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how to transfer property in Malaysia

How to Transfer Property in Malaysia: Sales, Gifts (love & Affection) & Transfers on Death

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Understanding how to transfer property in Malaysia is essential whether you are selling a home, gifting land to a family member under a love and affection arrangement, or administering an estate after a death. The process is governed primarily by the National Land Code 1965 and the Stamp Act 1949, and it requires precise documentation, centred on Form 14A (the Memorandum of Transfer), along with stamp duty payment and registration at the relevant State Land Office.

With lender practices, stamp duty waiver conditions and State consent requirements continuing to evolve in 2026, this guide consolidates the step-by-step procedure, documents needed, timeline, costs and legal fees into a single actionable reference for property owners, buyers, executors and in-house counsel operating in Malaysia.

Overview of the Property Transfer Process and Who It Applies To

Property transfers in Malaysia fall into three principal categories, each triggering a distinct set of requirements under the National Land Code 1965:

  • Sale (market transaction). A willing seller transfers registered title to a buyer for consideration. The core instrument is the Memorandum of Transfer (Form 14A), lodged at the State Land Office after the Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA) is executed and stamp duty is paid.
  • Gift / love and affection transfer. An owner transfers property to a spouse, parent, child, grandparent or grandchild without monetary consideration. The same Form 14A is used, but the transfer is expressed as being made for “natural love and affection.” Qualifying transfers may benefit from a stamp duty exemption or waiver.
  • Transfer on death. When the registered owner dies, ownership passes through probate (if there is a will) or intestacy administration. A Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration must be obtained before the executor or administrator can execute Form 14A on behalf of the estate.

For leasehold properties where no individual or strata title has been issued, a Deed of Assignment is used instead of, or alongside, Form 14A. State consent under section 433B of the National Land Code 1965 is required for transfers of Malay Reserve land, land subject to restriction-in-interest, or properties in certain categories. In each scenario, engaging a qualified conveyancing solicitor early, ideally six to eight weeks before the intended completion date, reduces the risk of missed deadlines and registration delays.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Transferring Property in Malaysia

Eligibility: Sales

The seller must hold a registered title (or beneficial interest evidenced by a Deed of Assignment if individual title has not been issued). The buyer must be legally eligible to hold land in the relevant state, foreigners face minimum purchase-price thresholds that vary by state and property type, and certain categories of property (Bumiputera lots, Malay Reserve land, low-cost housing) are restricted. If the property is subject to an existing mortgage, the seller’s lender must consent to the transfer or the loan must be fully redeemed before registration can proceed.

Eligibility: Love and Affection Transfers

A love and affection transfer is available between specific family relationships recognised under Malaysian law: spouses, parents and children (including adopted children), and grandparents and grandchildren. Since 1 April 2023, stamp duty on such transfers has been subject to a waiver on the first RM1,000,000 of property value for qualifying family categories, stamp duty at the normal scale rate applies to any value exceeding that cap. The transferee must provide documentary evidence of the family relationship (marriage certificate, birth certificate or adoption order) to the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia (LHDN) as part of the adjudication process. State consent requirements apply as they would in any other transfer.

Eligibility: Transfers on Death

Before any property can be transferred from a deceased owner’s name, the personal representative must obtain either a Grant of Probate (where a valid will exists) from the Malaysian High Court, or Letters of Administration (in intestacy cases) from the High Court or, for small estates valued at RM2,000,000 or below, from the Land Administrator. For Muslim estates in Peninsular Malaysia, administration follows the applicable Syariah and civil procedures. The personal representative must then prepare an affidavit of distribution and execute the transfer documents on behalf of the estate.

Step-by-Step Procedure to Transfer Property in Malaysia

The following table summarises the transfer property Malaysia requirements at each stage, who is responsible and the typical duration. Detailed guidance for each step follows below.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Title search and encumbrance check Buyer’s solicitor / State Land Office 1–7 days
2. Execute SPA, Deed of Gift or transfer documents Buyer and seller (with solicitors) 1–21 days
3. Lender payoff, consent or novation (if mortgage exists) Seller’s and buyer’s solicitors + lender 2–8 weeks
4. Draft and stamp Memorandum of Transfer (Form 14A) or Deed of Assignment Transferor’s solicitor 1–7 days preparation; stamp within 30 days of execution
5. Stamp duty payment or waiver application Transferee and solicitor (LHDN if waiver applies) Immediate payment; LHDN processing varies
6. Lodgement and registration at State Land Office Conveyancing solicitor / land office 1 working day to register once adjudicated; overall 2–12 weeks with queue and consents
7. Post-registration updates (taxes, utilities, lender records) New owner / solicitors 1–4 weeks

Step 1, Conduct Pre-Contract Title Searches and Encumbrance Checks

The buyer’s solicitor conducts an official title search at the relevant State Land Office or through online land registry systems where available. This search confirms the registered proprietor, lot details, tenure (freehold or leasehold), existing caveats, charges (mortgages), restrictions-in-interest and whether the land falls within a Malay Reserve area. For strata properties, the solicitor also verifies the strata title register. Encumbrance checks typically take one to seven days, depending on the land office’s processing time. Any anomalies, such as an existing private caveat or an unregistered prior dealing, must be resolved before the transaction proceeds.

Step 2, Execute the Sale and Purchase Agreement or Deed of Gift

For sales, the parties execute a Sale and Purchase Agreement drafted by their respective solicitors. The SPA sets out the purchase price, deposit (typically 10% of the purchase price), completion timeline, conditions precedent (such as loan approval) and the obligations of each party. For love and affection transfers, a Deed of Gift or a declaration reciting natural love and affection replaces the SPA. Execution typically takes one to twenty-one days, depending on negotiation complexity, financing conditions and the number of signatories involved. Where conditional finance is required, the SPA will commonly provide a window (often 90 days) for loan approval.

Step 3, Obtain Lender Discharge, Consent or Novation

If the property is subject to an existing mortgage, the seller’s solicitor must obtain a redemption statement from the mortgagee bank and arrange for full repayment of the outstanding loan, or negotiate a novation (transfer of the loan facility to the buyer) where the same bank is providing financing to the buyer. Required lender documents include the redemption statement, the bank’s discharge of charge form, the original title deed held by the bank, and the lender’s consent letter if a novation is agreed. This stage adds two to eight weeks to the process, depending on the lender’s internal turnaround time. Industry observers expect lender timelines to remain variable in 2026 as banks adjust operational onboarding protocols.

Step 4, Prepare and Adjudicate the Memorandum of Transfer (Form 14A)

The Memorandum of Transfer, prescribed as Form 14A under the National Land Code 1965, is the statutory instrument that effects the transfer of title. The transferor’s solicitor drafts Form 14A, which identifies the parties, the property, the consideration (or “natural love and affection” for gifts) and the terms of transfer. Both parties execute the form before an attesting witness. For leasehold properties without individual title, a Deed of Assignment is prepared instead, assigning the beneficial interest subject to the lessor’s consent. In transfers on death, the executor or administrator executes Form 14A on behalf of the estate, supported by the Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration. The completed transfer documents are then submitted for adjudication and stamping.

Step 5, Pay Stamp Duty or Apply for a Waiver

Stamp duty is assessed on the consideration stated in the transfer instrument or the market value of the property, whichever is higher. Payment is made to LHDN via the Stamp Office or, in most states, through e-stamping. Under the Stamp Act 1949, the transfer instrument must be stamped within 30 days of execution to avoid late-stamping penalties. For love and affection transfers qualifying for the waiver (applicable to the first RM1,000,000 of value for transfers between spouses, parents and children, or grandparents and grandchildren), the solicitor submits the waiver application to LHDN with supporting relationship documents. Processing times for waiver adjudication vary by LHDN branch.

Step 6, Lodge Form 14A at the State Land Office for Registration

Once the transfer instrument is duly stamped, the solicitor lodges Form 14A (together with the original title deed, stamped transfer, supporting documents and prescribed registration fees) at the relevant State Land Office. The Registrar of Titles examines the documents and, if all are in order, registers the transfer, this registration step itself typically takes one working day. However, the overall timeline from lodgement to issuance of the updated title can extend to two to twelve weeks, particularly where State consent is required (Malay Reserve land, restrictions-in-interest) or where there are administrative backlogs at the land office.

Step 7, Complete Post-Registration Administrative Steps

After registration, the new owner should notify the local authority to update the assessment tax records, transfer utility accounts (water, electricity, gas), update the relevant lender’s records if a new mortgage has been taken, and ensure that quit rent records at the land office reflect the new ownership. These administrative steps generally take one to four weeks to complete.

Required Documents for a Property Transfer in Malaysia

The documents needed for a property transfer vary depending on whether the transaction is a sale, a love and affection gift, or a transfer on death. The table below consolidates the standard requirements across all three pathways.

Document Notes
Title deed / Grant / Geran Issued by the State Land Office. Original required for registration. Confirm freehold or leasehold status and any express conditions or restrictions.
Sale & Purchase Agreement (SPA) or Deed of Gift Drafted by solicitors and executed between the parties. Signed originals required.
Memorandum of Transfer (Form 14A) Statutory transfer form under the National Land Code 1965. Prepared by solicitors for lodgement at the State Land Office.
Deed of Assignment Used for leasehold properties where individual or strata title has not been issued. Must be executed, stamped and include lessor consent where required.
Stamp duty form and receipt Stamp duty paid via LHDN (e-stamp) or the Stamp Office. Retain the paid receipt for lodgement.
NRIC / Passport of all parties Certified true copies. Foreigners must provide passport with valid visa documentation.
Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration Issued by the Malaysian High Court (or Land Administrator for small estates). Required for transfers on death.
Lender discharge letter / consent to transfer Issued by the mortgagee bank. Required if the property is subject to an existing charge.
Power of Attorney (if applicable) Certified original. Verify whether a limited or general power is required and whether it is registered.
Assessment tax and quit rent receipts Issued by local authorities. Current receipts are required for registration at many State Land Offices.
Company resolution (if a company is a party) Certified by the company secretary. Include the latest company register extracts where applicable.
Valuation report Prepared by a bank-panel or independent valuer. Required for mortgage refinancing, novation or LHDN adjudication where market value is in dispute.
Relationship evidence (love and affection transfers) Marriage certificate, birth certificate or adoption order to support the stamp duty waiver application.
Probate Affidavit of Assets (transfers on death) Prepared by the executor or solicitor to support the probate application and identify estate assets.

For all document categories, confirm with the relevant State Land Office whether originals or certified copies are accepted, as practice varies between states. Foreign-language documents generally require a certified Bahasa Malaysia or English translation.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Transferring Property in Malaysia

A straightforward property transfer, with no mortgage complications, no State consent requirement and cooperative parties, can be completed within approximately three months from execution of the SPA or Deed of Gift. However, several factors can extend this timeline significantly.

The most critical statutory deadline is the 30-day stamping window under the Stamp Act 1949: the transfer instrument must be presented for stamping within 30 days of execution, or a late-stamping penalty of up to five times the stamp duty amount may be imposed by LHDN. Other key timing considerations include:

  • Lender discharge: 2–8 weeks depending on the bank’s processing speed and the complexity of the redemption.
  • State consent (where required): processing times vary by state, Selangor, Penang and Johor each maintain their own timelines, ranging from 2 weeks to several months for Malay Reserve or restriction-in-interest approvals.
  • Probate proceedings (transfers on death): obtaining a Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration can add 3–12 months depending on the court registry’s caseload and whether the estate is contested.
  • LHDN waiver adjudication (love and affection): processing times vary by branch and can range from a few days to several weeks.

The recommended approach is to instruct a conveyancing solicitor at least six to eight weeks before the intended completion date, allowing sufficient time to handle lender discharge, State office queues and any documentary deficiencies.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations for Transferring Property in Malaysia

The costs and legal fees associated with a property transfer in Malaysia comprise stamp duty, solicitor fees, land office registration fees, lender-related charges and miscellaneous disbursements.

Item Amount Notes
Stamp duty (ad valorem, banded) 1% – 4% Applied to the consideration or market value (whichever is higher). See scale and worked example below.
Solicitor fees (transfer) RM1,000 – RM5,000+ Based on scale fees or agreed retainer. Includes preparation of SPA, Form 14A and lodgement. Disbursements additional.
Land office registration fee RM100 – RM1,000 Varies by state and property type. Payable on lodgement of Form 14A.
Lender redemption / discharge fees RM500 – RM3,000 Bank charges for redemption statement plus legal costs for discharge of charge.
Valuation fee (if required) RM200 – RM2,000 Depends on property value and whether a bank-panel or independent valuer is appointed.
Probate / administration costs Court fees + legal costs Applicable to transfers on death. Costs depend on estate complexity and whether contested.
Miscellaneous disbursements RM100 – RM500 Title searches, certified copies, courier, statutory notices and filing fees.

Stamp Duty Scale Rates

The stamp duty on a transfer of property is calculated on a progressive banded scale based on the consideration or market value (whichever is higher):

  • First RM100,000, 1%
  • RM100,001 to RM500,000, 2%
  • RM500,001 to RM1,000,000, 3%
  • Above RM1,000,000, 4%

Worked Example: Sale at RM500,000

For a property sold at RM500,000, the stamp duty calculation (illustrative) is: first RM100,000 at 1% = RM1,000; remaining RM400,000 at 2% = RM8,000; total stamp duty payable approximately RM9,000. Stamp duty is ordinarily borne by the buyer unless the parties agree otherwise. Exact calculations should be verified with LHDN, as specific exemptions or concessions may apply.

Love and Affection Stamp Duty Waiver

Since 1 April 2023, qualifying love and affection transfers between spouses, parents and children (including adopted children), and grandparents and grandchildren benefit from a stamp duty waiver on the first RM1,000,000 of property value. Stamp duty at the normal scale rate applies to any value above that cap. The waiver is subject to LHDN adjudication, and practice varies by state. Parties should verify the current status of the waiver and any updated conditions directly with LHDN and the relevant State Land Office before relying on the exemption.

Transfers on Death: Additional Cost Considerations

Where property is transferred from a deceased estate, additional costs include court filing fees for the probate or administration application, the solicitor’s fees for the estate administration, and any valuation reports required by the court or LHDN. The stamp duty treatment of transfers pursuant to a Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration is subject to specific adjudication by LHDN.

What Changes in 2026: Procedural Monitoring and Immediate Actions

No single new statute governing property transfers has been enacted in 2026 at the time of writing. However, regulatory practice remains in flux across several areas that directly affect how to transfer property in Malaysia:

  • Stamp duty waiver implementation. The 2023 waiver for love and affection transfers continues to operate, but LHDN branches and State Land Offices have issued differing operational notes on documentation requirements, processing times and the treatment of properties with partial commercial use. Parties should check LHDN’s latest published guidance before submission.
  • Lender protocols. Early indications suggest that several major banks have tightened their refinance and novation onboarding processes, adding verification steps that extend discharge timelines. Solicitors should request current turnaround commitments from the lender at the outset of each transaction.
  • Court processing for probate. Administrative processing times for Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration vary by court registry and may have shifted in 2026. Executors and administrators should check the relevant registry’s current timeline expectations before commencing the transfer.

Where any doubt exists, the prudent course is to instruct a Malaysian conveyancing solicitor to confirm the current procedural position before proceeding with a transfer.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Missing the 30-day stamping deadline. Late stamping under the Stamp Act 1949 attracts penalties of up to five times the duty amount. Calendar the deadline from the date of execution and submit promptly.
  • Failing to obtain lender consent. Lodging Form 14A without the mortgagee bank’s discharge or consent will result in rejection at the land office. Engage the lender early and obtain written confirmation of timelines.
  • Overlooking Malay Reserve or restriction-in-interest status. Transfers of restricted land require State Authority consent. A pre-contract title search identifies these restrictions before the parties commit.
  • Using a poorly drafted Deed of Gift. Ambiguous language around “natural love and affection” or missing relationship evidence can cause LHDN to reject a waiver application. Ensure the deed is professionally drafted and supported by certified relationship documents.
  • Neglecting to update assessment tax and quit rent records. Failure to notify the local authority after registration can result in penalties and complications for future dealings.
  • Not verifying the buyer’s eligibility (foreign purchasers). Foreigners face state-specific minimum purchase-price thresholds and property-type restrictions. Confirm eligibility before executing the SPA.
  • Incomplete probate documentation. Filing transfer documents without a valid Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration will be rejected. Obtain the grant before preparing Form 14A for estate transfers.
  • Ignoring lessor consent for leasehold assignments. Deeds of Assignment for leasehold properties often require the lessor’s (typically a state authority’s) written consent. Failing to obtain this consent can invalidate the assignment.
  • Relying on outdated stamp duty waiver information. Waiver conditions and caps may change. Always verify the current LHDN position before relying on an exemption.
  • Proceeding without a title search. Undiscovered caveats, encumbrances or prior unregistered dealings can derail a transfer at the registration stage. A current title search is the first step in any property transfer.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia (LHDN), Stamp Duty Guidance
  2. Attorney-General’s Chambers of Malaysia, Laws of Malaysia (National Land Code 1965)
  3. Stamp Act 1949, Laws of Malaysia (AGC)
  4. Low & Partners, Stamp Duty Waiver for Transfer of Property between Family Members
  5. Chan & Chia, How to Transfer Property in Malaysia: A Step-by-Step Legal Guide
  6. iProperty, Transferring Property to Family Members
  7. Properly, How Does MOT (Memorandum of Transfer) Work in Malaysia?
  8. PEMUDAH, Registering Property (Administrative Guide)
  9. CY Wong Ng & Partners, 5 Legal Steps Every Property Buyer in Malaysia Must Follow
  10. Selangor State Land Office (PTG Selangor)

FAQs

How much does it cost to transfer ownership of property in Malaysia?
The total cost depends on the property value, the type of transfer and whether a mortgage is involved. For a standard sale at RM500,000, stamp duty alone is approximately RM9,000, plus solicitor fees (RM1,000–RM5,000), land office registration fees (RM100–RM1,000) and disbursements. Love and affection transfers may benefit from a stamp duty waiver on the first RM1,000,000 of value. Detailed cost breakdowns are set out in the costs, fees and tax considerations section above.
The core documents are the original title deed (Grant/Geran), the executed SPA or Deed of Gift, the Memorandum of Transfer (Form 14A), the stamped transfer instrument, certified copies of NRIC or passport for all parties, and current assessment tax and quit rent receipts. Transfers on death additionally require a Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration. If a mortgage exists, a lender discharge letter is required. The full documents checklist is set out in the required documents section above.
Yes, subject to conditions. Since 1 April 2023, love and affection transfers between spouses, parents and children, and grandparents and grandchildren qualify for a stamp duty waiver on the first RM1,000,000 of property value. The transferee must provide documentary evidence of the relationship to LHDN. Any value exceeding the RM1,000,000 cap is subject to stamp duty at the normal scale rate. Parties should verify the waiver’s current availability with LHDN before proceeding.
A straightforward transfer with no mortgage complications and no State consent requirement can be completed within approximately three months. However, lender discharge can add two to eight weeks, State consent (where required) can take several additional weeks to months, and probate proceedings for transfers on death can add three to twelve months. The timeline and key deadlines section above provides milestone-by-milestone timing guidance.
Yes, but the existing mortgage must be dealt with before or as part of the transfer. The options are full redemption (repaying the loan and obtaining a discharge of charge), novation (where the buyer takes over the existing loan facility with the same bank) or refinancing (the buyer secures a new loan to fund the purchase and the seller’s loan is redeemed from the proceeds). In each case, the lender’s written consent or discharge is required before the transfer can be registered. A conveyancing solicitor should coordinate with both parties’ banks to ensure a smooth process.
If the owner dies before the transfer is registered, the transaction cannot proceed until a personal representative is appointed by the court. If the deceased left a will, the executor must apply for a Grant of Probate from the Malaysian High Court. If there is no will, an administrator must obtain Letters of Administration. Once granted, the personal representative can execute Form 14A on behalf of the estate and complete the registration. This probate process can take three to twelve months depending on the complexity of the estate and the court registry’s processing times.
Foreigners may purchase and hold property in Malaysia subject to state-specific minimum purchase-price thresholds and restrictions on certain property types (Bumiputera lots, Malay Reserve land, low- and medium-cost housing are generally prohibited). State Economic Planning Unit (EPU) approval or Foreign Investment Committee requirements may also apply depending on the state and the nature of the transaction. Each state publishes its own foreign ownership guidelines, and these should be verified before the SPA is executed.
Under the Stamp Act 1949, transfer instruments must be stamped within 30 days of execution. Late stamping attracts a penalty calculated by LHDN, which can be up to five times the original stamp duty amount depending on the length of the delay. To rectify a late stamping, the transferee or solicitor must apply to LHDN for adjudication, pay the outstanding duty plus the applicable penalty, and obtain a stamped instrument before lodgement at the State Land Office can proceed.

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How to Transfer Property in Malaysia: Sales, Gifts (love & Affection) & Transfers on Death

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