[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to clear a vessel malaysia MMSW procedure

How to Clear a Vessel in Malaysia: MMSW Procedure & Vessel Clearance (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to clear a vessel in Malaysia under the MMSW procedure is now essential for every shipowner, master and shipping agent planning a port call in the country. The Malaysia Maritime Single Window (MMSW) is the mandatory electronic channel through which all pre‑arrival, arrival and departure clearances must be submitted to the relevant Malaysian authorities. Following a phased rollout that began with the publication of the MMSW Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) V1 in June 2024 and the full implementation at Port Klang in early 2025, the system now covers an expanding list of Malaysian ports, and non‑compliance can result in delayed berthing, denied cargo operations, or exposure to arrest and detention claims.

This guide sets out the complete port clearance steps, documents needed for MMSW filing, the MMSW timeline, costs, and the legal risks that foreign‑flagged vessels and their agents must manage in 2026.

Overview of the MMSW Vessel Clearance Process and Who It Applies To

The MMSW consolidates what were previously separate paper‑based or port‑specific electronic submissions into a single platform operated under the oversight of the Marine Department Malaysia (Jabatan Laut). Through the MMSW, a vessel’s agent or master submits a Pre‑Arrival Notification (PAN/ePAN), crew and cargo declarations, and certificate information in one workflow. The system then routes each component to the relevant authority, immigration, customs, the port operator, the harbour master and health authorities, for parallel review and approval.

The following parties are required to use the MMSW for vessel clearance in Malaysia:

  • Local shipping agents. The primary filing party for virtually all foreign‑flagged vessel calls.
  • Masters. Responsible for the accuracy of crew lists, cargo manifests and dangerous goods declarations submitted through the agent.
  • Shipowners and ship managers. Must ensure a valid agent appointment and Power of Attorney (POA) is in place before the filing window opens.
  • Port operators and relevant government agencies. Act as reviewing and approving authorities within the MMSW workflow.

The high‑level sequence for every vessel call is: Register MMSW user account → Create Ship Profile and obtain Ship Call Number (SCN) → Submit PAN/ePAN with attachments → Receive authority approvals (immigration, customs, port, health) → Obtain Port Clearance and Berthing Instruction → Conduct port operations → File Departure Clearance via MMSW.

Eligibility and MMSW Registration Prerequisites

Before any filing can take place, the agent or owner must satisfy several MMSW requirements. Foreign‑flagged vessels cannot file directly through the system without a Malaysia‑based registered user, in practice, this means a local shipping agent is essential for every foreign vessel call.

Required Accounts and Roles

The MMSW User Guide sets out three principal user categories for MMSW registration:

  • Shipping Agent. Registers a company‑level account with the MMSW portal, linked to the agent’s Malaysian company registration number. This is the most common filing role.
  • Port Operator. Registers to manage berth allocation, pilotage coordination and vessel traffic within the system.
  • Owner / Manager. May register where a Malaysian‑incorporated entity manages the vessel directly, though this is uncommon for foreign‑flagged tonnage.

Each account requires validation by the MMSW administrator. For agents filing on behalf of multiple principals, the system supports multi‑vessel and multi‑principal configurations. Integrated agents with high call volumes may also connect via API, the MMSW provides technical documentation for system‑to‑system data submission.

Accepted POA Formats and Recommended Wording

A valid agent authorisation, typically a Power of Attorney or appointment letter, must be uploaded with or prior to the first PAN submission. The POA should clearly state the agent’s authority to submit MMSW filings, receive port clearance documentation and accept port invoices on behalf of the owner. Where the owner is incorporated outside Malaysia, industry observers expect that notarisation of the POA may be requested by port authorities, particularly for high‑value or contested calls. A recommended minimum wording is: “[Agent name] is hereby authorised to submit Pre‑Arrival Notifications and all related documents via the Malaysia Maritime Single Window (MMSW) on behalf of [Owner/Manager], and to accept port invoices and berthing instructions for the vessel [name, IMO number].”

Step‑by‑Step MMSW Procedure for Vessel Clearance in Malaysia

The following numbered steps set out the complete vessel clearance Malaysia procedure from ETA confirmation through departure. Each step identifies who acts and the typical timing involved.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Confirm ETA & appoint agent Owner / Master Immediately after ETA; ideally ≥72 hours before ETA
MMSW user & ship profile registration / SCN Shipping agent / Owner One‑off per vessel; 1–3 business days (instantaneous if pre‑registered)
Prepare attachments (crew list, certificates, DG, bunkers) Master / Ship operator / Agent Same day as PAN, prepare before submission
Submit Pre‑Arrival Notification (PAN/ePAN) Shipping agent / Master Required timing varies by port (common: 24–72 hours before ETA)
Authority review (immigration / customs / port operator) Relevant authorities From minutes (auto‑clear) to 48+ hours (manual checks)
Receive Port Clearance / Berthing Instruction Port Authority / Harbour Master Usually within 24 hours after approvals; may be same day for routine calls
Departure clearance via MMSW Shipping agent / Master Submit after cargo/crew changes, processing 1–24 hours

Step 1, Confirm ETA and Appoint a Local Shipping Agent

As soon as the vessel’s estimated time of arrival at a Malaysian port is confirmed, the owner or master must appoint a Malaysia‑based shipping agent. The agent’s MMSW account is the gateway to the entire clearance workflow. Appointment should occur at least 72 hours before ETA wherever possible to allow time for MMSW registration (if the vessel is calling Malaysia for the first time) and document preparation. The agent appointment must be formalised with a signed POA or letter of appointment, specifying MMSW filing authority.

Step 2, Complete MMSW User and Ship Profile Registration; Obtain Ship Call Number (SCN)

If the agent does not already hold an active MMSW user account, registration must be completed via the MMSW portal. The agent submits company details, the Malaysian company registration number and authorised user credentials. The MMSW administrator validates the account, this typically takes 1–3 business days for new registrations.

Once the user account is active, the agent creates a Ship Profile for the vessel, entering the IMO number, vessel name, flag state, gross tonnage, and classification details. On completion, the MMSW assigns a Ship Call Number (SCN), a unique identifier for that vessel’s call at the specified port. The SCN links all subsequent filings (PAN, crew lists, cargo declarations, departure clearance) to a single voyage record. For vessels that have called Malaysian ports previously, the ship profile may already exist and the agent simply initiates a new SCN for the current call.

Step 3, Prepare and Attach Required Documents

Before submitting the PAN, the master and agent must compile all documents needed for MMSW clearance. These include crew lists with passport and seaman’s book details, the cargo manifest, dangerous goods declarations where applicable, bunker delivery notes for bunkering calls, and valid statutory certificates. All attachments should be in PDF format (JPEG is accepted for some scanned documents; agents using API integration may submit structured data in XML). File names should clearly identify the document type and vessel, for example, CrewList_IMO1234567_PortKlang.pdf. The full documents checklist is set out in the Required Documents section below.

Step 4, Submit the Pre‑Arrival Notification (PAN/ePAN) via MMSW

This is the central filing step in the MMSW procedure. The agent logs into the MMSW portal, selects the active SCN and completes the Pre‑Arrival Notification (PAN/ePAN) form. The PAN captures voyage details, ETA, last port of call, next port, crew count, cargo summary, and dangerous goods information. All prepared attachments are uploaded at this stage.

The required submission window varies by port. At Port Klang, the Port Klang Authority’s ePAN system requires submission well in advance of the vessel’s arrival, the MMSW SOP and port-specific notices generally indicate a window of 24 to 72 hours before ETA for routine calls. For bunkering‑only calls, a pre‑arrival notification MMSW filing is still mandatory, typically at least 24 hours before the planned bunkering operation. Agents should always verify the exact deadline with the relevant port authority’s latest notice.

Step 5, Await Agency Reviews and Authority Approvals

Once the PAN is submitted, the MMSW routes the filing to each relevant authority simultaneously:

  • Immigration Department. Reviews crew list and passport data; may request physical passport submission at certain ports (see the 2026 changes section below).
  • Royal Malaysian Customs. Reviews cargo manifest and applies duty or exemption determinations.
  • Port operator / Harbour Master. Assesses berth availability, pilotage requirements and safety conditions.
  • Health / quarantine authorities. Reviews health declarations and any applicable medical documentation.

Approval times range from minutes, where the system auto‑clears routine, low‑risk calls, to 48 hours or more where manual checks are triggered. The agent can monitor the status of each authority’s review in real time through the MMSW dashboard. If any authority raises a query or rejects a component, the agent receives a notification and must respond with corrected data or additional documents.

Step 6, Receive Port Clearance and Berthing Instruction; Arrange Pilotage and Towage

When all authorities have approved the submission, the MMSW issues a Port Clearance confirmation and the harbour master provides a Berthing Instruction. The agent then coordinates pilotage and towage services, these are arranged separately with the port’s pilotage service and local towage companies but must be consistent with the berthing window assigned through the MMSW workflow. For routine calls, Port Clearance is typically issued within 24 hours of all approvals being granted.

Step 7, File Departure Clearance via MMSW

After cargo operations, crew changes and any bunkering are completed, the agent must submit a Departure Clearance through the MMSW before the vessel sails. This filing updates the crew list (if any sign‑on/sign‑off occurred), confirms cargo loaded or discharged, and requests final immigration and customs clearance for departure. Processing typically takes 1 to 24 hours depending on the complexity of the call and port workload.

Step 8, If Rejected: Urgent Escalation and Legal Steps

Where a PAN or any component is rejected and the vessel is already on approach, the agent must act immediately. The first step is to identify the rejection reason in the MMSW dashboard, correct the data or upload missing documents, and resubmit. If the issue cannot be resolved electronically, the agent should contact the MMSW helpdesk (contact details available on the MMSW home page at mmsw. gov. my) and the port’s Operations Room (OPR) directly. The master and owner should be notified without delay.

Where the rejection exposes the vessel to detention, or where cargo claims or unpaid port fees create arrest risk, the owner’s P&I club must be notified immediately and legal counsel should be engaged to assess whether urgent court applications, such as an application to set aside a potential arrest warrant, are necessary.

Documents Needed for MMSW Vessel Clearance

The following table lists the documents required for a standard vessel call in Malaysia via the MMSW. All documents should be uploaded as PDF attachments unless otherwise indicated. Agents should confirm port‑specific variations with the relevant port authority notice.

Document Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity)
Ship Registration Certificate / Certificate of Registry Issued by flag state; PDF; must include IMO number
International Tonnage Certificate / Safety certificates (SOLAS, Load Line) Flag state or classification society; PDF; expiry dates must be valid on date of arrival
Crew List (with passport numbers and seaman’s book details) Master or shipping company; PDF or CSV; physical passport submission may be required at certain ports
Passenger List (if applicable) Master; PDF
Cargo Manifest / Bill of Lading summary Shipper or carrier; PDF; include IMO cargo descriptions
Dangerous Goods Declaration / IMDG manifest Shipper or cargo safety manager; PDF; include UN numbers and IMDG Class
Bunker Delivery Note (if bunkering in port) Bunker supplier; PDF; MMSW filing is mandatory even for bunkering‑only calls
Previous Port Clearance Previous port authority; PDF
Agent POA / Authorisation letter Owner or manager; PDF; must specify MMSW filing authority (notarised if owner is incorporated outside Malaysia, recommended)
Crew passports (copies) and Seaman’s book extracts Scanned copies (PDF); check port for physical submission requirements
Ship’s particulars / Voyage plan / ETA details Entered directly in PAN form fields; master or agent
P&I Club / insurance contact details Club name, emergency phone, email, include for arrest and contingency contacts
Health declarations / medical certificates As required by port or health authority; PDF

MMSW Timeline and Key Deadlines

Getting the MMSW timeline right is critical. The table below sets out recommended and minimum action windows. All timings should be cross‑checked against the latest port‑specific SOP or notice, requirements at Port Klang, Bintulu, Johor Port and other terminals may differ.

Action Minimum / Recommended Time Before ETA Risk if Missed
MMSW user account and ship profile registration ≥5 business days (recommended for new users) Registration delays prevent PAN submission entirely
PAN/ePAN submission (routine cargo call) 24–72 hours before ETA (check port SOP) Rejection or delayed berthing; potential additional port charges
PAN/ePAN submission (bunkering‑only call) At least 24 hours before planned bunkering Denial of bunkering services
Immigration crew sign‑on / sign‑off approvals 48 hours where physical passports are required Crew denied shore leave or denied sign‑on
Dangerous goods declarations Submit with PAN; earlier if high‑hazard cargo Denial of cargo operations or holding of vessel at anchorage

The most common cause of delay is inadequate lead time for new MMSW registrations. Agents handling a vessel’s first‑ever call to Malaysia should begin the registration process at least five business days before the vessel’s ETA. Where an authority requests physical documents following a PAN submission, for example, immigration requesting physical crew passports, the agent must immediately arrange courier delivery or in‑person presentation to avoid the approval window expiring.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations for MMSW Vessel Clearance

The MMSW system itself does not currently charge a transaction fee to filing users, the platform is government‑provided. However, vessel clearance in Malaysia involves several categories of cost that owners and agents must budget for. The table below provides indicative ranges; exact amounts must be confirmed from the relevant port authority’s published tariff schedule.

Item Typical Range Notes
MMSW system transaction fee Nil Government‑provided system; no user fee at time of writing, confirm with MMSW portal for updates
Port dues and harbour fees Varies by port and vessel GT Consult Port Authority tariff (Port Klang, Bintulu, Johor Port etc.)
Pilotage and towage Varies by vessel size and port Contracted via port pilotage service and local towage company
Agent handling fee Commercial, depends on scope of services Covers PAN filing, customs, immigration, line handling as agreed
Immigration document processing Small admin or courier fee Applies where physical passport handling is required
Penalty for late or missing PAN Varies; may include berthing delays and surcharges Check port notices for specific penalty schedules

Owners should also factor in the cost of legal advice where a call involves elevated risk, for example, calls where cargo disputes are pending, where the vessel has outstanding port fee liabilities, or where crew changes involve complex immigration scenarios. Engaging Malaysian maritime counsel before the vessel arrives is significantly less costly than seeking urgent relief after a detention or arrest has been initiated.

What Changes in 2026: MMSW Port Rollouts and Practical Impact

The MMSW has undergone significant expansion since the publication of the MMSW SOP V1 in June 2024. The Port Klang Authority launched its full MMSW integration in February 2025, streamlining port clearance procedures and replacing legacy paper‑based submissions at the country’s busiest port. Bintulu Port Authority issued Port Notice 07/2025, mandating the use of the MMSW ship clearance modules for online submission at Bintulu Port. Additional ports, including Johor Port and terminals in East Malaysia, have been onboarding through 2025 and into 2026.

The practical impacts for vessel operators in 2026 are threefold. First, MMSW filing is now mandatory even for bunkering‑only calls at ports that have completed implementation, there is no paper fallback. Second, certain ports retain requirements for physical passport submission alongside electronic crew data filed through the MMSW. Early indications from Port Klang suggest that immigration authorities may continue to request physical crew passports for sign‑on and sign‑off processing despite the digitisation of other elements. Third, the SOP‑driven workflow frontloads authority checks: all approvals must be obtained electronically before a berthing instruction is issued, meaning that omissions or errors in the PAN submission now create delays earlier in the process than they did under the legacy system.

Common Pitfalls in the MMSW Vessel Clearance Process and How to Avoid Them

  • Mismatched IMO number or vessel name. Any discrepancy between the ship profile in MMSW and the vessel’s actual Certificate of Registry will trigger an immediate rejection. Always verify the IMO number, vessel name and flag state against the registry document before creating the ship profile.
  • Expired statutory certificates. Uploading certificates that will expire before the vessel’s arrival date is a common cause of rejection. Check validity dates for SOLAS, Load Line and International Tonnage Certificates and ensure renewals are completed before filing.
  • Missing or deficient POA. A POA that does not expressly authorise the agent to submit MMSW filings may be rejected at the port level. Use specific MMSW language in the POA and consider notarisation for foreign‑incorporated owners.
  • Incorrect crew passport numbers. Transposition errors in passport or seaman’s book numbers cause immigration rejections. Cross‑check every entry against physical documents before submission.
  • Dangerous goods code errors. Incorrect UN numbers or IMDG Class designations will halt cargo approval. The shipper’s DG declaration should be verified by the agent against the IMDG Code before upload.
  • Late PAN submission. Submitting the PAN after the port’s deadline window has closed results in automatic rejection at most ports. Build in a buffer of at least 12 hours beyond the minimum submission window to allow for corrections.
  • Failure to notify P&I club of pending issues. Where MMSW compliance penalties, cargo disputes or port fee arrears create a risk of vessel arrest, delayed P&I notification can increase the owner’s exposure. The likely practical effect of failing to notify the club promptly is that security or bail arrangements cannot be put in place before an arrest warrant is executed. Owners and agents should maintain standing instructions to notify the P&I club immediately upon any rejection, dispute or detention notice.

If a PAN is rejected while the vessel is on approach, the escalation path is: correct and resubmit → contact the MMSW helpdesk → contact the port OPR and harbour master directly → notify the owner and P&I club → engage Malaysian maritime counsel if detention or arrest risk materialises.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jeremy M Joseph at Messrs Joseph and Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Malaysia Maritime Single Window (MMSW), Home
  2. MMSW Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) V1
  3. MMSW User Guide, New User Registration
  4. MMSW Frequently Asked Questions
  5. Port Klang Authority, ePAN / Online Systems
  6. Bintulu Port Authority, Port Notice 07/2025 (Ship Clearance via MMSW)
  7. DagangNet, Full Implementation of MMSW at Port Klang
  8. The Star, PKA Launches Single Window System
  9. APEC TPTWG Briefing on MMSW
  10. Marine Department Malaysia (Jabatan Laut)
  11. GAC, Guidelines and Pre‑Arrival Requirements

FAQs

How do I register and submit a Pre‑Arrival Notification (PAN) in MMSW?
Register a user account on the MMSW portal (mmsw.gov.my) by submitting your company details and Malaysian registration number. Once validated, create a Ship Profile for the vessel and obtain a Ship Call Number (SCN). With the SCN active, complete the PAN form, upload all required documents as PDF attachments, and submit within the port’s required timeframe, typically 24 to 72 hours before ETA. See Steps 2 and 4 above for full details.
At a minimum: Certificate of Registry, International Tonnage Certificate, SOLAS and Load Line certificates, crew list with passport details, cargo manifest, Agent POA, and health declarations. Dangerous goods declarations and bunker delivery notes are required where applicable. The complete checklist is in the Required Documents table above.
In practice, the local shipping agent submits all MMSW filings on behalf of the vessel. The master is responsible for the accuracy of crew, cargo and voyage data provided to the agent. The owner must ensure a valid POA is in place authorising the agent to file. Foreign‑flagged vessels must use a Malaysia‑based agent with an active MMSW user account.
From PAN submission to Port Clearance, routine calls may be cleared within hours if all authorities auto‑approve. Complex calls, those involving dangerous goods, crew changes requiring physical passport review, or first‑time vessel registrations, may take 48 hours or more. New MMSW user registration itself takes 1 to 3 business days. See the Timeline and Key Deadlines section for port‑specific windows.
Not directly. The MMSW requires a Malaysia‑based registered user to submit filings. A foreign agent must appoint a local sub‑agent with an active MMSW account. The local agent files the PAN and manages the clearance process, relying on the POA issued by the owner or foreign principal. Agents with high call volumes may integrate their systems via the MMSW API, but the registered entity must still be Malaysia‑based.
Identify the rejection reason in the MMSW dashboard immediately. Correct the data or upload missing documents and resubmit. If the issue is not resolvable electronically, contact the MMSW helpdesk and the port’s Operations Room directly. Notify the owner and the vessel’s P&I club without delay, if the rejection creates a risk of detention or arrest (for example, due to outstanding cargo claims or port fee arrears), Malaysian maritime counsel should be engaged urgently to assess legal options including urgent court applications.
Legal counsel should be engaged before the vessel arrives where there are known disputes (cargo claims, crew issues, or outstanding liabilities), where the POA or agent appointment involves cross‑border complexity, or where the vessel has previously been subject to arrest or detention in Malaysia. Post‑arrival, a lawyer should be contacted immediately upon any rejection that cannot be resolved through the MMSW helpdesk, any notice of detention, or any indication that a third party is seeking to arrest the vessel. To find a lawyer in Malaysia, consult the Global Law Experts directory for qualified maritime and shipping practitioners.

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

How to Clear a Vessel in Malaysia: MMSW Procedure & Vessel Clearance (2026)

Send welcome message

Custom Message