Our Expert in Malaysia
No results available
Last reviewed: 5 May 2026
Malaysia’s stamp duty landscape changed significantly on 1 January 2026 when the Stamp Duty Self-Assessment System (SDSAS) came into force, shifting the obligation to calculate, declare and pay stamp duty squarely onto taxpayers. For anyone involved in Malaysia stamp duty changes 2026 conveyancing transactions, whether as a buyer, seller, real estate agent or legal practitioner, the reforms demand immediate adjustments to deal timelines, document preparation and cost allocation. Alongside SDSAS, the government has mandated wider use of e-stamping through the MyStamp portal, introduced revised ad valorem rates targeting foreign purchasers, and updated the list of available exemptions following the Budget 2026 announcements. This guide explains every change in practical, transaction-level detail so that conveyancing teams can comply from day one.
The 2026 reforms touch almost every property instrument that passes through a conveyancer’s desk. Below is a quick-reference summary of the key changes and the immediate actions they require.
Malaysia’s stamp duty regime is governed by the Stamp Act 1949, which has been progressively amended to accommodate self-assessment. The Finance Ministry’s Budget 2026, tabled in late 2025, confirmed that the Stamp Duty Self-Assessment System would go live on 1 January 2026, bringing Malaysia into line with the existing self-assessment frameworks for income tax and real property gains tax (RPGT). The Malaysian Bar subsequently issued Circular No. 011/2026 providing practical guidance to legal practitioners on compliance.
| Date | Change Introduced | Practical Impact for Conveyancers |
|---|---|---|
| Budget 2026 (Oct–Dec 2025) | Proposed flat rates for certain foreign buyer transfers (4–8 %) and higher instrument rates; new Item 32(ab) of the First Schedule | Re-price offers and releases; advise foreign clients on net acquisition cost and adjust SPA clauses accordingly |
| 1 January 2026 | SDSAS goes live; e-stamping required for most instruments | Conveyancers must ensure the client calculates and files the stamp duty return; proof of stamping is needed before lodgement of transfer at the Land Registry |
| January–March 2026 | Malaysian Bar Circular No. 011/2026 issued (practitioner guidance) | Follow the circular for practical allocation of drafting responsibilities and evidence-retention requirements |
The Stamp Act’s First Schedule sets out the ad valorem rates for instruments of transfer, while the Third Schedule lists persons liable to pay duty. The 2026 amendments expand both schedules: the First Schedule now includes Item 32(ab) addressing foreign purchaser instruments, and the Third Schedule has been updated to reflect the taxpayer’s self-assessment obligation. Conveyancers should obtain the latest consolidated version of both schedules from the official LHDN stamp duty guidance page.
Under the stamp duty self-assessment regime, the person liable to pay duty is the person identified in the Third Schedule of the Stamp Act 1949, in most property transfers, this is the buyer or transferee. SDSAS does not change who is legally liable; it changes how the duty is determined and paid. Before 2026, taxpayers submitted instruments to LHDN for adjudication and LHDN assessed the duty payable. Under the new system, the taxpayer must self-compute, declare and remit the correct amount, and only then stamp the instrument electronically.
The Malaysian Bar Circular No. 011/2026 clarifies that while the statutory duty to pay remains with the taxpayer, conveyancers have a professional obligation to:
Buyers bear the primary duty obligation for instruments of transfer. Sellers, however, should be aware that certain ancillary instruments, such as a deed of assignment executed by the vendor in favour of a sub-purchaser, may also attract duty. In sub-sale scenarios, both instruments must be stamped, and the parties should agree in the SPA on who bears each charge. Industry observers expect that disputes over liability allocation will increase under SDSAS, making express contractual provisions more important than ever.
| Entity Type | Primary Reporting Obligation | Typical Role under SDSAS |
|---|---|---|
| Individual buyer (citizen) | Self-compute and file return via MyStamp; pay duty before instrument lodgement | Principal taxpayer, signs stamp duty return |
| Individual buyer (non-citizen) | Same as citizen, but higher rates under Item 32(ab) may apply | Principal taxpayer, may need foreign ID registration on MyTax |
| Corporate purchaser | Authorised officer or company secretary files on behalf of the company | Corporate taxpayer, ensure board resolution authorising signatory |
| Conveyancer / solicitor | Advisory and filing agent (where authorised); no personal liability for duty quantum unless negligent | Agent, files return using client’s funds and retains stamped certificate |
The key takeaway on who pays stamp duty in Malaysia after the 2026 changes is straightforward: contractual allocation determines the commercial burden, but SDSAS places the statutory filing and payment obligation on the taxpayer named in the Third Schedule. Every SPA should include an unambiguous clause addressing this distinction.
E-stamping Malaysia 2026 is processed through the MyStamp module within LHDN’s MyTax digital platform. The system accepts instrument details, calculates or validates the duty payable, processes payment and issues an electronic stamping certificate, all online. Below is a step-by-step guide for conveyancers handling property transfer instruments.
LHDN has indicated that certain complex or high-value instruments, and instruments involving government bodies or diplomatic exemptions, may still be submitted for manual adjudication at LHDN branch counters. Conveyancers should check the latest LHDN operational guidelines for the current list of excluded instrument types.
The likely practical effect of the shift to e-stamping is that Malaysia stamp duty changes 2026 conveyancing timelines will tighten. Practitioners should allow five to seven working days between SPA execution and the target completion date for e-stamping processing, payment clearance and certificate download, particularly for transactions involving foreign buyers requiring TIN registration.
Understanding the current rate structure is essential for accurate self-assessment. The ad valorem rates for property transfer instruments (MOT/assignment) under the First Schedule are tiered based on the property’s market value or consideration, whichever is higher. Budget 2026 proposals also introduced enhanced rates for stamp duty foreign buyers 2026 under a new Item 32(ab).
| Property Value Band (RM) | Rate (Citizen / PR) | Rate (Foreign Buyer, Budget 2026 Proposal) |
|---|---|---|
| First 100,000 | 1 % | Up to 4 % |
| 100,001 – 500,000 | 2 % | Up to 4 % |
| 500,001 – 1,000,000 | 3 % | Up to 6 % |
| Above 1,000,000 | 4 % | Up to 8 % |
Note: foreign buyer rates shown are based on Budget 2026 proposals and the proposed Item 32(ab) of the First Schedule as analysed by Skrine’s November 2025 alert. Final enacted rates may vary by state and should be confirmed against the official gazette before completion.
| Band | Amount (RM) | Rate | Duty (RM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| First 100,000 | 100,000 | 1 % | 1,000 |
| 100,001 – 500,000 | 400,000 | 2 % | 8,000 |
| 500,001 – 600,000 | 100,000 | 3 % | 3,000 |
| Total stamp duty | 12,000 | ||
Applying the proposed Item 32(ab) flat rates for a non-citizen purchaser:
| Band | Amount (RM) | Proposed Rate | Duty (RM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| First 100,000 | 100,000 | 4 % | 4,000 |
| 100,001 – 500,000 | 400,000 | 4 % | 16,000 |
| 500,001 – 1,000,000 | 500,000 | 6 % | 30,000 |
| Total stamp duty | 50,000 | ||
The difference is stark: a foreign buyer acquiring the same RM 1,000,000 property would pay roughly RM 50,000 in stamp duty compared with approximately RM 24,000 for a citizen at the standard rates. Conveyancers must ensure foreign clients understand this additional cost at the offer stage.
A Malaysian-incorporated company transferring commercial property at RM 2,000,000 pays duty at the standard citizen/PR ad valorem rates (companies incorporated in Malaysia are not subject to foreign buyer surcharges unless the beneficial ownership test under the proposed amendments is triggered). The duty would be:
Common exemptions relevant to conveyancers include first-time homebuyer relief (subject to property value thresholds and eligibility criteria published by the Ministry of Finance), transfers between spouses, and certain affordable-housing scheme purchases. The PropertyGuru exemptions guide provides a consumer-friendly summary of eligibility conditions. Practitioners should verify entitlements against the official exemption orders gazetted under the Stamp Act before filing.
RPGT and stamp duty 2026 operate as separate taxes. RPGT applies to the gain realised on a property disposal, while stamp duty applies to the instrument effecting the transfer. They are not mutually exclusive: a seller may owe RPGT on the capital gain and the buyer simultaneously owes stamp duty on the transfer instrument. Conveyancers handling both sides of a transaction should ensure that commercial pricing accounts for the cumulative tax exposure, and that each party receives independent tax advice where the amounts are material.
With the taxpayer now bearing responsibility for self-assessment, the question of who pays stamp duty in Malaysia is no longer merely a commercial negotiation, it has procedural consequences. If the SPA is silent on stamp duty allocation, the statutory liability falls on the buyer for a transfer instrument. However, parties frequently negotiate cost-sharing or vendor contributions, particularly in sub-sale and developer transactions. Every SPA should contain clear, unambiguous wording.
The following is a model clause for illustrative purposes only. It should be adapted to the specific transaction and reviewed by qualified Malaysian legal counsel.
Clause [X], Stamp Duty (a) The Purchaser shall be solely responsible for the computation, filing and payment of all stamp duty payable on the Memorandum of Transfer and any ancillary instruments of transfer executed pursuant to this Agreement, in accordance with the Stamp Act 1949 (as amended) and the Stamp Duty Self-Assessment System (SDSAS). (b) The Purchaser shall procure the electronic stamping of the said instruments via the MyStamp portal within [fourteen (14)] working days of the execution of the instrument or such earlier date as may be required by law.
(c) The Purchaser shall indemnify and keep the Vendor indemnified against any penalty, fine, interest or additional duty arising from late filing, under-computation or non-payment of stamp duty attributable to the Purchaser’s default.
When issuing a stamp duty offer letter in Malaysia, particularly in developer-direct sales, the offer letter should explicitly state the estimated stamp duty, the basis of calculation (market value or purchase price), whether any exemption has been applied and the party responsible for payment. A clear statement at the offer stage reduces disputes and allows the buyer to budget for conveyancing fees Malaysia 2026 accurately.
Where the stamp duty computation depends on a declared market value (for instance, when the consideration is below market value and the higher figure applies), consider including a vendor warranty confirming the declared value or, alternatively, an escrow or holdback mechanism to cover any reassessment by LHDN. Early indications suggest that LHDN audits of self-assessed returns will focus on valuation discrepancies, making such protective clauses a prudent addition to the conveyancing toolkit.
The penalty framework under SDSAS is designed to encourage timely and accurate self-assessment. Late stamping, under-stamping and failure to stamp attract graduated consequences under the Stamp Act 1949.
LHDN has introduced a voluntary disclosure pathway that allows taxpayers who discover an error, whether through their own review or their conveyancer’s, to come forward, correct the return and pay any shortfall. The advantage of voluntary disclosure is a reduced penalty compared with an LHDN-initiated audit or investigation. Practitioners should advise clients to act promptly if an under-assessment is identified, as the reduced penalty window is time-limited.
The practical steps are:
The following checklist maps onto the three key phases of a typical property conveyancing transaction under the SDSAS regime. The Malaysia stamp duty changes 2026 conveyancing reforms affect each phase.
The Malaysia stamp duty changes 2026 conveyancing reforms represent the most significant procedural shift in decades. Self-assessment under SDSAS, mandatory e-stamping and revised foreign buyer rates demand that every practitioner, buyer and seller updates their processes, templates and deal timelines. The cost of non-compliance, penalties, inadmissible instruments and potential audit exposure, is too high to leave to chance.
Conveyancers should review every active transaction file against the checklist above, update their SPA precedents to include express SDSAS allocation and indemnity clauses, and ensure their teams are trained on the MyStamp e-stamping workflow. For foreign-buyer transactions, early engagement with tax advisers is essential given the substantially higher duty rates now in play.
For jurisdiction-specific guidance on the Malaysia conveyancing practice area, or to connect with a qualified practitioner, visit the Malaysia conveyancing lawyer directory.
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.
posted 6 minutes ago
posted 21 minutes ago
posted 44 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
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.
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 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.
Send welcome message