affecting large portions of the Philippines, including Metro Manila, northern Luzon, Palawan and Mindoro islands.
The weather agency also issued a rainfall warning for many of the provinces around Manila as the monsoons, enhanced by Henry, move southwest.
Every year at least a dozen typhoons sweep through the area around the Philippines, bringing heavy rains and floods.
In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, one of the strongest tropical cyclones ever recorded, devastated parts of the island of Leyte, leaving thousands dead.
Australian Associated Press