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The hire purchase amendment Malaysia landscape is shifting decisively on 1 June 2026, when the Hire Purchase (Amendment) Act 2026 (HPAA 2026) takes effect and overhauls the way vehicle and asset financing is originated, documented and enforced across the country. Gazetted on 30 January 2026, the amendment mandates Effective Interest Rate (EIR) and reducing-balance interest calculations, introduces a prescribed disclosure statement at the point of origination, and rewrites the rules governing early settlement, default notices and repossession procedures. For dealers, finance houses, banks and in-house counsel, the compliance window is now measured in weeks, and the operational changes required touch every stage of the hire-purchase lifecycle, from showroom contracts to collection workflows.
Key takeaways:
The Hire-Purchase Act 2026 amendments apply to every entity that originates, finances or facilitates a hire-purchase agreement in Malaysia, including commercial banks, Islamic banks, development financial institutions, licensed moneylenders, motor-vehicle dealers, machinery dealers and any other party acting as an owner or dealer under the Act. The effective date of 1 June 2026 means that any HP agreement signed on or after that date must comply with the new regime in full.
Existing agreements executed before 1 June 2026 are generally governed by their original contractual terms. However, as several major banks in Malaysia have announced, goodwill measures, including voluntary early-settlement discounts calculated on a reducing-balance basis, will commence from the effective date for legacy portfolios. The Association of Banks in Malaysia (ABM) has coordinated these goodwill initiatives across member institutions.
Eight immediate actions every dealer and lender should take before 1 June 2026:
The HPAA 2026 represents the most significant reform of Malaysia’s hire-purchase legislation in over two decades. It addresses three structural issues that have long drawn criticism from consumer advocates and regulators alike: opaque interest calculations, inconsistent disclosure practices, and inflexible early-settlement mechanics. Industry observers expect these changes to reshape product pricing, competitive dynamics and customer expectations across the entire auto-financing sector.
Under the amended Act, all new HP agreements must calculate interest using the Effective Interest Rate (EIR) method on a reducing-balance basis. This means interest accrues only on the outstanding principal at any given point during the loan tenure, not on the original full loan amount for the entire period. The practical effect is that borrowers who make early repayments or additional lump-sum payments will see an immediate reduction in their interest liability.
Consider a simplified illustration on a RM 100,000 loan at a nominal rate of 3.5% per annum over 24 months:
| Method | Total Interest Payable | Monthly Instalment (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Flat rate (old method) | RM 7,000 | RM 4,458 |
| EIR / Reducing balance (new method) | RM 3,638 | RM 4,318 |
As the Bank Negara Malaysia HP Consumer Guide explains, the reducing-balance method charges interest on the diminishing principal, resulting in significantly lower total interest costs for the hirer, particularly where agreements are settled before maturity.
The Rule of 78, a front-loaded interest allocation formula that historically penalised early settlement, is abolished for all new HP agreements from 1 June 2026. Under the old system, a disproportionate share of total interest was allocated to the early months of the agreement, meaning borrowers who settled early still paid the majority of interest charges. The HPAA 2026 eliminates this asymmetry for new contracts by mandating the reducing-balance approach.
The amendment introduces a prescribed disclosure statement that must be presented to every hirer at origination. This statement must set out, at minimum: the EIR applicable to the agreement, the total cost of credit (including all fees and charges), the method and formula for calculating early settlement, the hirer’s rights upon default, and the owner’s repossession entitlements and procedures. The HPAA 2026 disclosure requirements represent a significant uplift from the previous regime, where disclosure content and format varied widely across lenders.
| Topic | Before HPAA 2026 | After HPAA 2026 | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest method | Flat rate / Rule of 78 commonly used | EIR + Reducing-balance (mandatory) | Repricing of all HP products; system reconfiguration required |
| Early settlement calculation | Rule of 78 / individual bank policy | Statutory early-settlement formula (transparent) | Update calculation engines; retrain staff on new quotes |
| Mandatory disclosure | Limited / variable across lenders | Prescribed disclosure statement required at origination | New document templates; point-of-sale process changes |
| Repossession procedures | Statutory notice with limited prescription | Enhanced notice periods and procedural safeguards | Revised notice templates; updated collections workflows |
The HPAA 2026 applies to all new HP agreements executed on or after 1 June 2026. It covers motor vehicles, industrial and commercial machinery, and other goods specified under the Hire-Purchase Act 1967 as amended. Every party that acts as an “owner” (lender/financier) or “dealer” (seller/intermediary) within the meaning of the Act falls within scope.
Existing agreements entered into before the effective date are not retroactively subject to the new calculation or disclosure rules. However, several banks in Malaysia, including Public Bank, AmBank, Hong Leong Bank and Maybank, have announced goodwill measures for legacy portfolios. Public Bank, for example, has confirmed that goodwill discounts for early settlement of existing HP agreements will commence upon the effective date of the HPAA, calculated on a basis more favourable than the Rule of 78. These measures, coordinated through the ABM, are voluntary but signal industry-wide alignment toward the new standard.
For compliance officers and in-house counsel managing mixed portfolios (pre- and post-1 June 2026), the likely practical effect is that two parallel servicing regimes will operate until legacy books run off. Businesses should clearly segregate agreement records and ensure that servicing systems can apply the correct calculation methodology based on execution date.
Dealers sit at the front line of hire purchase compliance in Malaysia. Every vehicle or asset sold under an HP arrangement must now be accompanied by documentation that meets the HPAA 2026 standard. The following checklist covers the critical operational changes for dealer principals, finance managers and sales teams.
The following is illustrative sample language consistent with the HPAA 2026 disclosure requirements (dealers should adapt this to their specific agreements and seek legal review):
“This Hire Purchase Agreement is subject to the Hire-Purchase Act 1967 (as amended by the Hire Purchase (Amendment) Act 2026). Interest is calculated using the Effective Interest Rate (EIR) method on a reducing-balance basis. The EIR applicable to this agreement is [X.XX]% per annum. The total cost of credit, comprising all interest and prescribed fees, is RM [amount]. You have the right to settle this agreement early at any time; the early-settlement amount will be calculated using the statutory formula set out in [section reference], based on the outstanding principal balance at the date of settlement. In the event of default, the Owner’s rights are governed by [section reference], including prescribed notice periods before any repossession action may be taken.”
Dealer management systems (DMS) and customer relationship management (CRM) platforms must be updated to store the executed disclosure statement, the hirer’s signed acknowledgement, and a record of the EIR and total cost figures presented at origination. Where dealers use third-party DMS providers, engage the vendor early to confirm that system updates will be delivered before 1 June 2026. Audit trails showing when disclosures were generated and presented will be essential evidence in any future dispute.
Banks and finance houses face the deepest operational impact from the hire purchase amendment Malaysia reforms. The changes touch origination, product pricing, loan servicing, collections and regulatory reporting, requiring coordinated action across legal, product, IT and operations teams.
Origination: Loan origination systems must be reconfigured to generate EIR / reducing-balance calculations as the default (and only permissible) interest methodology for new HP agreements. Offer letters, sanction letters and all pre-contractual documents must reflect the EIR and include the prescribed disclosure statement. Banks in Malaysia, including Maybank and Hong Leong Bank, have already issued customer-facing notices explaining the transition; internal origination workflows should mirror these external communications for consistency.
Product pricing: The shift to EIR / reducing-balance will alter the effective yield on HP products. Product teams must re-compute pricing to maintain target margins under the new methodology. Web-based calculators, mobile app tools and branch comparison sheets must all be updated to show EIR figures. Early indications suggest that headline rates may appear higher under EIR presentation (since EIR is mathematically higher than the equivalent flat rate for the same cash flows), requiring careful customer communication to avoid confusion.
Servicing: The early-settlement workflow is the most operationally sensitive change. Calculation engines must be updated to apply the statutory formula, producing settlement quotes based on the outstanding reducing balance rather than the Rule of 78. Statement formats, staff scripts and self-service portal outputs must all reflect the new methodology. Banks that have announced goodwill early-settlement discounts for existing agreements (e.g., Public Bank, AmBank) must maintain parallel calculation logic for legacy and new portfolios.
Compliance and reporting: Internal compliance policies, product governance frameworks and management information packs must be updated to reflect the HPAA 2026 requirements. Regulatory reporting to Bank Negara Malaysia should be reviewed to ensure that any prescribed statistical or disclosure-related submissions capture the new data fields.
The HPAA 2026 strengthens the procedural safeguards that must be followed before a financier or dealer may repossess goods under a hire-purchase agreement. The amendments introduce enhanced notice periods, tighter documentation requirements and clearer escalation pathways, all designed to ensure that repossession is a remedy of last resort and that the hirer’s rights are protected at every stage.
Pre-repossession requirements under the new regime:
The statutory early-settlement formula under the HPAA 2026 requires the settlement amount to be calculated based on the outstanding principal balance at the date of settlement, plus any accrued but unpaid interest to that date, plus any prescribed fees, and nothing more. The Rule of 78 front-loading mechanism no longer applies to new agreements.
Consider a RM 100,000 HP agreement at a nominal rate of 3.5% per annum over 24 months, settled after 12 months of regular payments:
| Settlement Method | Outstanding Balance at Month 12 | Early-Settlement Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Rule of 78 (old) | RM 51,750 (approx.) | RM 55,308 (including front-loaded interest) |
| Flat rate (old, some lenders) | RM 53,500 (approx.) | RM 53,500 |
| EIR / Reducing balance (new HPAA 2026) | RM 50,918 (approx.) | RM 50,918 + accrued interest to settlement date |
The difference is material. Under the new method, the hirer benefits from interest being calculated only on the diminishing principal, resulting in a lower settlement figure, particularly in the first half of the agreement’s tenure.
Template early-settlement communication language:
“As at [date], the early-settlement amount for your Hire Purchase Agreement (reference: [number]) is RM [amount]. This amount comprises the outstanding principal balance of RM [amount] calculated on a reducing-balance basis, plus accrued interest of RM [amount] to the settlement date, plus applicable fees of RM [amount]. This quotation is valid for [X] days from the date of this notice. Settlement may be made at any [bank branch / designated payment channel].”
With the effective date imminent, businesses should adopt a structured sprint plan to close compliance gaps. The following timeline maps key milestones against responsible teams.
| Date | Action | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| 30 January 2026 | HPAA 2026 gazetted | , |
| February–March 2026 | Legal review of amended Act; gap analysis against current contracts and processes | Legal / Compliance |
| March–April 2026 | Redraft contract templates, disclosure statements and notice templates | Legal / Product |
| April 2026 | IT system reconfiguration: EIR engines, early-settlement logic, disclosure generation | IT / Operations |
| April–May 2026 | End-to-end testing: origination, servicing, collections, reporting | IT / QA / Compliance |
| May 2026 | Staff training: sales, branches, call centres, collections | Operations / HR |
| May 2026 | External communications: customer notices, website updates, dealer coordination | Marketing / Product |
| 1 June 2026 | Effective date, HPAA 2026 applies to all new HP agreements | All teams |
| June–July 2026 | Post-implementation review; address edge cases and regulator queries | Compliance / Legal |
The transition to the new hire purchase compliance Malaysia regime creates litigation risk at several points, particularly around early-settlement disputes, repossession challenges and allegations of non-disclosure. Proactive risk mitigation reduces exposure significantly.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shanker Sivapragasam at MESSRS K.SILADASS & PARTNERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
To support operational readiness, the following template pack has been prepared for dealers, lenders and in-house counsel implementing the HPAA 2026 requirements:
These resources are designed as starting points and should be reviewed by qualified legal counsel before adoption. Malaysian law practitioners with experience in commercial transactions and hire-purchase financing can tailor these templates to specific business requirements and risk profiles.
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