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conveyancing fees process in Malaysia

Conveyancing Fees Process in Malaysia (2026): How Solicitor Fees, Disbursements & Government Charges Are Calculated and Paid

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The conveyancing fees process in Malaysia encompasses every cost a buyer, seller or lender will incur when transferring real property, from the solicitor’s professional fee (set by a statutory tariff) through government stamp duty and Land Office registration charges, to the various disbursements a lawyer advances on a client’s behalf. Understanding who pays each component, when payment falls due and how each amount is calculated is essential for anyone budgeting a 2026 property transaction. This guide is especially timely because Malaysia’s Stamp Duty Self‑Assessment System (SDSAS), which took effect on 1 January 2026, has changed the way stamp duty returns are submitted and paid, shifting compliance responsibilities and tightening deadlines for buyers, solicitors and appointed agents alike.

Overview of the Conveyancing Fees Process and Who It Applies To

Conveyancing fees in Malaysia fall into three broad categories. The first is the solicitor’s professional fee, governed by the Solicitors’ Remuneration Order (SRO) and calculated on a statutory scale tied to the property’s consideration or adjudicated value. The second category covers government charges: ad valorem stamp duty on the instrument of transfer (and on loan documentation, where applicable) plus state Land Office registration fees prescribed under the National Land Code 1965. The third category is disbursements, out‑of‑pocket expenses the solicitor incurs on the client’s behalf, such as title searches, bankruptcy searches, photocopying, courier charges and valuation fees.

In a standard sale and purchase, the buyer pays the buyer’s solicitor fees, stamp duty on the memorandum of transfer (MOT), and Land Office registration fees. The seller typically pays the seller’s own legal fees and the real‑estate agent’s commission. Where a mortgage is involved, the borrower usually also pays the bank’s solicitor fees and stamp duty on the loan or charge instrument. Lenders may have additional requirements, original title custody fees, for example, that flow through as disbursements.

Solicitors are ordinarily instructed once an offer is accepted or a booking fee is paid. For developer projects sold under Schedule G or Schedule H of the Housing Development (Control and Licensing) Act 1966, the developer’s solicitor will prepare the Sale & Purchase Agreement (SPA), and the buyer instructs a separate solicitor for the loan documentation and transfer. Early instruction is important because the SDSAS framework now requires the stamp duty return to be submitted within a strict statutory window from execution, delays in engaging a solicitor can result in late‑stamping penalties.

Eligibility and Prerequisites

Any individual, company or entity that is party to a property transaction in Malaysia may instruct a solicitor to handle conveyancing. Buyers (whether individuals or corporate purchasers), sellers, developers, and mortgagee banks all routinely appoint separate legal representation. Lenders will typically issue a panel‑solicitor requirement or allow the borrower’s solicitor to handle the charge documentation, subject to the bank’s compliance checklist.

Foreign buyers face additional prerequisites. Under state‑level rules, non‑citizens generally require the consent of the relevant State Authority before completing a transfer, and minimum purchase‑price thresholds apply (these vary by state). Foreign purchasers should also note that stamp duty rates and any applicable levies may differ from those available to Malaysian citizens, the precise position depends on the state, the property type, and any applicable exemption orders. A 2025–2026 guide to buying residential property in Malaysia for foreigners provides further detail on state consent and pricing thresholds.

When to Instruct Your Solicitor

Instruct your solicitor as soon as the offer is accepted or the booking deposit is paid. For sub‑sale transactions, this means immediately after signing the letter of offer or the booking form. For developer purchases, engagement should occur before or at the time the SPA is presented by the developer’s solicitor. Early instruction ensures title searches and encumbrance checks are completed before contractual deadlines begin to run, and it allows the solicitor to calculate and collect the estimated stamp duty and disbursements in time for the SDSAS return window.

Step‑by‑Step Conveyancing Fees Procedure

The conveyancing fees process in Malaysia follows a predictable sequence. Each stage triggers specific invoices or trust‑account collections. The numbered steps below set out the procedure from instruction to post‑completion, together with a summary timeline table.

Step 1, Receive the Engagement Letter and Pay the Initial Retainer

The solicitor issues a written engagement letter setting out the scope of work, an estimate of professional fees (based on the SRO scale), an estimate of stamp duty and disbursements, and the initial retainer amount. The retainer is deposited into the solicitor’s client (trust) account and is applied against invoices as they fall due. Expect the retainer request to cover at least the cost of preliminary searches and a portion of the professional fee.

Step 2, Conduct Pre‑Contract Searches and Title Checks

The solicitor conducts a title search at the relevant Land Office (or via the e‑Tanah online system where available) to verify ownership, confirm the title type (Geran / Pajakan / Hakmilik), and check for encumbrances, caveats or restrictions. Bankruptcy searches on the seller (and sometimes the buyer, if required by the lender) are also run at this stage. Search fees are invoiced as disbursements, typically ranging from RM100 to RM1,000 in aggregate, depending on the number and type of searches required. A detailed guide on the steps involved in transferring property in Malaysia sets out the full search procedure.

Step 3, Draft or Negotiate the SPA and Bank Loan Documents

For sub‑sale transactions, the buyer’s and seller’s solicitors negotiate and finalise the SPA. For developer sales, the developer’s solicitor prepares the SPA in the prescribed statutory form (Schedule G or Schedule H). The buyer’s solicitor reviews the SPA terms, advises the buyer, and simultaneously liaises with the lender’s solicitor (or panel solicitor) to prepare the loan agreement and charge documentation. Professional fees for the loan documentation are typically calculated on a separate SRO scale tied to the loan amount, payable by the borrower.

Step 4, Sign the SPA and Pay the Deposit; Stamp the SPA Under SDSAS

Upon signing the SPA, the buyer pays the deposit (commonly 10% of the purchase price, of which the booking fee already paid is deducted). The signed SPA must then be stamped. Under the SDSAS framework effective from 1 January 2026, the buyer or the buyer’s appointed agent (usually the solicitor) submits an electronic stamp duty return to the Lembaga Hasil Dalam Negeri (LHDN) via the e‑Stamping portal. Stamp duty must be assessed and paid within 30 days of execution for instruments executed in Malaysia, as required under the Stamp Act 1949. The solicitor will collect the estimated stamp duty from the client’s trust account and remit it to LHDN.

Step 5, Satisfy Conditions Precedent and Arrange Loan Drawdown

Once the SPA is stamped and all conditions precedent are satisfied, including state consent for foreign buyers, lender valuation, and insurance cover, the lender releases the loan funds. The solicitor coordinates the drawdown, ensuring the balance purchase price is paid to the seller’s solicitor on or before the contractual completion date. Interim invoices for additional searches, requisition fees or administrative charges may be issued during this period.

Step 6, Execute and Stamp the MOT; Lodge for Registration at the Land Office

At completion, the parties execute the Memorandum of Transfer (MOT). The MOT is stamped with ad valorem stamp duty (assessed under SDSAS and payable to LHDN). The solicitor then lodges the stamped MOT, together with the charge instrument (if any), at the State Land Office for registration under the National Land Code 1965. Land Office registration fees, prescribed by state rules and the National Land Code, are paid at this point. Registration processing times vary by state, typically ranging from one to 14 business days.

Step 7, Post‑Completion: Discharge of Charge and Title Handover

After registration, the buyer’s solicitor collects the new title or grant reflecting the buyer’s ownership. Where the seller had an existing mortgage, the seller’s lender issues a discharge of charge, which must also be registered. The solicitor renders a final account, reconciling all fees, stamp duty payments and disbursements against amounts held in the trust account, and refunding or collecting any balance due.

Conveyancing Timeline Summary

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Instruction & retainer issued; initial retainer paid Buyer instructs solicitor; solicitor issues engagement letter & invoice Day 0–3
Title searches and checks; requisitions raised Solicitor (acting for buyer or seller) 3–14 business days
Draft / agree SPA & bank loan documents Seller’s & buyer’s solicitors; lender’s solicitors (if mortgage) 7–30 days (depends on negotiation)
Signing of SPA (deposit paid) & SPA stamping (SDSAS e‑return) Buyer’s solicitor / appointed agent submits stamp return under SDSAS Within 30 days of execution (SDSAS statutory window)
Conditions precedent satisfied; loan drawdown arranged Buyer, lender, solicitors 14–60 days depending on lender
Completion: MOT executed & stamped; registration at Land Office Buyer’s solicitor pays government charges, lodges MOT for registration Completion day; registration 1–14 days depending on state
Post‑completion: discharge of charge / title issuance Lender’s solicitors and Land Office; buyer’s solicitor collects title 7–60 days (dependent on lender & Land Office)

Required Documents and Information

Every conveyancing transaction requires a core set of documents. Missing or defective documents are one of the most common causes of delay. The table below sets out the documents needed, who issues each item, and key notes on format and validity.

Document Notes (Issuer, Format, Validity)
Sale & Purchase Agreement (SPA), signed copies Issued by vendor / developer; signed originals required for stamping (usually 4+ copies).
Memorandum of Transfer (MOT) Prepared by solicitors at completion; stamped and lodged at Land Office for registration.
Title search / current title (Geran / Pajakan / Hakmilik) Obtained from the Land Office by solicitor; verifies registered owners and encumbrances.
Proof of identity (NRIC / passport) Buyer and seller; original and certified copies required. Passport for foreigners.
Bank loan offer & bank requirement letter Issued by lender; sets conditions precedent and disbursement timetable.
Banker’s guarantee or banker’s draft Payment instruments for deposit and balance; format as required by seller’s solicitor.
Developer documents (Advertising & Sales Permit, SPA annexures) Developer issues; required for new launches under housing‑development legislation.
Statutory declarations / state consent forms (foreign buyer) Buyer / applicant prepares; may require state‑level consent and additional documentation.
Power of Attorney (if used) If executed abroad, must be registered / attested per Land Office and High Court rules.
Valuation report / JPPH market‑value assessment JPPH provides valuation services relied on by LHDN for SDSAS stamp‑duty determinations.

Lenders often require original (not merely certified) copies of the title and the loan offer acceptance. Buyers should confirm the lender’s specific checklist early in the process to avoid last‑minute delays.

Conveyancing Timeline and Key Deadlines

The most critical deadlines in the conveyancing fees process in Malaysia relate to stamping. Under the Stamp Act 1949, an instrument executed in Malaysia must be stamped within 30 days of execution. The SDSAS framework, operational from 1 January 2026, requires the payer or appointed agent to submit the stamp duty return electronically and remit payment to LHDN within this window. Late stamping attracts penalties, a graduated scale of surcharges applies, increasing the longer the delay.

LHDN assesses stamp duty based on the higher of the consideration stated in the instrument and the market value of the property. Market value is determined by the Jabatan Penilaian dan Perkhidmatan Harta (JPPH). If LHDN considers the declared value to be below market value, it may request a formal JPPH valuation and issue an additional assessment. Buyers should budget for this possibility.

For a deeper analysis of recent Malaysia stamp duty changes in 2026, including the SDSAS implementation timeline and affected instrument categories, see the dedicated guide.

When to Expect Invoices

Invoice Point What It Covers
On instruction (Day 0–3) Retainer deposit, partial professional fee and estimated search disbursements.
After pre‑contract searches Interim disbursement invoice for title search, bankruptcy search and related fees.
Before SPA stamping Stamp duty collection, solicitor requests funds to remit SDSAS payment to LHDN.
Before completion / MOT stamping MOT stamp duty, Land Office registration fees, and any outstanding professional fee balance.
Post‑completion Final account, reconciliation of all fees, disbursements and trust‑account balances.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Solicitor fees in Malaysia are not negotiable in the way commercial fees might be, they are governed by the Solicitors’ Remuneration Order (SRO), which prescribes mandatory scale fees for conveyancing work. The SRO sets percentage rates applied to successive tranches of the property’s consideration or adjudicated value. Below is a summary of the main cost items, followed by worked examples of how solicitor fees are calculated.

Main Cost Items

Item Typical Amount / Basis Notes
Solicitor professional fee (SRO scale) 1.25% on first RM500,000; 1.0% on next RM500,000 (illustrative; see SRO schedule) Statutory scale, solicitors may not charge below the prescribed minimum.
Stamp duty on MOT Ad valorem / tiered rates per LHDN SDSAS self‑assessment required from 1 Jan 2026; LHDN may apply market value (JPPH) if higher than SPA price.
SPA stamping fee Nominal per copy (typically RM10–RM20 per copy) Usually 4+ copies; confirm at time of transaction.
Land Office registration fee State‑based; prescribed by National Land Code / state land rules Paid at lodgement; varies by state and by property value.
Search & disbursement fees RM100–RM1,000 total Title search, bankruptcy search, local‑authority searches; invoiced as disbursements.
Bank legal fee (loan documentation) SRO scale on loan amount (separate calculation) Borrower typically pays; bank may require its own panel solicitor.
JPPH valuation fee RM300–RM2,000 (varies by property type) Triggered if LHDN requests a market‑value assessment under SDSAS.

Worked Solicitor Fee Examples (SRO Scale)

The following examples illustrate how solicitor fees Malaysia practitioners charge are calculated using the SRO’s percentage‑based scale. All figures are for the SPA professional fee only and exclude disbursements, stamp duty and registration fees.

Purchase Price Calculation (SRO Scale) Professional Fee
RM300,000 1.25% × RM300,000 RM3,750
RM500,000 1.25% × RM500,000 RM6,250
RM1,000,000 1.25% × RM500,000 = RM6,250 + 1.0% × RM500,000 = RM5,000 RM11,250

These examples use the widely applied SRO scale bands. The SRO schedule contains further tranches for higher values (the rate decreases on successive bands above RM7.5 million). Solicitors must provide a written fee estimate before work begins, and conveyancing disbursements must be itemised separately on the invoice. Buyers should always request a detailed breakdown so that each line item, professional fee, stamp duty, search fees, registration fees, is transparent.

What Changes in 2026: SDSAS and Conveyancing Fees 2026

The most significant procedural change affecting conveyancing fees 2026 is the rollout of the Stamp Duty Self‑Assessment System (SDSAS), effective 1 January 2026. Under SDSAS, the obligation to assess and declare the correct stamp duty shifts from LHDN to the taxpayer (or the taxpayer’s appointed agent, typically the solicitor). The payer submits a stamp duty return via the LHDN e‑Stamping portal, calculates the duty payable, and remits payment within the statutory 30‑day window. LHDN retains the right to audit and reassess within the prescribed limitation period.

Industry observers expect the practical effect for conveyancing transactions to include earlier collection of stamp duty funds from clients (since the solicitor, as appointed agent, bears compliance responsibility), tighter internal deadlines in law‑firm workflows, and increased reliance on JPPH market‑value data to ensure the self‑assessed amount is defensible. LHDN has also introduced a voluntary disclosure programme for stamp duty, with penalty waivers available during 2026 for taxpayers who come forward to correct past under‑assessments.

Solicitors and clients should confirm at the outset of every transaction who will act as the appointed agent for SDSAS purposes and how stamp duty funds will be held and remitted from the trust account.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Late stamping. Failing to stamp the SPA or MOT within 30 days of execution triggers graduated penalties under the Stamp Act 1949. Under SDSAS, the appointed agent bears primary compliance responsibility, solicitors should diarise deadlines immediately upon execution.
  • Relying on SPA price for stamp duty. LHDN assesses stamp duty on the higher of the SPA price and the JPPH market value. Buyers who budget only for the SPA price may face a shortfall if LHDN uses a higher valuation.
  • Insufficient trust‑account funding. Not depositing enough funds for Land Office registration fees or search disbursements can stall the transaction. Request a full breakdown of estimated disbursements at the instruction stage.
  • Unclear allocation of who pays conveyancing fees. The SPA should specify which party bears stamp duty, legal fees and registration costs. Ambiguity leads to disputes at completion.
  • Ignoring SRO minimums. Solicitors are bound by the conveyancing tariff set by the SRO. Buyers who expect to negotiate fees below the statutory scale may find the solicitor cannot lawfully comply.
  • Not confirming SDSAS agent responsibilities. Under SDSAS, both the payer and any appointed agent can be liable. Confirm the solicitor’s role in writing and ensure the engagement letter addresses SDSAS compliance.
  • Disputed invoices. If you disagree with a solicitor’s bill, request an itemised account. The SRO and Malaysian Bar guidance provide a framework for disputing fees, solicitors must be able to justify each line item by reference to the prescribed scale or as a documented disbursement.

Conclusion

The conveyancing fees process in Malaysia is structured around three pillars: statutory solicitor fees set by the SRO, government stamp duty and registration charges, and disbursements advanced by the solicitor. In 2026, the SDSAS framework adds a compliance layer that makes early instruction and careful trust‑account management more important than ever. Buyers, sellers and lenders who understand the fee structure, the payment timeline and the documentary requirements are far better positioned to avoid penalties, budget accurately and complete their transactions on schedule. For tailored guidance on a specific transaction, consider engaging a qualified Malaysian conveyancing solicitor through the lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Brent Yap Hon Yean at Viknesh & Yap, Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Lembaga Hasil Dalam Negeri (LHDN), SDSAS / Stamp Duty Self‑Assessment System
  2. Stamp Act 1949, Laws of Malaysia (AGC updated text via LHDN)
  3. Solicitors’ Remuneration Order, Malaysian Bar
  4. JPPH (Valuation & Property Services Department), Valuation and Stamp Duty Coordination
  5. LHDN e‑Stamping Portal, Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs

What is the conveyancing process in Malaysia?
Conveyancing is the legal process of transferring property ownership. It involves instructing a solicitor, conducting title searches, negotiating and signing the SPA, paying stamp duty and government charges, executing the Memorandum of Transfer (MOT), and registering the transfer at the Land Office. The step‑by‑step procedure section above sets out the full sequence.
Total costs include the solicitor’s professional fee (calculated on the SRO scale), stamp duty on the MOT (ad valorem rates set by LHDN), Land Office registration fees (state‑based), and various disbursements. For a RM500,000 property, the solicitor’s SPA fee alone is approximately RM6,250 before stamp duty and disbursements. The worked examples in the costs section provide calculations at three price points.
As a buyer, you typically pay the buyer’s solicitor fee (SRO scale), stamp duty on the instrument of transfer and on the loan agreement, Land Office registration fees, search and administrative disbursements, and the bank’s solicitor fee if you are taking a mortgage. The seller generally pays the seller’s own legal fees and the real‑estate agent’s commission.
The conveyancing timeline from instruction to registration typically ranges from two to four months, though complex transactions, particularly those involving foreign‑buyer state consent or multiple lenders, may take longer. Fees are due at several milestones: retainer on instruction, search disbursements after pre‑contract checks, stamp duty before stamping, and registration fees at completion. The timeline table above provides indicative durations for each stage.
Yes. Foreigners may purchase property in Malaysia, subject to minimum‑price thresholds and State Authority consent. Stamp duty rates and any additional levies may differ from those available to Malaysian citizens, depending on the state and the category of property. A detailed overview of foreign buyer requirements is available separately.
Late stamping under the Stamp Act 1949 attracts graduated penalties that increase the longer the instrument remains unstamped. LHDN has introduced a voluntary disclosure programme for 2026, offering penalty waivers for taxpayers who proactively correct under‑assessments or late submissions within the programme window. Solicitors should monitor LHDN announcements for any extensions to the waiver period.
Instruct a solicitor immediately after the offer is accepted or the booking deposit is paid. Early engagement ensures title searches are completed, fee estimates are provided, and stamp duty funds are collected before the 30‑day SDSAS stamping deadline begins to run.
Request a fully itemised bill that separates the professional fee (by reference to the SRO scale), each disbursement (with supporting receipts or invoices) and any government charges. If you believe the bill exceeds the SRO‑prescribed amount, you may raise the matter with the Malaysian Bar or apply to court for taxation of the solicitor’s bill under the applicable rules.
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Conveyancing Fees Process in Malaysia (2026): How Solicitor Fees, Disbursements & Government Charges Are Calculated and Paid

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