[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
share sale agreement stamp duty malaysia

Share Sale Agreement Stamp Duty Malaysia: Rates, Who Pays & Filing Timelines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

When executing a private share sale in Malaysia, stamp duty applies to two distinct documents: the share sale agreement itself, which attracts a nominal duty of RM10, and the instrument of transfer (share transfer form), which is subject to ad valorem duty at 0. 3%, calculated on the higher of the sale consideration or the Net Tangible Assets (NTA) of the shares being transferred. Under the Stamp Act 1949 and the LHDN Guidelines on the Stamping of Share Transfer Instruments, the transferee (buyer) bears legal responsibility for paying this duty, although parties routinely negotiate alternative arrangements in the share purchase agreement.

All stamping is now typically handled via the LHDN Stamp Assessment and Payment System (STAMPS) portal, with documents submitted digitally and duty paid online before completion can be finalised.

Quick Answer: What Every Buyer and Seller Must Know About Share Sale Agreement Stamp Duty Malaysia

Before diving into the detail, here are the essential takeaways for any deal team working on a private share sale agreement stamp duty Malaysia transaction:

  • Who pays. The transferee (buyer) is legally liable for stamp duty on the share transfer form. The share sale agreement itself is typically stamped by the party presenting it for stamping, though the buyer usually bears all costs by convention.
  • Key rates. The share sale agreement attracts a flat RM10 nominal duty (plus RM10 per duplicate). The instrument of transfer attracts ad valorem duty of 0.3% (RM3 for every RM1,000 or part thereof) on the higher of consideration or market value.
  • Time to stamp. Instruments must be stamped within 30 days of execution. Late stamping triggers penalties of up to four times the original duty payable.
  • Documents required. Executed share transfer form, signed share sale agreement, audited financial statements of the target company, board resolution approving the transfer, and existing share certificates.

Snapshot: Stamp Duty Rates and Liability

Document Duty type Rate Who pays
Share sale agreement (SPA) Nominal (fixed) RM10 (+ RM10 per duplicate) Presenting party (usually buyer)
Instrument of transfer (share transfer form) Ad valorem 0.3% (RM3 per RM1,000 or part thereof) Transferee (buyer) by law

Legal Basis and Documents Liable to Stamp Duty on Share Transfers in Malaysia

Stamp duty in Malaysia is governed by the Stamp Act 1949. The person liable to pay stamp duty is specified in the Third Schedule of the Act, while the rates and instruments chargeable are set out in the First Schedule. For share transfers, Item 32(b) of the First Schedule is the operative provision, imposing ad valorem duty on instruments that effect the transfer of shares, stocks or marketable securities.

It is critical to distinguish between the two documents involved in a private share sale:

  • The share sale agreement (SPA / share purchase agreement). This is the contract between buyer and seller that records the commercial terms, purchase price, representations, warranties, conditions precedent and completion mechanics. As a contract or agreement, it attracts nominal stamp duty only.
  • The instrument of transfer (share transfer form). This is the statutory form that actually transfers legal ownership of the shares from transferor to transferee. It is this document, not the share sale agreement, that attracts ad valorem stamp duty at 0.3%.

Statutory References

The LHDN Guidelines on the Stamping of Share Transfer Instruments confirm that the instrument of transfer is the chargeable document, and that the duty base is computed on the higher of the sale consideration or the NTA of the shares. The LHDN stamp duty overview page further confirms that stamp duty is levied on legal, commercial and financial instruments and that the person liable to pay is set out in the Third Schedule of the Stamp Act 1949.

Stamp Duty Rates Malaysia Shares: How Duty Is Calculated

Understanding how stamp duty on share transfer Malaysia transactions is computed requires clarity on two separate charges.

Nominal Duty on the Share Sale Agreement

The share sale agreement, whether titled as an SPA, share purchase agreement, or sale and purchase agreement for shares, is stamped at a fixed nominal rate of RM10. Each duplicate or counterpart copy attracts an additional RM10. This applies regardless of the transaction value.

Ad Valorem Duty on the Instrument of Transfer

The share transfer form Malaysia attracts ad valorem duty at the rate of 0.3%, which equates to RM3 for every RM1,000 or part thereof. The duty is calculated on the higher of the following values:

  • Total consideration. The actual purchase price agreed between the parties.
  • Net Tangible Assets (NTA). Total tangible assets minus total liabilities, proportionate to the number of shares being transferred relative to total issued shares.
  • Price-Earnings Ratio (PER) multiple. An alternative valuation method that LHDN may apply for active, profitable companies, typically using a multiple of the company’s earnings per share.

For unquoted (private company) shares, the LHDN Guidelines state that the NTA or sale consideration, whichever is the highest, is used for computation of the stamp duty payable. In practice, LHDN officers will assess using the highest of consideration, NTA and (where applicable) PER.

Worked Example A: Consideration Exceeds NTA

Scenario: A buyer acquires 50,000 shares (out of 100,000 total issued shares) in XYZ Sdn Bhd for RM750,000. The company’s NTA per its latest audited accounts is RM1,200,000.

Valuation basis Calculation Value
Consideration Agreed price RM750,000
NTA (pro rata) RM1,200,000 ÷ 100,000 × 50,000 RM600,000
Duty base (higher of the two) , RM750,000
Stamp duty payable RM750,000 ÷ 1,000 × RM3 RM2,250

Worked Example B: NTA Exceeds Consideration

Scenario: A buyer acquires 80,000 shares (out of 100,000 total issued shares) in ABC Sdn Bhd for RM400,000. The company’s NTA is RM1,000,000.

Valuation basis Calculation Value
Consideration Agreed price RM400,000
NTA (pro rata) RM1,000,000 ÷ 100,000 × 80,000 RM800,000
Duty base (higher of the two) , RM800,000
Stamp duty payable RM800,000 ÷ 1,000 × RM3 RM2,400

In both examples, the SPA itself would attract a separate RM10 nominal duty. Where LHDN applies the PER method and the resulting value exceeds both consideration and NTA, the PER-derived figure becomes the duty base.

Who Pays Stamp Duty Malaysia Shares: Legal Liability and Market Practice

Under the Third Schedule of the Stamp Act 1949, the transferee, i.e. the buyer, is the person legally responsible for paying stamp duty on the transfer of shares. Industry observers note that it is unusual in Malaysian market practice for this obligation to be shared or shifted to the seller, though there is no prohibition against doing so by contract.

In practice, the share purchase agreement Malaysia will typically contain an express clause addressing the allocation of stamp duty costs. Deal teams should ensure this is clearly drafted to avoid completion disputes.

Sample SPA Clause, Duty Allocation

A typical clause may read:

“The Purchaser shall bear and pay all stamp duty payable on this Agreement and the instrument of transfer of the Sale Shares and shall indemnify and hold harmless the Vendor from and against all claims, losses and liabilities arising from any failure to pay or late payment of such duty.”

Where the seller agrees to contribute toward stamp duty (for example, in a negotiated deal or management buyout), this should be documented separately to avoid LHDN treating the contribution as an adjustment to consideration.

Stamping Process for Share Sale Agreement Stamp Duty Malaysia: Step by Step

The stamping process combines pre-completion preparation, digital submission via the LHDN portal, and post-stamping completion steps. Below is a practical walkthrough for deal teams handling stamp duty on share transfer Malaysia filings.

Pre-Completion Preparation

  • Draft and execute the share transfer form. Both transferor and transferee must sign the instrument of transfer.
  • Obtain board approval. The target company’s board of directors must pass a resolution approving the registration of the share transfer (for private companies, check the constitution for any transfer restrictions or pre-emption rights).
  • Gather supporting documents. Assemble the signed SPA, existing share certificates, the company’s latest audited financial statements (for NTA computation), and copies of the transferor’s and transferee’s identification documents.

STAMPS Portal Submission

LHDN’s Stamp Assessment and Payment System (STAMPS) is the standard digital channel for submitting stamp duty assessments and payments. The typical workflow is:

  1. Register an account on the STAMPS portal if you have not already done so.
  2. Upload the executed documents, the instrument of transfer, the signed SPA, and the audited financial statements of the target company.
  3. Complete the online assessment form, enter the consideration, NTA and number of shares transferred. LHDN will assess the duty based on the highest applicable value.
  4. Pay the assessed duty, payment can be made online via FPX or other accepted methods. Retain the digital receipt.
  5. Download the stamping certificate, once payment is confirmed, the system generates a digital stamp certificate that evidences the instrument has been duly stamped.

Counter Stamping

While the STAMPS portal is the primary route, stamping at the physical LHDN counter remains available. This may be necessary for complex cases, where LHDN requests additional information, or for expedited assessment. Bring all original documents and expect processing to take several working days.

Documents Checklist

Document Who prepares When to file
Executed instrument of transfer (share transfer form) Buyer’s solicitor / company secretary At submission to STAMPS portal
Signed share sale agreement (SPA) Parties’ solicitors At submission to STAMPS portal
Audited financial statements (latest) Target company / auditors At submission to STAMPS portal
Board resolution approving transfer Company secretary of target Pre-completion
Existing share certificates Seller At completion
Identity documents (transferor / transferee) Parties At submission to STAMPS portal

Completion and Post-Completion Filings

Once the instrument of transfer has been duly stamped, the company secretary of the target company registers the transfer and updates the register of members. New share certificates must be issued in the name of the transferee. For a private company (Sdn Bhd), this should be done immediately at completion. The completion documents for a share sale in Malaysia should also be lodged with the Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM) where required.

Late stamping attracts penalties under the Stamp Act 1949. Instruments stamped within 30 days of execution attract no penalty; instruments stamped after this period may incur penalties of up to four times the duty payable, depending on the length of the delay.

Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity type Obligation Who files / timing
Private company (Sdn Bhd) Update share register; issue new certificates Company secretary at completion (immediate)
Public unlisted Notify company; update register; ensure compliance with transfer restrictions Company secretary; timeframe per constitution
Public listed Additional regulatory filings and possible disclosure obligations Company / issuer (may involve exchange rules)

Common Pitfalls and Risk Allocation

Deal teams should be alert to several recurring issues when managing share sale agreement stamp duty Malaysia obligations:

  • Undervaluation risk. If the agreed consideration is below the NTA, LHDN will compute duty on the higher NTA figure. Attempting to minimise the stated consideration to reduce duty is not effective and may trigger a formal revaluation or audit.
  • Forgetting duplicates. Each duplicate or counterpart of the SPA requires an additional RM10 stamp. Failing to stamp all copies can render them inadmissible as evidence.
  • Double stamping. Where multiple instruments are executed in connection with a single transfer (for example, a supplemental agreement and the main SPA), ensure only the operative transfer instrument attracts ad valorem duty. Seek advice to avoid paying duty twice on the same economic transfer.
  • Foreign buyer considerations. Non-resident buyers face the same stamp duty rates, but should verify whether the target company’s constitution contains foreign ownership restrictions that could delay or prevent the registration of the transfer.
  • Chain of title gaps. Where shares have changed hands informally (without proper stamping of prior transfers), the current buyer may be unable to register the transfer until all prior instruments are duly stamped. This can result in back-stamping with accumulated penalties.

Practical mitigation includes requiring the seller to provide warranties on clean chain of title, including a stamp duty indemnity in the SPA, and holding back a portion of the purchase price pending successful registration.

Practical Checklist for Deal Teams

Use this compact checklist at each stage of the transaction:

  • Pre-signing. Confirm NTA from audited accounts; agree duty allocation in the SPA; check the target’s constitution for transfer restrictions.
  • At completion. Execute the instrument of transfer; submit documents and pay duty via the STAMPS portal; obtain the digital stamping certificate; surrender old share certificates.
  • Post-completion. Register the transfer in the company’s share register; issue new share certificates; file any required SSM notifications; retain stamped originals for records.

For deal teams handling complex transactions, contact a Malaysia M&A lawyer to ensure every filing obligation is met on time.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Managing share sale agreement stamp duty Malaysia obligations requires attention to two separate documents, correct valuation, timely filing via the STAMPS portal and careful post-completion registration. Getting any of these steps wrong can delay the transaction or trigger penalties. Deal teams executing private share sales should confirm NTA valuations early, draft clear duty-allocation clauses in the SPA and ensure all instruments are stamped within the 30-day statutory window. For tailored advice on your transaction, find a Malaysia M&A lawyer through the Global Law Experts network.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Terrence Chong at Darryl Edward & Co., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. LHDN, Guidelines on the Stamping of Share Transfer Instruments
  2. LHDN, Stamp Duty Overview
  3. ACCA, Stamp Duty (Malaysia)
  4. Baker McKenzie, Global Private M&A Guide (Malaysia)
  5. PwC Malaysia, Stamp Duty
  6. Cleartax Malaysia, Stamp Duty 2026
  7. LPPLaw, Guide to Stamp Duty on Share Transfers
  8. Fastlane Group, Stamp Duty in Malaysia for Transfer of Shares

FAQs

What are the legal requirements to transfer shares of a Malaysian company?
The transferor and transferee must execute an instrument of transfer (share transfer form), the company’s board must approve the registration, stamp duty must be paid and the stamped instrument lodged with the company secretary for registration in the share register. A signed share sale agreement records the commercial terms.
Ad valorem duty of 0.3% (RM3 per RM1,000 or part thereof) is imposed on the instrument of transfer. The duty base is the higher of the sale consideration, the pro-rata NTA or, where LHDN applies it, the PER-derived value. See the worked examples above.
By law, the transferee (buyer) pays. Market practice in Malaysia almost always follows this default, though parties may negotiate otherwise and document the arrangement in the SPA.
Yes, the share purchase agreement attracts a nominal stamp duty of RM10, with an additional RM10 for each duplicate copy. This is separate from the ad valorem duty on the share transfer form.
Submit the executed instrument of transfer, signed SPA and audited financial statements via the LHDN STAMPS portal. Complete the online assessment, pay the duty electronically and download the digital stamping certificate. Physical counter stamping at LHDN offices is also available.
Certain exemptions exist under specific orders, for example, transfers between associated companies, restructuring exercises or transfers pursuant to approved schemes. Each exemption has strict qualifying conditions and typically requires an advance application to LHDN.
If LHDN determines that the duty was underpaid (for example, because the NTA exceeded the stated consideration), it will issue an additional assessment. The shortfall must be paid together with any applicable penalty. Taxpayers may object to the assessment and, if unresolved, appeal to the High Court.
do grandparents have rights
By Global Law Experts

posted 5 hours ago

ai copyright line between training theft
By Global Law Experts

posted 6 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Share Sale Agreement Stamp Duty Malaysia: Rates, Who Pays & Filing Timelines

Send welcome message

Custom Message